UI and UX continue to be undervalued in the building automation system (BAS) industry.
We are seeing a shift at QA Graphics. More building owners and end users are coming to us after a BAS project has already been handed over because the interface they received does not match how their team actually operates the building.
In many cases, the control system works. The points are mapped, the equipment is running, and the system is technically complete. The issue is the experience the owner is left with.
For years, BAS graphics have often been treated as the final step in a project. The controls are installed, the system is commissioned, and then the graphics are added so the project can be turned over.
That approach is becoming a problem.
The UI Is What the Owner Uses Every Day
When a building is handed over, the owner is not living inside the controller logic. They are not looking at the field wiring. They are not reviewing every point in the database.
They are using the BAS interface.
That interface becomes the face of the system. It is how their team monitors equipment, identifies problems, responds to alarms, and understands what is happening inside the building.
If the UI is poorly organized, inconsistent, or difficult to use, the entire system feels harder to manage. Even if the controls are technically correct, the owner experience suffers.
This is where the BAS industry has continued to discount the value of UI and UX.
The BAS User Has Changed
Another issue the BAS industry needs to recognize is that the person using the system every day is not always a controls engineer.
In many buildings, the BAS is being used by facility managers, maintenance teams, property managers, operators, and staff who may not have deep controls or engineering backgrounds. They are responsible for comfort, uptime, energy performance, tenant complaints, alarms, and day to day building operations, but they may not have been involved in how the system was programmed or how the graphics were built.
That matters.
If the BAS interface is designed only for someone who already understands the equipment, point naming, control logic, and navigation structure, it creates a gap for the people actually using the system after handoff.
A modern BAS UI should help users understand the building faster. It should make navigation clear, graphics consistent, alarms easier to interpret, and equipment information easier to find. The interface should support the building team, not require every user to think like a controls engineer.
This is another reason UI and UX matter. As buildings become more complex and facility teams are asked to do more with fewer resources, the BAS interface has to become easier, clearer, and more standardized. The industry cannot keep assuming the end user is always a highly technical operator.
Standardization Is Becoming More Important
Many building owners operate multiple facilities, multiple BAS platforms, and multiple control contractors. Over time, this can create a mix of different graphic styles, navigation structures, naming conventions, floor plans, equipment views, and alarm workflows.
One building may look completely different from the next. One contractor may build graphics one way, while another contractor uses a different approach.
For the owner, this creates confusion.
Their facilities team should not have to relearn the BAS interface every time they move from one building to another. They should have a consistent experience across their portfolio.
That is why more end users are asking QA Graphics to help revamp and standardize their BAS UI. They want a cleaner, more professional, and more usable front end that supports the way their team actually works.
Modern BAS Interfaces Need to Scale
We are also seeing clear trends in what building owners and system integrators want from a modern BAS interface.
Vector floor plans and vector system graphics are becoming more important because they allow the UI to scale better across different screen sizes, devices, and resolutions. That matters as more users expect a cleaner experience whether they are viewing the system on a desktop, a larger operator workstation, or other modern displays.
We are also seeing increased demand for specialized symbol libraries built around specific market segments and facility types. A generic symbol set is often not enough anymore. Owners and integrators want graphics that better reflect the environments they actually operate.
That includes symbol libraries and UI standards tailored for data centers, grow rooms, emergency rooms, nuclear facilities, and food service environments. These types of facilities have unique equipment, operating priorities, and user expectations. Their BAS interface should reflect that.
A Good UI Makes the BAS More Valuable
A strong BAS interface is not just about making graphics look better.
It improves usability. It helps operators find information faster. It makes troubleshooting easier. It gives owners more confidence in the system. It also helps protect the investment they already made in their building automation system.
A good UI can make an older system feel more organized and usable. It can also bring consistency to new construction, retrofit work, and multi site rollouts.
This is especially important as buildings become more complex. Owners are dealing with more data, more systems, more energy requirements, and more pressure to operate efficiently. The BAS interface needs to support that reality.
Owners Need Flexibility to Maintain Their BAS UI
As buildings change over time, the BAS interface needs to be able to change with them. Floor plans get updated, equipment is replaced, tenants move, and owner standards evolve.
QA Graphics has developed tools and a diverse BAS symbol library set that can operate across almost all major BAS control manufacturer user interfaces. This allows us to help owners, control manufacturers, and system integrators revamp, standardize, and improve BAS graphics without limiting the project to one visual approach.
When we complete a project, the building owner is left with more than better looking graphics. They are left with the actual graphics, standards, and software tools needed to support future UI updates.
That matters.
The owner should have a path to maintain consistency across their buildings as their facilities evolve. System integrators and control contractors remain critical partners for controls, programming, commissioning, and system functionality. QA Graphics supports that process by helping deliver a professional BAS interface that can continue to evolve after handoff.
This gives the owner a stronger long term BAS experience while still supporting the role of the control professionals responsible for the system.
Many System Integrators Already Understand This
To be clear, many system integrators do understand the value of a better BAS user interface. They know the graphics are not just a final project task. They are a major part of what the owner sees, uses, and judges after the system is handed over.
That is one of the reasons QA Graphics’ BAS symbol libraries have been so popular across the industry.
System integrators use our libraries because they help create a more professional and consistent user experience without having to build everything from scratch. They can improve the look and usability of their BAS graphics while still focusing their time on controls, programming, commissioning, and customer support.
The best system integrators understand that a strong UI helps them stand out. It gives the owner a better handoff, a better daily experience, and a more polished final product.
This is not about replacing the control contractor. It is about giving both the integrator and the building owner better tools to deliver and maintain a BAS interface that actually supports the people using the system.
The Industry Needs to Raise the Standard
System integrators and control manufacturers play a critical role in delivering functioning building automation systems. That will not change.
But the industry needs to stop treating UI and UX as secondary.
The handoff to the building owner should include more than a working system. It should include an interface that is clear, consistent, professional, and built for the people who will actually use it.
At QA Graphics, we have spent years building BAS graphics, floor plans, 3D graphics, symbol libraries, and UI standards for the building automation industry. We understand that the graphics are not just decoration. They are the owner’s daily experience with the system.
The trend we are seeing is clear.
Building owners are starting to rethink the BAS interface they inherit at handoff. They want standardization. They want usability. They want scalability. They want industry specific graphics that better reflect their facilities. Most importantly, they want a better experience for their facilities team.
And they are right to ask for it.
QA Graphics is built for this shift. Whether it is a full BAS UI revamp, a standardized floor plan package, vector system graphics, 3D graphics, or BAS symbol libraries that can be used across control manufacturer platforms, our goal is to help owners and integrators deliver a better experience after the building is handed over.



