Operations
Site Maps and Building Rollups
Use building-level site maps to summarize child locations, asset counts, high-risk concentration, and open work for leadership and dispatch.
Updated June 5, 2026
What a site map is
A site map gives a broader building view than a floor plan and summarizes what is happening under that building's child locations. Site maps are available for location nodes typed as buildings that have a plan image. Open the building context and choose the site-map view, or navigate to app.rivolq.com/locations/<nodeId>/site-map. The feature is gated by spatial floor plans.
What the page shows
The page includes the building plan image, a summary strip, child-location dots, a rollup list, and empty states. The summary strip shows child areas, assets, high-risk assets, open work orders, plan version, and upload date. Each child location gets an aggregate dot whose tooltip shows name, asset count, high-risk count, and open work-order count. Current building dots are synthetic placements, so use them as a high-level rollup, not precise room placement.
When to use them
Use site maps to see which child areas have the most assets, where high-risk equipment concentrates, where active work pressure sits, and whether a building has enough structure. Floor plans remain better for pinning individual assets and cleaning up unlocated assets; a healthy setup uses both.
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