New CEO deepening PlanIT Impact’s mission to help design a carbon-neutral built environment
March 1, 2021 | Startland News Staff
A startup veteran and architecture industry expert is now leading day-to-day operations for one of Kansas City’s Top Venture Capital-Backed firms, shaping the company’s expanded footprint under a new presidential administration as its founder shifts to a more focused role.
Brett Krug, who began work today as CEO of the building analytics software platform PlanIT Impact, is expected to usher the firm into a new phase of growth, said founder Dominique Davison, who is pivoting her efforts deeper into continued product development capabilities.
“Brett’s experience, focus and energy will be invaluable in taking PlanIT Impact to the next level,” said Davison, who now serves as the company’s Chief Sustainability Officer. “Having a partner who knows our industry as well as how to navigate the next steps in scaling a startup will accelerate our already rapid growth. We’re fortunate to be able to tap Brett’s unique skill set, and I look forward to working closely with him and the entire PlanIT team as we seek to provide more value to a growing number of industries.”
PlanIT Impact is a fast-growing Kansas City startup that has raised more than $1.7 million in funding, landing it on the list of Kansas City’s Top VC-Backed Companies, which is published annually by Startland News. The software platform helps architects, engineers, property managers and building owners efficiently find cost-benefit insights to maximize energy, stormwater, water and transportation savings in construction and renovation projects.
Click here to learn more about PlanIT Impact.
“We are at an interesting environmental and societal intersection,” said Krug, describing plans to expand the company and its influence in creating a carbon-neutral built environment. “Our clients and investors wisely recognize environmental sustainability as one of the greatest challenges of humanity, but also one of the biggest opportunities for value creation for society. I’m excited to lead PlanIT Impact on its mission to reduce carbon emissions and water use by removing barriers to efficiency and sustainability in the designed and built environment.”
An architectural engineer, Krug was co-founder and CEO of a national design-build engineering company that completed the first LEED Platinum project in St. Louis, as well as the World’s First Living Building, the Tyson Living Learning Center for Washington University St. Louis, among many other sustainable pioneering projects.
“There’s no better time than now — particularly in the wake of the Biden Administration’s push for a clean energy revolution that puts the United States on an irreversible path to a net-zero economy by 2050 — to show architects, engineers, property managers, institutional real estate investors, data centers and a host of other verticals how cost-effective sustainability can be,” Krug said.
Davison remains founding principal of DRAW Architecture, an award-winning practice in Kansas City, Missouri, and has made a name for herself as a nationally recognized expert in the sustainable and smart city space. She recently completed the 2020 Pipeline fellowship, joining the elite ranks of some of the Midwest’s top entrepreneurs.
[divide]
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
Featured Business
2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
3 local businessmen named EY’s Entrepreneur of the Year
Three Kansas City area businesspeople recently snagged one of the most prestigious awards for entrepreneurs. EY announced Monday the winners of the Entrepreneur of the Year 2015 for the central Midwest, which included three businessmen from the Kansas City metro area. Those receiving the commendation included: Jody Brazil, CEO of FireMon; Matthew Perry, President of…
Women flex their tech muscles at KC conference
Framed by a LEGO guitar and robotic vehicle, Rheanne Walton and Emma Howard anxiously review notes at their podium as dozens of technology experts await their pitch. The middle-school students are visiting the Kansas City Developers Conference to share the story of their all-girl robotics team, MindSTEM, and how it competes in the FIRST LEGO…
New lab hopes to boost digital inclusion in Kansas City
A new computer lab in Northeast Kansas City hopes to serve as a tech oasis in a digital desert among low-income households. Google donated and opened the new lab Monday in Chouteau Court, furthering the company’s mission to help bridge the area’s digital divide through education about computers and Internet use. Rachel Hack Merlo, Google…
Lantern scores big with Sporting Kansas City deal
Tech firm Lantern Software’s mobile app hit the right pitch with its hometown soccer team. The startup, located in Kansas City, Kan., recently partnered with Sporting Kansas City to offer its mobile concessions ordering platform. The deal, effective Saturday, will allow fans in Sporting KC’s Boulevard Members Club to order and pay for concessions on…

