Tag: E-Mobility

  • Five mobility trends are driving the real estate industry

    Five mobility trends are driving the real estate industry

    Parking was a marginal topic for a long time. Today, it is seen as the key to optimizing the value of properties. This is because outdoor spaces, once pure infrastructure, are becoming strategic earnings factors thanks to digital technology. “Parking space is no longer a necessary evil, but an integral part of the value chain,” says Jakob Bodenmüller, CEO of Wemolo. His company operates over 3,500 locations across Europe with 2.5 million parking transactions every day and sees an industry that is reinventing itself.

    1.Free-flow technology, the farewell to the barrier
    Cameras instead of barriers with license plate recognition enable parking management without physical barriers, ticket loss or maintenance costs. User vehicles are digitally identified and authorized users park automatically. This reduces operating costs by up to 60 percent while improving the customer experience.

    Mixed-use districts benefit in particular. Retailers, service providers and residents can manage spaces as required, for example on a time-limited or quota-based basis. Third-party parkers are automatically recognized and sanctioned. According to Wemolo, their share drops by up to 85 percent within the first few months.

    2.Shared parking – new sources of revenue through cooperation
    What is a supermarket during the day can become a residential area at night. Shared parking uses free time slots in private spaces and opens them up to third parties in a controlled manner. Supermarkets, office buildings or retail parks can generate additional revenue of up to 80 euros per parking space per month without any structural investment.

    The model is a liberating blow for cities. Around a third of inner-city traffic is caused by the search for a parking space. If private parking space can be managed digitally, traffic volumes can be reduced and space efficiency increased. “We orchestrate instead of opening up and control always remains with the operator,” emphasizes Dominic Winkler

    3.E-mobility as a business model
    Charging points are not only a regulatory obligation, but also a revenue driver. Those who charge stay longer, a measurable advantage for retailers. Studies show that every additional minute of charging extends the length of stay and increases sales by over one percent.

    By linking e-mobility and smart parking, charging infrastructure can be dynamically controlled, priced or offered as a premium service. Integration into the parking management system significantly reduces costs and at the same time boosts the ESG performance of a property.

    4.Parking Intelligence uses data as a management tool
    Parking data becomes corporate intelligence. Automatically recorded key figures provide information on occupancy, dwell time, customer frequency and seasonal patterns. Facility and asset managers can use this information to adapt rental models, optimize personnel planning or develop targeted marketing strategies.

    For the first time, Parking Intelligence creates a data-based foundation for location decisions. This turns parking space into a mirror of actual asset performance, making it measurable, comparable and controllable.

    5.AI space monitoring, from parking space to portfolio sensor
    The next stage of digitalization lies above the asphalt. 360-degree cameras and AI analytics monitor outdoor areas in real time, detect garbage, vandalism or snow and automatically report service tickets to facility managers.

    This drastically reduces monitoring costs, maintenance contracts are evaluated objectively and standards can be managed centrally. This is a particular advantage for portfolios with hundreds of locations. The first operators are already testing how monitoring data can also be used to optimize locations.

    Parking space as a new asset
    The future of the real estate industry no longer lies just in buildings, but in front of them. Expo Real 2025 showed that thinking digitally about parking space changes the business model of a property.

    “The challenge is not to be aware of trends, but to implement them,” says Bodenmüller. Parking management is becoming the interface between mobility, ESG and value creation. A dynamic market in which standing still is finally a thing of the past.

  • Pfanner & Frei AG takes over re.com Elektroanlagen AG

    Pfanner & Frei AG takes over re.com Elektroanlagen AG

    Pfanner & Frei AG, founded in 1913, is a company deeply rooted in the Swiss electrical industry and is characterised by comprehensive services in the areas of classic electrical installations, modern e-mobility solutions and smart home technologies. Under the management of Enis Bajra and Timo Wenger, Pfanner & Frei AG has established itself as an innovative and reliable partner with a strong commitment to quality and customer satisfaction.

    Re.com Elektroanlagen AG, an integral part of the Zurich electrical landscape since 2001, is known for its high-quality services and strong commitment to innovation and technological development. With the acquisition by Pfanner & Frei AG, re.com will continue to operate as an independent company, but with increased co-operation in various technical and operational areas.

    “re.com is known for its excellent reputation in the Zurich region. Leading this professional company into the future is our heart’s desire,” agree the new partners Enis Bajra and Timo Wenger.

    “After 25 years, the time has come to hand over the company to a new generation. The match between the two corporate cultures and market orientations is ideal for ensuring the long-term succession of my life’s work,” says Romeo Raffaele.

    Romeo Raffaele, the founder of re.com Elektroanlagen AG, sees the partnership with Pfanner & Frei AG as an ideal opportunity to place the company in the hands of a new generation while continuing the company’s values and quality standards. Enis Bajra will take over as Chairman of the Board of Directors and the Executive Board, while the long-standing Managing Director Alex Stanzani will continue to manage the day-to-day operations.

    This partnership is an exemplary approach for the long-term safeguarding and further development of both companies and strengthens their position in a dynamically growing market. Employees, customers and business partners can continue to rely on the proven quality and professionalism of re.com, which will now be further expanded with the additional resources and expertise of Pfanner & Frei AG.

  • Self-consumption community in the double sense

    Self-consumption community in the double sense

    In three different pilot areas – a commercial area, a mixed-use area and a residential area – local businesses and residents are to cooperate both in the production and storage of solar energy (pooling for self-consumption) and in the use of electric vehicles (sharing, “Mobility as a Service”). This addresses two problems that are emerging in Switzerland and in Winterthur in the context of the Energy Strategy 2050: on the one hand, the sluggish expansion of solar energy and, on the other hand, the high density of fossil-fuelled motorised private transport.

    The project is based on the cooperation of various partners from Winterthur from the fields of higher education/education, industry, structural and civil engineering and city administration. In particular, the areas are confronted with the issue of combining self-use and shared mobility. While the installation of a PV system including ZEV will soon be a matter of course in new buildings, e-vehicle sharing is still not very widespread here either. ZEV^2, on the other hand, starts with existing buildings and aims to design the optimal solution for mixed areas by combining technologies (metering infrastructure, energy management system, charging infrastructure – and the digital networking of these three systems) and needs (use, billing, transparency).

    The project is being carried out by the City of Winterthur under the project management of the Climate Unit. The project is also financially supported by the Swiss Federal Office of Energy with the Front Runner programme.

    Further information is available on request from the Smart City programme management.