Hemma starts with strata in Sydney because that’s the loudest, most broken surface. The destination is bigger: one quiet operating system underneath every building people live in, work in, or pass through.
Watch the label change. The surface doesn’t. Strata, hotels, offices, co-living — the work underneath is identical.
Strata is where we start. The patterns are identical anywhere people share a building — only the labels change.
Every building runs on the same six things. Today they live in separate tools, spreadsheets and inboxes. Hemma puts them on one surface.
Residents, owners, staff, guests, contractors, agents — one identity per person across every building they touch.
Units, floors, common areas, meeting rooms, amenities. Each one is a place where things happen and where things break.
Announcements, events, notices, acknowledgements, archives. Everything routed by role, surfaced by relevance, kept by default.
Maintenance, access, cleaning, deliveries, bookings, meetings. The everyday loops that keep a building running.
Levies, rent, bookings, invoices, contractors. The financial layer that already exists — just connected, finally.
A quiet model that drafts the announcement, translates the notice, summarises the meeting, surfaces the unread — in the background, never as a feature.
Payments used to be a tangle of bank APIs, gateways, and forms. Stripe made it one quiet layer that everyone built on top of. Buildings are at the same moment: a tangle of strata software, property managers, group chats, lobby notices, hotel PMSes, office tenant apps. None of it talks.
Hemma is the layer underneath. Quiet. Connected. The thing every building ends up running on, whether the person inside it knows the name or not.
Every OS starts as a small tool people actually use. This one starts with yours.