Enhance an accurately scanned space with navigation menus, floor plans, minimaps, pop-ups, panoramas, iframes, hotspots, branded screens, and highlight reels.
80% productivity benchmarkDigital twin extensions for field use.
A scanned space can be extended with the tools teams actually use: tags, clickable objects, route guidance, floor plans, SOP prompts, safety-awareness notes, remote-support context, and work briefings.

How this service improves asset identity, onsite access, and handover evidence.
Use interactive tags to attach practical tour content, including access notes, images, videos, webpages, linked spaces, supporting documentation, forms, and media that opens when users select a marker.
70% frontline digital-tool preferenceMake complete objects or zones clickable, so doors, risers, panels, valves, cabinets, rooms, corridors, or restricted areas can launch instructions, paths, media, or pop-up summaries.
50% error-reduction benchmarkCreate guided operational journeys with planned stops, reveal controls, step-by-step content, quizzes, scoring, analytics, and LMS-ready training routes when required.
Support indoor navigation, pathfinding and worker orientation across web, kiosk, AR, and VR-style experiences, including custom destination categories, route planning, elevator avoidance, and branded navigation cues.
Connect asset tagging to worker enablement by using notes, SOP prompts, remote assistance context, training content, IoT-ready equipment context, and location-based knowledge where the project scope requires it.
External benchmarks and planning context. These figures explain why better site information matters, not guaranteed outcomes.
A public connected-worker source reports an 80% productivity increase with connected-worker solutions. The figure is used here as planning context, not an Astagio guarantee.
The same source states that 70% of frontline workers feel more productive with digital tools, reinforcing the value of guided digital twin journeys and spatial instructions.
The source cites a 50% reduction in workplace errors using connected-worker solutions, supporting the case for SOP prompts, safety overlays, and location-based notes.
Use extensions only where they support a real site task.
Extension features work best when they answer real site questions. Tags, clickable zones, floor plans, guided routes, media, quizzes, SOP prompts, and worker journeys should support access, assets, safety awareness, handover, and training.
Extension capabilities translated into practical site outcomes.
Each layer is selected because it helps a team explain a route, asset, hazard, handover point, induction step, or contractor decision before work starts.
Menus, highlight reels, custom screens, panoramas, floor plans, minimaps, iframes and branded presentation.
Clickable information points and interactive areas for objects, zones, routes, documents, images, videos, forms and pop-ups.
Guided routes, reveal controls, quizzes, scores, analytics and repeatable induction or training sequences.
Destination categories, shortest paths, lift avoidance, manual routes, AR-style guidance and kiosk/web orientation.
Practical outputs, not just a walkthrough.
Feature scoping map
A practical matrix matching digital twin extension capabilities to your site-manager, contractor, accessibility, safety-awareness and handover needs.
Experience prototype
A first route, tag group or guided journey that proves how the digital twin should support real work.
Rollout specification
A plan for content ownership, tag conventions, routes, training flows and future additions.
The avoidable site problems this service is built to prevent.
The team wants more than a passive tour
Risk: Users browse once and return to calls, photos and spreadsheets.
Response: The experience is structured around clickable objects, routes, media and workflows that answer practical questions.
Different audiences need different views
Risk: A single generic walkthrough overwhelms visitors with irrelevant information.
Response: Menus, pathfinding, guided experiences and role-specific content help site managers, contractors, visitors and trainees see what matters to them.
From scanned context to a field-ready service layer.
Capture and structure the site
We use accurate site scanning to capture the important spaces, define user journeys, and identify the assets, routes, rooms, access constraints, and audience groups that the extension layer needs to explain.
Design the interactive layer
Tags, clickable zones, menus, floor plans, pop-ups, path points, media, and guided steps are planned around real onsite decisions, not decorative markers.
Build the extension experience
The tour is enhanced with the right combination of tags, clickable zones, guided journeys, indoor navigation, branded presentation, SOP prompts, connected-worker notes, and optional XR access.
Handover for field use
The final experience is reviewed from the perspective of contractors, FM teams, inspectors, and remote stakeholders so it explains access, safety, asset identity, and work context clearly.
What an extension layer can add to a tagged digital twin.
These options are configured around the site, the workforce, and the required handover outcome. Astagio translates extension features into asset tagging, access guidance, safety awareness, training, navigation, and onsite support.
Digital twin editing can support navigation menus, custom highlight reels, iframes, pop-ups, panoramas, hotspots, minimaps, floor plans, personalised content, intro and outro screens, and white-label presentation.
Turn a scanned building into a branded operational map where asset notes, access instructions, documents, media, route prompts, and handover screens sit inside the same virtual environment.Tour tags can add extra content such as images, videos, webpages, links to another space, forms, documents, and other media activated when a user clicks the tag.
Give each asset a practical information point with identity, location context, access notes, evidence photos, safety prompts, linked documents, and maintenance instructions.Clickable zones can make objects or areas interactive, with actions such as tour transitions, navigation paths, links, panoramas, iframes, text, images, videos, menus, pop-ups, and guided flows.
Make doors, risers, panels, valves, cabinets, plant zones, routes, or restricted areas interactive without relying only on visible pin markers.Guided experiences can use screens, tags, shapes, language options, route stops, hide-and-reveal controls, step-by-step journeys, media, quizzes, scoring, analytics, and LMS-style integration where scoped.
Build guided site inductions, safety walkthroughs, contractor briefings, onboarding journeys, task sequences, and knowledge checks from the same scanned space.Indoor navigation can support web, AR, and kiosk use with destination categories, custom icons and colours, dynamic path editing, shortest paths, elevator avoidance, manual routes, and branded AR navigation where scoped.
Guide workers from entrance points to plant rooms, roof access, risers, shutdown points, inspection areas, or contractor routes before the physical visit begins.Public connected-worker use cases include immersive training, knowledge transfer, AR/VR, smart notifications, 3D notes, SOP overlays, remote assistance, IoT context, and location-based knowledge.
Support remote specialists, onsite teams, new starters, inspectors, and FM providers with a shared location-aware briefing layer that can extend into AR or VR when scoped.