March 2018 |
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ASHRAE's BACnet Committee, Project Haystack and Brick Schema Collaborating to Provide Unified Data Semantic Modeling Solution
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RICHMOND, VIRGINIA (March 02, 2018) --
The ASHRAE BACnet committee (www.bacnet.org), Project Haystack
(www.project-haystack.org) and Brick Schema (www.brickschema.org)
announced they are actively collaborating to integrate Haystack tagging
and Brick data modeling concepts into the new proposed ASHRAE Standard
223P for semantic tagging of building data.
ASHRAE Standard 223P: "Designation and Classification of Semantic Tags
for Building Data" provides a dictionary of semantic tags for
descriptive tagging of building data including building automation and
control data along with associated systems.
By integrating Haystack tagging and Brick data modeling concepts with
the upcoming ASHRAE Standard 223P, the result will enable
interoperability on semantic information across the building industry,
particularly in building automation.
This unified effort is aiming at a formally standardized application
data modeling solution which can be implemented in various ways. For
example, it will be able to be used for exchanging data over
established communication protocols like the Haystack web services or
BACnet, or being applied on data stored in databases and cloud
applications. The first public review of the initial draft of 223P is
envisioned for late 2018. Ultimately, ASHRAE Standard 223P is intended
to be adopted as an ISO standard.
Aside from the engineering and automation efficiency improvements
machine-readable semantic descriptions of data will provide, a single
and widely used global standard will enable broader interoperability
among applications -- creating a competitive market place to the
benefit of building owners.
About Project Haystack
Project Haystack is a 501(c) tax-exempt non-stock corporation formed
May 28, 2014. The corporation functions as a trade association with the
purpose of fostering the common association and interests of software
and technology companies focused on developing semantic modeling
solutions for data related to smart devices including: building
equipment systems, automation and control devices, sensors and sensing
devices, promotion and education with respect to the semantic data
modeling industry for building automation systems, and to engage in
educational activities directed towards the improvement of business
conditions of the semantic data modeling industry for smart device
data, all on a not-for-profit basis. All work developed by the
project-haystack.org community is provided for use as open source
software under the Academic Free License 3.0. For more information,
please visit www.project-haystack.org.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]About ASHRAE's BACnet Committee
The BACnet Committee is the Standing Standard Project Committee 135
within ASHRAE and is charged with the maintenance and enhancement of
the ANSI/ASHRAE Standards 135 and 135.1, which are the BACnet protocol
and accompanying conformance test standard. The committee is also in
charge of drafting the initial version of the proposed new ASHRAE
Standard 223P. Under the auspices of ASHRAE authorities, ANSI approved
review and approval processes are applied that enable the standards to
be adopted as national, regional, but also global standards. BACnet® is
a registered trademark of ASHRAE Inc., Atlanta, Ga. For more
information, please visit www.bacnet.org.
About the Brick Schema Initiative
Brick is an open-source, BSD-licensed schema for metadata in buildings.
Brick defines (1) a class hierarchy describing the families of sensors,
equipment, subsystems and other building assets, and (2) a minimal,
well-defined set of relationships for describing the associations and
connections between those entities. These concepts are captured in an
extensible RDF ontology. Applications for the built environment (such
as analytics, alarms, controllers and schedulers) use the standard
SPARQL query language to access the Brick representation of a building
and determine the set of resources and relationships that they require
to operate. This declarative approach improves portability across
buildings. For more information, please visit www.brickschema.org.
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