Service layer · Asset identity

Asset tagging for buildings, plant areas, and complex workspaces.

Astagio gives physical features a usable asset ID inside the 3D site record. Each tag can show what the asset is, where it is, how to reach it, and what engineers or contractors need to know before work begins.

Technician reviewing asset tags in a scan-based industrial site record
SERVICE NODE
Operational value

How this service improves asset identity, onsite access, and handover evidence.

01

Create clear tag codes for access points, plant assets, risers, panels, fire systems, valves, doors, roof hatches, and service zones.

36% onsite diagnosis benchmark
02

Attach practical explanations that make sense to contractors, maintenance engineers, inspectors, and facilities managers.

£1.0T downtime exposure context
03

Connect asset identity with surrounding spatial evidence so teams understand both the item and the environment around it.

04

Build a searchable site record from scan geometry and visual context rather than relying on isolated photos or spreadsheets.

Impact context

External benchmarks and planning context. These figures explain why better site information matters, not guaranteed outcomes.

36%onsite diagnosis benchmark

Field-service research shows why asset tags should include route, access, and evidence notes rather than only a name or code.

£1.0Tdowntime exposure context

Unplanned downtime has a major operational cost, so asset identity and location context should be available before the team travels.

Why facilities teams care

Give engineers more than a spreadsheet and a site photo.

Facilities teams need fast answers: what is the asset, where is it, how is it reached, what blocks access, and what must the contractor know before the RAMS, permit, or work order is issued? Tags make those answers visible and repeatable.

Asset codes linked to real spatial context
Clickable points for panels, risers, valves, doors and safety features
Field notes that explain access, constraints and supporting documents
A stronger handover record than static images alone
Tags

Attach identity, instructions, media, links, evidence photos and safety notes to the exact asset location inside the tour.

Polygons

Make whole doors, panels, cabinets, risers or zones clickable when a single pin would not make the target obvious.

Pop-ups and iframes

Surface registers, forms, PDFs, webpages, or work-order context directly beside the object being discussed.

What you can hand over

Practical outputs, not just a walkthrough.

Tagged asset register

A structured list of asset codes, categories, locations, notes and associated tour positions.

Interactive tour layer

A navigable 3D walkthrough with tags placed where the onsite user naturally looks for information.

Site-manager briefing map

A view of priority assets, access constraints, work zones and escalation points for contractor planning.

Problems this prevents

The avoidable site problems this service is built to prevent.

Contractor arrives at the wrong riser

Risk: Lost time, repeated calls, escort delays and aborted work.

Response: The contractor previews the route, opens the tagged riser, checks access notes, and arrives at the right location with the right keys.

Critical valve is known by different names

Risk: Teams waste time reconciling drawings, local names and inherited spreadsheets.

Response: The tag record aligns the visual asset, code, local label, notes and surrounding landmarks in one view.

01

Define the tag set

We agree the asset categories, naming conventions, priority locations, and handover fields before tagging begins.

02

Place tags in context

Tags are positioned within the virtual tour so the user can see the asset, its route, and nearby constraints in one view.

03

Write field-ready notes

Each tag can include access explanations, safety observations, location cues, and work instructions tailored to the onsite audience.