The turning point came in the early 2000s with the rise of KNX (formerly EIB – European Installation Bus). The team at Weinzierl realized that while KNX was a brilliant standard for decentralized building control, the tools to connect KNX to the wider world of IT (Ethernet, IP, and web services) were either too expensive or too restrictive.
Imagine a gateway that learns your building's thermal inertia. It predicts that the office will reach 24°C at 2:00 PM based on sunlight and occupancy patterns, and it pre-cools the room at 1:45 PM automatically, without human programming. Weinzierl is actively testing lightweight TensorFlow Lite models on their next-generation BAOS hardware. weinzierl engineering gmbh
| Feature | Weinzierl Engineering GmbH | Jung / Gira (Legacy KNX) | Siemens / Schneider (Industrial) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Gateways & Logic | Switches & Sockets | PLCs & Substations | | Open Source Support | Native (MQTT, REST) | Poor (Proprietary only) | Moderate (Requires license) | | Price Point | Mid-range (Affordable) | High (Premium hardware) | Very High (Enterprise) | | Ease of Scripting | Easy (LUA, Python libs) | Difficult | Very Complex (IEC 61131) | | KNX Secure | Full support | Partial | Rare | The turning point came in the early 2000s
In a world of closed ecosystems, Weinzierl remains proudly open. Keywords Used: Weinzierl Engineering GmbH, KNX, building automation, MQTT gateway, BAOS, KNX Secure, smart building, IP Interface, ETS Apps, Edge AI. It predicts that the office will reach 24°C
Whether you are a DIY home automation enthusiast using Home Assistant, a certified KNX integrator managing a 50-story tower, or a university researcher studying building energy efficiency, Weinzierl Engineering GmbH provides the tools you need to bridge the analog past with the digital future.
They represent a rare breed of German engineering: precise, durable, and unfashionably practical. While other companies chase flashy mobile apps, Weinzierl focuses on the reliability of the data pipe. They understand that a smart building is only as smart as its ability to communicate openly, and for that job, no one does it better.