If you manage a commercial property in Massachusetts, you know the sting of rising utility bills. HVAC units hum day and night. Lights stay on in empty hallways. Water heaters run harder than they should, and nobody notices until the next bill lands on your desk.
It’s not that you’re trying to waste money. Without centralized control, it’s nearly impossible to stop these leaks in efficiency.
At Harold Brothers Mechanical Contractors, we’ve spent decades helping New England businesses upgrade and maintain their HVAC and plumbing systems. While we don’t sell or install Building Management Systems (BMS) ourselves, we often work on projects where one is already in place. We’ve seen firsthand how a well-tuned BMS can tame runaway energy use, extend the life of mechanical equipment, and slash monthly costs.
In this guide, we’ll walk you through how a BMS can help your building cut energy waste across HVAC, plumbing, lighting, and more, and what factors influence your potential savings.
A Building Management System (BMS) is essentially the command center for your building’s key systems, including:
Think of it as the building’s brain, adjusting settings on the fly, reducing wasted energy, and alerting you before small issues turn into expensive emergencies.
A properly configured BMS typically cuts 10% to 30% off annual energy costs.
If your facility spends $100,000 a year on utilities, you could save $10,000 to $30,000 annually, not to mention fewer service calls, longer equipment life, and improved occupant comfort.
Long-term gains often include:
A Building Management System (BMS) does more than just automate your building’s systems, it helps you spend less on utilities every month. By monitoring energy use and adjusting equipment in real time, a BMS eliminates waste across HVAC, plumbing, lighting, and even the building’s envelope. Here’s how each area contributes to meaningful cost savings for commercial buildings in Massachusetts. This is a key part of building maintenance practices that can save you money, and keep your building fully operational.
HVAC is usually the biggest energy drain in any building, but a Building Management System (BMS) can help keep it in check. A BMS adjusts heating and cooling in real time based on both indoor and outdoor temperatures, controls fan speeds and dampers to improve airflow, and matches system schedules to actual occupancy.
It also prevents equipment from running when it’s not needed. Without a BMS, your HVAC system is like leaving your car idling all night; with one, it only runs when necessary and never overdoes it.
A BMS can coordinate domestic hot water heaters and recirculation pumps while also detecting leaks or unusual usage spikes. Real savings come from turning off water heating in unoccupied zones, reducing pump runtimes, and catching leaks early before they waste water and energy.
It’s like putting your plumbing system on a smart timer with eyes, it runs only when necessary and alerts you the moment something seems off.
Plug load, anything that plugs into an outlet like computers, vending machines, and monitors, can account for 20% to 30% of a building’s energy use. A BMS helps by turning off non-essential lighting and plug loads in empty areas, dimming lights based on available daylight, and automating schedules for displays, break-room appliances, and signage.
Reducing plug load might sound minor, but in a 50,000-square-foot commercial space, the savings can add up fast.
A BMS can monitor energy use across circuits and panels in real time, giving facility managers the insight they need to identify power-hungry equipment and phantom loads, stagger heavy loads to avoid demand spikes and utility penalties, and detect irregular energy use that could signal failing equipment.
This kind of oversight is especially valuable for Massachusetts businesses with heavy machinery, data centers, or multi-zone HVAC setups.
Some advanced BMS platforms integrate with sensors that monitor insulation, airflow, and humidity to keep buildings running efficiently. They ensure that windows and doors aren’t leaking conditioned air, ventilation stays balanced for both comfort and code compliance, and weatherproofing and insulation perform as intended.
It’s essentially a wellness check for your building’s walls, windows, and insulation.
Your savings will vary based on:
The biggest hidden cost isn’t the equipment itself — it’s not using it to its full potential. Many facilities install a BMS but never leverage its data and automation features.
The result? Missed savings.
Regular training for your team and periodic system reviews are key to ensuring your BMS pays for itself year after year.
Most BMS hardware components come with one- to three-year manufacturer warranties, but since each system is customized for the building, coverage details vary. Support or software service contracts are usually separate, so make sure you understand what’s included.
Managing a commercial property in New England is challenging enough without wasting money on energy leaks you can’t see.
A Building Management System brings all your HVAC, plumbing, lighting, and electrical systems together, cutting waste and helping you save an average of 10% to 30% each year. It also promotes healthier equipment and fewer emergency repairs.
Want to learn how to make your facility more efficient right now? Read our guide: Energy Efficiency in Commercial Buildings to uncover more cost-saving steps you can start today.
At Harold Brothers, we’re here to keep your HVAC and plumbing systems running at peak performance, whether you already have a BMS or are considering one. We’ll make sure your mechanical systems are working as hard as they need to, and not a bit harder.