Water asset register software that mirrors the estate, not the paperwork

Tanks, calorifiers, TMVs, cooling towers — the estate is the thing you actually maintain. BlueWave's register is built so the work keeps it true.

The problem it kills

Most asset registers are a spreadsheet tab created during onboarding and updated at gunpoint. Within a year it disagrees with the estate: assets decommissioned, TMVs added, a calorifier swapped — none of it recorded, because recording it was someone's extra job. Then a risk assessment cites an asset that no longer exists, and the client notices before you do.

One registry, and everything hangs off it

Sites, their assets, and the schematics that explain them — one navigable structure. It's the same spine the compliance records cascade from, so the register isn't a parallel document to maintain; it's the platform's backbone.

  • Sites and assets in one navigable registry
  • Schematics attached where they're useful — at the site and asset
  • The same structure your records, jobs and history hang off

One visit, every asset it touched

A monitoring round covers the tank, the calorifier and twelve TMVs — so the job records all of them, as one visit. No splitting reality into artificial one-asset jobs to fit the software's shape.

  • Multiple assets per job, as the work actually happens
  • Per-asset readings inside a single visit record
  • The visit's story stays whole — one engineer, one site, one job

History stays with the asset

Readings, photos, disinfections and certificates accumulate on the asset itself — across years, engineers and even ownership of the contract. Ask any asset what's happened to it, and it answers.

  • Full service history per asset, not per engineer's memory
  • Photos and certificates pinned to the asset's timeline
  • New engineer on site? The asset briefs them

A register nobody updates is historical fiction

The spreadsheet register fails for a structural reason: keeping it current is extra work that competes with real work. In BlueWave the register updates because the work updates it — every visit touches the assets it serviced, so the estate and the record converge instead of drifting. Nobody has to remember, which is the only maintenance policy that survives contact with a busy week.

Your BS 8580-1 risk assessments cite this register — how the standards fit together is mapped on the compliance hub.

Common questions

Can one job cover multiple assets?
Yes. A monitoring round across the tank, the calorifier and twelve TMVs is recorded as one visit, with per-asset readings inside it. There's no artificial one-asset-per-job limit forcing you to split a real visit to fit the software.
Does asset history survive an engineer leaving or a contract changing hands?
It does. Readings, photos, disinfections and certificates accumulate on the asset itself, across years, engineers and even ownership of the contract. A new engineer on site can ask the asset what's happened to it instead of relying on someone's memory.
How does the asset register stay up to date?
The work updates it. Every visit touches the assets it serviced, so the estate and the record converge instead of drifting, with no separate spreadsheet to maintain during onboarding and never again.
What kinds of water assets can it track?
Cold water storage tanks, calorifiers, TMVs, cooling towers and the rest of the estate you maintain, each with its own schematics and history. The register is the same spine your compliance records and BS 8580-1 risk assessments hang off.

See your estate the way your auditor wishes you did

Bring one real site to the demo — we'll build its register live, assets and schematics included, and show you the history view your spreadsheet can't.