Firm works to provide geospatial views from individual properties
Dosaj hinted more details would be forthcoming. The applications are something of an offshoot to the AIRE platform launched earlier this year. The platform leans on AI to provide insights but also focuses on its robust aerial photography database that comprises more than 110 million structures and property elements – think solar panels, swimming pools and the like – that would not typically be presented through use of traditional records.
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“We can tell you the exterior conditions of the house,” he previously told MPA. “We can also tell you straightforward things like does it have solar panels? Does it have a swimming pool? What kind of driveway does it have? So, we can assess conditions of the house all through imagery.”
To be sure, existing datasets – such as standard property records, public records and MLS-data – are already utilized by investors and property stakeholders, but they are not as reliable and can inadvertently omit critical information about properties. AIRE’s geospatial data enables mapping data sets to also be layered on to the platform, allowing it to incorporate a property’s proximity to geographical features, such as coastlines, streets, or train tracks, into the analysis.
It’s fast too: “So if you send an address to our platform, we return back all the property features – if it has a pool, solar panel, the condition of the roof, the condition of the yard, location factors around it if it’s next to a highway or on the coast, plus the liquidity score – all come back within a second and a half.”
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