News | September 29, 2015

Jones And Jones Management Group Selects Watersignal To Measure Water In Real Time To Detect Leaks And Conserve Water

To help detect leaks, conserve water and assist with California’s water mandate, Jones And Jones Management Group, one of the state’s largest apartment management companies with more than 2900 units in Central Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley, and East Ventura County, has selected WaterSignal to install their real-time water monitoring system for seven of their multi-family properties.

“We are excited to work with a progressive company like Jones and Jones,” states Sean Rayborn, vice president at WaterSignal. “With large California properties struggling to find new answers to reduce water consumption, WaterSignal offers a unique solution with real savings of 14 percent or more.”

Utilizing breakthrough technology, WaterSignal is a self-contained, non-intrusive device that continuously reads the water meter and sends real-time data wirelessly to a website portal to view the property’s water consumption by the month, day or even down to the hour.

If a major leak occurs, much like an energy surge popping a circuit breaker, the device immediately alerts the manager or engineer that a water spike above the preset limit has occurred. The alert can be sent to both a computer and a smartphone for the manager to act upon, and can be customized for business hours as well as after hours and weekends.

While the WaterSignal monitoring system can help reduce the catastrophic costs associated with undetected leaks, the data the system collects plays a vital role in the building manager’s water conservation efforts.

About WaterSignal
WaterSignal is a green technology company focused on water conservation. WaterSignal measures water flow in real-time to detect leaks and monitor irrigation systems and cooling towers for commercial, multifamily, medical and educational properties. WaterSignal is located in Alpharetta, GA with operations in 17 states. For more information, visit www.watersignal.com.

Source: WaterSignal