From PDF to project data
Import the floor plan, review room structure and keep the project context ready for technical work.
Prometo helps HVAC teams turn floor plans into structured project data for heat load, emitter design, heat pump context and balancing workflows.
Short answer
Prometo is heat load calculation software for HVAC teams that starts from the project floor plan and keeps room data, calculation context and downstream planning steps connected. It supports professional workflows, while final technical verification remains project-specific.
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The same basic structure matters across the workflow: start with project context, check room data, then carry cleaner information into the next technical step.
Import the floor plan, review room structure and keep the project context ready for technical work.
Room areas, envelope surfaces, U-values, design temperatures, ventilation assumptions and setpoints should stay tied to the calculation.
Heat load data can support heat pump sizing, underfloor heating design, hydraulic balancing and documentation.
Prometo is built for HVAC contractors, heating specialists and MEP teams that need a connected workflow instead of separate spreadsheets and notes.
The intended result is cleaner room and project data that can carry into heat load, heat pumps, surface heating and balancing.
The software supports the workflow, but final project assumptions and professional responsibility remain with qualified users.
Prometo supports a structured heat load workflow with DIN EN 12831 context. Final technical checks and project-specific responsibility remain with qualified users.
It is aimed at HVAC contractors, heating specialists and planning teams that need connected project data from floor plan to calculation workflow.
No. The software structures data and workflows, but project-specific assumptions and final decisions must be checked professionally.
Review room structure, floor areas, envelope surfaces, U-values, design temperatures, ventilation assumptions and project-specific notes.
Yes. Heat load context is a core basis for heat pump sizing and operating strategy.