About
Built by people who understand the deal.
We pair production software engineering with hands-on real estate operating and fund management experience. We build the systems we would trust with our own investors' data — because we do.
The principals
Leadership.

Michael Hironimus, CCIM
Co-founder and CEO
Michael brings over twenty years in commercial real estate — brokerage, private-equity operations as a COO, and portfolio and asset management for high-net-worth investors through Duckridge Realty Advisors. A CCIM Senior Instructor and former Oregon/SW Washington Chapter President, he leads PropTech Integrations with the same operator's lens: governed AI that fits how CRE firms actually run deals, assets, and teams.

Daniel Holmlund
Co-founder and CTO
Daniel leads AI integration as CTO — twenty-seven years as a software engineer, twelve years teaching software development at Intel, and seven years on Intel AI products. He brings that production discipline to CRE firms that need governed automation and secure solutions. Outside the build work, he founded the Alternative Investing Club and has invested across 3,300+ real estate units.
Real estate operators
Hands-on brokerage, operating, and fund management experience — the workflows we audit are workflows we run.
Production engineers
The systems we deploy are written, versioned, and reviewable — built to the standard of software that handles investor money, because ours does.
CRE only
One industry's workflows, data, and liability. No side quests.
Why it matters
The asymmetry is the product.
An engineer can learn what a rent roll is. What they can't shortcut is knowing which client relationship dies if that rent roll leaks, which broker will quietly refuse to use the new system, and which 'inefficiency' is actually how deals get done. That judgment is the difference between automation that gets adopted and automation that gets routed around.
Next step
Book a discovery call.
Thirty minutes with the people who'd do the work. We'll tell you plainly whether an engagement makes sense — and where we'd start.