HomeFundingLondon-based SenSat raises €9 million for its simulated reality tech

London-based SenSat raises €9 million for its simulated reality tech

London-based SenSat, which uses AI to unlock value in the infrastructure industry by using digital representations of real world locations, announced €9 million in a Series A funding round led by Tencent, with participation from Sistema Venture Capital.

The new capital will be used to support growth, enabling SenSat to expand its London team of 30 experts by more than three-fold over the next year, focusing on data scientists, mathematicians, software developers and creative problem solvers, as well as driving continued international expansion.

At the heart of SenSat is Mapp, which allows infrastructure companies to interact with their workplaces digitally for the first time by allowing digital automation to help them make better decisions with real world data. Despite only launching in 2018, the startup is already transforming the industry, with Mapp providing major value to more than 30 international infrastructure companies.

SenSat creates digital representations of real world locations – otherwise known as digital twins – infusing real time data sets from a variety of sources. The result is an accurate, digital and up-to-date copy of the real world in a machine-readable format. This enables offline industries, such as infrastructure, to make more informed decisions and accurate analysis, driving vast improvements in safety, cost-efficiency, waste generation, project collaboration, and carbon reduction.

$94 trillion in infrastructure investment is required by 2040 to sustain global growth predictions, yet Infrastructure is one of the least digitised sectors in the global economy, lacking the automation and transparency that has transformed online industries. This lack of digital impact has also meant that much of the industry relies on traditional and inefficient ways of doing  business, resulting in a tremendous amount of waste. Combined with the environmental degradation and resource waste linked to unsustainable growth, a particularly compelling case can be made for introducing AI and digital automation to physical sectors.

“SenSat has a simple but profound goal: to build the third platform, an intelligent eco-system that translates the real world into a version understandable to AI,” said James Dean, co-founder and CEO of SenSat. “This technology will help us to build a more sustainable future, using the wealth of new insight to help humans make better decisions. Our plan is to first focus on perfecting our human controlled digital twin technology, so we can help to transform the way we deliver infrastructure.

“Using AI-powered digital twin technology to replicate the real world in a digital capacity is the next step towards using data to make better decisions, not only in infrastructure but in how we impact the world as humans. SenSat has scaled rapidly in the past year, and we have big plans for this first major round of investment, adding to our world class AI expertise, and enabling fresh partnerships with innovators in a range of different fields. With Tencent we share similar ambitions about the impact of enterprise internet on laggard industries and how that can lead to us operating our world more sustainably.”

“Infrastructure is the only sector to have had a 0% net productivity increase since the 1960s, with a history of inefficiencies in doing business, contributing to a staggering 61% of total UK waste,” added Harry Atkinson, co-founder and chief data officer of SenSat. “The result is an estimated $5.2 trillion direct economic loss per year. Knowing this, we see a huge opportunity in allowing computers and AI to analyse the real world in order to help us grow more sustainably – an area which SenSat is pioneering.”

As part of a project with Murphy Group for the National Grid, SenSat digitised a 52km underground transmission line as a part of the Triton Knoll offshore wind farm project, resulting in reducing time on site by 200%, as well as vastly reducing the impact on local wildlife thanks to less invasive methods. Most recently, SenSat worked with Berkeley homes, recreating the physical environment digitally for the development of 10,000 new homes.

The assimilation of thousands of separate data points into a single view meant that Berkeley was able to accelerate their design and decision making process by eight months, whilst also providing a powerful tool for future public consultation.

We are delighted with our investment into SenSat, which aligns well with the ambitions of Tencent’s Cloud and Smart Industries Group,” said Dr Ling Ge, Chief European Representative at Tencent Holdings. “We believe SenSat is well positioned to introduce mass digital automation to offline industries that have not yet engaged in the digital revolution; and we look forward to SenSat applying its platform to a broadening range of smart industries.”

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Mary Loritz
Mary Loritz
Mary served as Head of Content at EU-Startups.com from November 2018 until November 2019. She is an experienced journalist and researcher covering tech and business topics.
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