Bentley Systems says that the combination of its iTwin platform and Cesium offered 鈥渢he most comprehensive digital platform for the built and natural environment鈥.
Cesium is an open platform for creating 3D geospatial applications, and its 3D Tiles open standard has many users. Cesium ion, the company鈥檚 software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform, brings 3D geospatial experiences to more than a million devices every month, while Cesium's open-source offerings have more than 10 million downloads.
Bentley鈥檚 iTwin platform powers digital twin solutions that are used to design, build and operate infrastructure. The combination of Cesium plus iTwin enables developers to align 3D geospatial data with engineering, subsurface, IoT, reality and enterprise data to create digital twins, Bentley said.
Bentley chief executive Nicholas Cumins said: 鈥淎 3D geospatial view is the most intuitive way for owner-operators and engineering services providers to search for, query, and visualise information about infrastructure networks and assets. With the combined capabilities of Cesium and iTwin, infrastructure professionals can make better informed decisions in full 3D geospatial context 鈥 all within a single, highly performant environment.鈥
The financial details of the transaction were not disclosed.
Cesium began in 2011, when a team of developers at aerospace software company Analytical Graphics Inc (Ansys) set out to create an application to visualise objects in space. Cesium was released as an open source application in 2012 and spun out as an independent company in 2019. Like Bentley, Cesium is based in Pennsylvania, USA.
Cesium chief executive Patrick Cozzi added: 鈥淛oining Bentley marks an important milestone for Cesium as we continue our journey to create the best developer platform for the built and natural environment鈥攆ounded on open standards and open-source technologies. The combined power of our two organisations and our shared commitment to openness will provide new opportunities for growth and create greater value for an already flourishing developer ecosystem that ranges from small start-ups to global enterprises.鈥
Patrick Cozzi has now been named Bentley鈥檚 chief platform officer, leading the development of the combined Cesium and iTwin platform offerings, reporting to Bentley鈥檚 chief technology officer Julien Moutte.
Komatsu, the Japanese manufacturer of construction machinery, uses Cesium鈥檚 3D geospatial technology to monitor construction sites globally, track changes over time, compare architectural plans with real-world data, and run near real-time measurements. It is expecting benefits from having Cesium integrated into Bentley.
Chikashi Shike, executive officer of Komatsu鈥檚 smart construction promotion division, said: 鈥Komatsu and Cesium brought novel thinking to the construction industry by leveraging advanced visualisations to deliver more precise insights and enable our customers to make better, more informed construction decisions. With Cesium as part of Bentley, we can further enrich our smart construction digital twins with engineering models, subsurface data, and more, for safer and more efficient construction projects.鈥
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