JE Dunn leads $5M round in a local, ‘skunkworks’ tech spinout

September 27, 2016  |  Bobby Burch

JE Dunn Site 1001

One of Kansas City’s top corporations has led a $5 million investment round in a local tech firm that helps manage the torrents of paperwork associated with building maintenance and management.

Kansas City-based JE Dunn led the Series A round in Site 1001, a software company that spun out of the construction giant to digitize and automate facilities maintenance and management. Kansas City-area based funds Flyover Capital, Tifec and Ward Ventures also were apart of the investment round, which will go toward building Site 1001’s engineering, sales and marketing efforts.

“Site 1001 bridges the gap between the old hodge-podge of paper and PC-based facilities management systems of the past 30 to 50 years, and the hyper-connected and automated ‘smart’ building systems of tomorrow,” Site 1001 CEO Cleve Adams said in a release. “By bringing all that legacy information in, combining it with the real time information connected building controls generate, and putting it all in the hand of the person who needs it when and where he needs it, we can dramatically reduce operational costs and extend the life of the building.”

The Site 1001 system simplifies work for facility managers, who often must rely on binders of paperwork and a variety of software tools to conduct maintenance or other tasks. It was also built with old and new building management systems in mind — such as building automation, energy management, internet of things, analytics and other connected systems for smart buildings and cities.

With the cloud-based product, those systems are aggregated into a mobile app for the building manager, allowing her to scan a particular room’s code with the app to pull up facility information, such as structural and mechanical drawings to a building’s carpet and light bulbs. App users can also create task lists, log service, issue work orders and manage various IoT devices within a facility.

Site 1001 CTO Eric Hall originally developed the idea — described as a “skunkworks” project — while he was a vice president at JE Dunn, according to a release. Hall created Site 1001 in response to frustrations with the information handoff between a builder and the building owner.

“As a construction company we used … enterprise tools like resource planning and building information modeling to track every detail of what went into the building — from the $6 million chiller on the roof to the $2 electrical outlet in the basement supply room,” Hall said in a release. “But those systems are extremely expensive and difficult, so very few on the building operations side use them.”

Adams said that in the next few years, smart building tech trends will be mainstream, positioning the firm for sustained success.  

“Building automation, analytics and smart management will be key to reducing costs, increasing efficiency and extending the life of buildings and building ecosystems by 20 percent or more,” he said in a release. “In a couple of years it will be no big deal that a light bulb can request its own work order to be replaced, and it will be Site 1001 that is there to accept the work order and notify the nearest facilities manager to complete it.”

Site 1001 was founded in 2016 and employs less than 10 people, according to its LinkedIn page. The company’s reports that its headquarters are located at 1001 Locust Street, Kansas City, Mo., which is also JE Dunn’s headquarters.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Pitch locally or look to outsiders? How founder bias toward funding at all costs could leave your distracted startup without a why

        By Tommy Felts | March 19, 2025

        Kansas City’s funding gaps often feel deeper for women entrepreneurs, two top founders said Tuesday, describing a startup ecosystem that pits emerging entrepreneurs against each other — but perhaps more critically, against time — in a highly competitive fight for a limited amount of local capital. “Kansas City is very startup friendly — at least…

        KC-built Buzz acquired by Vegas tech company hoping to solve AI’s ‘last mile’ challenge in property management

        By Tommy Felts | March 18, 2025

        A leading property tech company is placing its bet on the Kansas City-built rent collections platform that Buzz brings to the table, announcing the AI-driven startup’s acquisition Tuesday by Las Vegas-based Pay Ready. The potential for artificial intelligence’s use in an industry historically is limited by the way tech collides with humans, said serial entrepreneur…

        Still in the game: 16 startups advance in Kansas pitch tournament; courting a new style of seed funding

        By Tommy Felts | March 17, 2025

        WICHITA — And then there were 16. Monday’s pitch competition announcement served up sweet news for more than a dozen Kansas startups as local founders learned they’re advancing in the Gamechangers & Champions “Bracket Bash for Innovators and Angels” — a tournament-style event set to end with a $20,000 grand prize. The just-released list of…

        Trio adds Asian fusion to KCK culinary cluster; new BYO ramen, poke spot opens by May

        By Tommy Felts | March 17, 2025

        This little strip in Kansas City, Kansas, boasts some of the metro’s favorite restaurants: Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que, 1889 Pizza Napoletana, and Gus’s World Famous Chicken.  Lulu’s Thai Noodle Shop is just down the street in Westwood. Now an Asian fusion restaurant is joining the mix. Sannin — poke, sushi and ramen — plans to…