Environment-Specific Spatial Intelligence, Governed by Purpose

Betti Environmental Tiers define how independent living infrastructure is governed, constrained, and validated across different environments, without changing the underlying platform.

Environmental Tiers ensure Betti's spatial intelligence, response layers, permissions, and accountability operate appropriately within each environment's operational, regulatory, and partner context.

This is how Betti avoids one-size-fits-all deployment while remaining infrastructure-grade and scalable.

Infrastructure Must Adapt to Environment, Not the Other Way Around

A private home, a senior living community, a hospital-at-home program, a behavioral health setting, and city-owned housing do not share the same:

  • Risk profiles
  • Regulatory requirements
  • Privacy expectations
  • Response obligations
  • Accountability structures

Deploying the same system without environmental governance creates operational risk, regulatory exposure, and loss of trust.

Environmental Tiers exist to ensure the same infrastructure behaves differently, appropriately, in each environment.

What Environmental Tiers Govern

Environmental Tiers do not introduce new technology and do not change Betti's core infrastructure.

They govern how spatial intelligence is interpreted and acted upon, not what data is collected.

Specifically, Environmental Tiers define:

  • How spatial patterns are modeled within an environment
  • What constitutes a meaningful deviation
  • How response layers are permitted to operate
  • Who has role-based visibility and authority
  • What data is retained, shared, or reported
  • How outcomes are validated and reviewed

This ensures intelligence remains context-aware, privacy-preserving, and institution-ready.

Built by Environment, In Partnership

Environmental Tiers are defined in collaboration with the environments they serve.

This includes alignment with:

  • Operational workflows (e.g., caregivers, staff, property managers)
  • Regulatory and compliance requirements
  • Partner responsibilities and escalation boundaries
  • Environmental constraints and use patterns

Betti does not impose a fixed operating model.

It provides standardized infrastructure with environment-specific governance, co-defined with partners and validated through ILIP.

The Betti Environmental Tier Framework

Betti currently supports multiple Environmental Tiers, each governing how infrastructure operates within a specific class of environment.

Tier 1 — Managed Living & Senior Communities

Includes: Independent Living (IL), Assisted Living (AL), Memory Care, CCRCs

Tier Focus: Resident dignity and safety, staff workflow alignment, reduction of alert fatigue

Governance Emphasis: Role-based staff access, Care Response Network as primary layer, family visibility controls

Tier 2 — Healthcare & Clinical-Adjacent Environments

Includes: Hospital-at-home programs, post-acute and step-down care, RPM-adjacent environments, behavioral health clinics

Tier Focus: Safety and continuity outside clinical walls, context around care delivery, reduction of unnecessary escalation

Governance Emphasis: Non-diagnostic operation, strict consent and boundary controls, clinical-adjacent, not clinical, intelligence

Tier 3 — City, Public & Transitional Housing

Includes: City-owned housing, supportive and transitional housing, DV/trafficking survivor and protected housing, HUD- and VA-aligned programs

Tier Focus: Resident safety without surveillance, housing stability and continuity, program accountability

Governance Emphasis: No default law-enforcement escalation, silent and non-verbal workflows where required, de-identified, audit-ready reporting

Tier 4 — Development, Construction & Manufactured Housing

Includes: Real estate developments, homebuilders and master-planned communities, modular and manufactured housing

Tier Focus: Asset-level future readiness, aging-in-place enablement, portfolio consistency

Governance Emphasis: Embedded infrastructure standards, upgrade paths without retrofit dependency, alignment with developer and manufacturer workflows

Response Architecture, Governed by Environment

Environmental Tiers define how Betti's two response layers operate:

  • Care Response Network (primary, non-emergency)
  • Emergency Intelligence Console (escalation and context)

Each tier specifies:

  • Which response layer is permitted
  • Escalation thresholds
  • Authorized roles and responsibilities
  • Data visibility and retention rules

This ensures response behavior is proportional, ethical, and compliant.

Validated Through ILIP. Overseen by HOBEC.

Environmental Tier behavior is:

  • Tested through the Independent Living Infrastructure Pilot (ILIP)
  • Reviewed through HOBEC validation processes
  • Refined based on real-world outcomes and partner input

Environmental Tiers evolve responsibly without breaking trust, compatibility, or governance alignment.

Clear Boundaries

Environmental Tiers are not:

  • Separate products
  • Custom codebases per partner
  • Surveillance modes
  • Resident scoring systems
  • Jurisdiction-blind deployments

They are governance layers designed to protect people, partners, and institutions.

One Infrastructure. Many Environments.
Governed by Purpose.

Betti Environmental Tiers ensure independent living infrastructure remains ethical, scalable, and trusted, regardless of where it is deployed. Spatial intelligence adapts. Governance constrains. Outcomes are validated. That is how infrastructure earns trust.