Yes, but the level depends on the target system. API/SSO: deeper integration depends on your stack. If you share the names of your PMS, SMS/HSEQ, ERP, and reporting tools, we’ll confirm what is available now and what would need a small integration sprint. Simple link/workflow: we embed links from the twin to PMS tasks, HSEQ
Currently, Mari-Twin operates as a hosted platform, which means access to the interactive twin is tied to an active licence — this covers server costs, storage, updates, and viewer access across departments. However, we understand that long-term data ownership and continuity are critical, especially in maritime. So here’s how we handle it clearly: You always
Yes—as a spatial context layer. The twin provides location truth, access paths, and equipment context. That makes future AI or sensor outputs easier to interpret and act on. Live telemetry is not required for value today, but if you later add sensors or analytics, the twin can serve as the spatial UI to surface it. If you
Yes—by improving scope certainty before commitment. Teams use the twin to verify access, envelopes, routes, lifting paths, and tie-ins before dock. This cuts late discoveries that trigger variation orders. We can review one planned retrofit with your team and mark the exact checks we would run inside the twin. That gives you a clear “with
Today we support per-vessel twins with enterprise viewing. One twin per vessel. Organisation-wide viewer access so departments are not gated. Options for editor seats are limited to the teams who need to curate tags, POIs, or notes. Storage/hosting scales with data size. If you prefer a fleet licence with predictable cost across many vessels, we can price that.
For most vessels, a full capture typically takes 4–6 days onboard, even when scanning at sea. In many cases, sailing conditions are actually more efficient to work in as there is less congestion and fewer competing work parties than during a shipyard period. Once scanning is complete, we begin processing immediately. Depending on the vessel’s scale
Fewer site visits and travel: engineers resolve more questions from shore. Faster planning: less time spent chasing drawings and photos. Reduced rework: clashes and access issues are spotted earlier. Crew readiness: fewer onboarding delays and fewer basic “where is it?” calls. Audit prep: HSEQ teams review spaces remotely and arrive prepared.
