TEBIN at Think.Future 2025 in Warsaw

TEBIN took part in Think.Future 2025 in Warsaw, an event organised by ARKANCE Poland around sustainable development in construction and industry. The presentation focused on a practical question: how can coordinated design and engineering workflows turn sustainability goals into technical decisions that can be calculated, reviewed, and documented?
Digital tools are useful only when they remain connected to engineering logic. For building systems, that means bringing mechanical, electrical, and plumbing design together with calculations, model coordination, equipment data, and project information rather than treating each output as a separate task.
From sustainability targets to engineering inputs
Sustainable building performance begins with decisions about loads, system configuration, energy sources, equipment selection, controls, and how disciplines interact. Building Information Modeling provides a shared spatial and information environment, but the model must be supported by traceable calculation inputs and technical review.
TEBIN's presentation showed how calculation-led system sizing and coordinated models can support this process. Thermal and hydraulic analysis informs the design; the design is coordinated against architectural and structural constraints; and project information remains available for review as the solution develops.
This approach does not make sustainability automatic. It gives engineers and project stakeholders a clearer basis for comparing options, identifying interfaces, and documenting why a system was designed in a particular way.
Software connected to project delivery
LINEAR GmbH, whose calculation software TEBIN uses for building systems and heating analysis on European projects, attended through its sales team. That connection between a software developer and an engineering user, built through real project delivery rather than a demonstration, helps turn practitioner feedback into more useful workflows.
For TEBIN, software is part of an integrated workflow rather than an isolated answer. Calculation tools, authoring platforms, coordination environments, and data checks each support a defined engineering task. Technical judgement and responsibility remain with the engineers using them.
What the discussion carried forward
Think.Future created a useful meeting point between design and engineering teams, technology providers, and the wider construction industry. The central takeaway from TEBIN's contribution was straightforward: digitalization and sustainability become credible when they are expressed through coordinated systems, reviewable calculations, and information that supports decisions throughout delivery.
That is the practical role of BIM-based design and engineering: connecting disciplines and data so that performance goals can be developed into buildable technical solutions.