Building Automation Systems NJDDC controls, BACnet integration, and BAS retrofits
Dimatic Control helps New Jersey building owners and facility managers get control of the system behind the HVAC system: schedules, sensors, VFDs, rooftop units, boilers, air handlers, alarms, and the BAS logic that determines comfort and energy use.
A BAS problem usually looks like an HVAC problem first.
The top New Jersey BAS results focus on broad promises: comfort, efficiency, and smart controls. What most of them do not explain is the practical handoff between mechanical HVAC service and the controls layer. That handoff is where Dimatic is strongest. We diagnose the rooftop unit, boiler, VFD, sensor, damper, and control sequence together so the repair matches the real failure.
The U.S. Department of Energy notes that high-performance building controls can reduce commercial HVAC energy use by about 30% when implemented correctly. That result does not come from installing a dashboard alone. It comes from clean point mapping, correct sequences, verified sensors, maintained equipment, and a facility team that can actually read alarms and trends.
Best-fit projects
- Tenants complain about hot and cold zones even after repeated service calls
- Rooftop units, boilers, pumps, or VFDs run outside occupied schedules
- A legacy control panel cannot communicate with new equipment
- The BAS shows devices offline, failed sensors, or nuisance alarms
- Energy bills keep rising but no single mechanical failure explains it
- Facility staff cannot see trends, run times, or alarm history clearly
BAS services for New Jersey commercial buildings
DDC and BAS Controls
Controller replacement, point mapping, sequence review, schedules, sensors, relays, actuators, and integration with rooftop units, boilers, air handlers, and pumps.
BACnet Integration
Communication troubleshooting for BACnet/IP, BACnet MS/TP, Modbus gateways, VFDs, networked thermostats, and mixed-vendor control environments.
Energy Optimization
Occupied schedules, setpoint resets, economizer logic, VFD staging, trend review, and controls changes that reduce waste without sacrificing comfort.
Retrofit and Repair
Modernization for older pneumatic, analog, or unsupported DDC controls when parts are scarce, alarms are unreliable, or the building needs remote visibility.
What we check before recommending a BAS upgrade
A full BAS replacement is not always the first answer. We start with the pieces that determine whether the existing system can be corrected, phased, or needs replacement.
- 1Mechanical equipment condition and whether the unit can respond to control commands
- 2Controller age, manufacturer support, network health, and replacement part availability
- 3Sensor accuracy, actuator movement, VFD status, and field wiring condition
- 4Occupied schedules, after-hours overrides, alarm history, and trend data
- 5Integration needs for future equipment, remote access, and facility reporting
| Control layer | Best for | What it gives you |
|---|---|---|
| Basic thermostat | One unit or zone | Limited scheduling and no building-wide visibility |
| DDC panel | Commercial HVAC equipment | Programmable control logic, sensors, alarms, and trend data |
| Full BAS | Whole building or campus | Central dashboard for HVAC schedules, alarms, energy, and multi-equipment coordination |
| BAS retrofit | Existing building | Keeps useful equipment while replacing the control layer that is causing waste or downtime |
Controls plus mechanical judgment
We understand the HVAC equipment and the BAS command layer, so troubleshooting does not stop at the first alarm.
Built around operations
Schedules, overrides, tenant comfort, and maintenance access are handled as operating realities.
Backed by deeper guides
For panel selection details, pair this page with our HVAC control panel guide and commercial HVAC service page.