AI in Commercial Real Estate: How Bryckel AI is Using New Technology To Automate Document Workflows and Boost Productivity

In a recent article Steve Marcinuk covered AI in CRE specifically how Bryckel simplifies tedious work of reviewing, organizing, and processing documents, which slows down deals and drains resources across the industry. Takeway: Bryckel is accelerating the work of CRE Brokers, Commercial Property Managers and Real Estate Asset Managers
May 23, 2025
Written by: Steve Marcinuk

In commercial real estate, where multimillion-dollar transactions hinge on dense and often inconsistent paperwork, time is rarely spent on flashy software. Instead, it is consumed by the tedious work of reviewing, organizing, and processing documents, which slows down deals and drains resources across the industry.
“80% of time in commercial real estate goes into dealing with messy, bespoke documents—not the software systems that receive all the attention,” says Sienam Ahuja, CEO and Co-Founder of Bryckel AI a document intelligence platform that’s transforming how commercial real estate professionals handle their most time-consuming tasks.
Bryckel AI uses artificial intelligence to streamline these behind-the-scenes processes, automating everything from lease abstractions to property management records. The goal is to help brokers, property managers, and asset managers redirect their time toward what matters most: closing deals and growing portfolios.
The Document Intelligence Problem
The commercial real estate workflow is riddled with document-intensive processes that drain productivity. Ahuja breaks down several examples:
Property comparison: “If you’re trying to find a 10,000 square-foot retail space in South Florida, you’re going to take 50 broker flyers and type every single element to create a competitive Excel spreadsheet for apple-to-apple comparisons.”
Lease review: “Every version of a 200-page lease needs to be compared to the LOI to make sure all commercial terms are reflected and nothing got changed. The broker reviews it, the property manager reviews it, and the lawyer reviews it. All three people doing the exact same work.”
Due diligence: “If you’re a tenant, you’re researching the landlord. Especially in today’s climate, you don’t want their debt to be so much that the asset you’re planning to occupy might not be there. Likewise, landlords need to verify that new tenants can afford to pay for the next 10 years.”
Lease abstraction: “When the lease is signed, that data has to go into a property management or lease administration system. You end up sending it to a BPO in India or the Philippines, and that person has no context. They’ll provide an error-filled version.”
Ongoing management: “Every time you have a conversation—HVAC breaks, somebody’s got to figure out if the landlord’s paying for it or the tenant—your system of record may not be accurate, so you go back to the lease document.”
Bryckel AI addresses these pain points by automating document intelligence tasks that previously required hours of manual work. “Every single workflow takes less than three minutes in Bryckel,” Ahuja claims. “You put a lease in, I’ll automatically abstract it and push it to your property management system. You put an LOI to lease, I’ll compare it and give you proper analysis.”
From Real Estate Operations to AI Innovation
Ahuja’s journey to founding Bryckel AI follows a path through various facets of the real estate industry. Her career began at Levi’s, where she was responsible for new location transactions. This experience sparked an entrepreneurial venture building a hospitality chain across the Northeast.
“One of the things my team struggled with was keeping on top of dates and dollars for each real estate location,” Ahuja recalls. “We were doing all of it manually with Excel sheets. Everything was very disorganized.”
After successfully selling her business, Ahuja entered the brokerage world, first with Corcoran and later with Compass, where she had her first significant realization about real estate technology.
“People keep saying real estate is a tech-backward industry. It’s not tech-backward, it’s that the tech doesn’t catch up to the people and the way they want to use it,” she explains.
Her career then took her to WeWork in India, where she gained further appreciation for how effective technology could improve real estate operations. When her husband’s work brought them to California during the early days of ChatGPT, Ahuja recognized a significant opportunity.
“Up until now, all the legacy technology has fixated on 20% of data that is extracted to drive workflows of property management and ERP systems,” she notes. “But the real work happens in those messy documents that brokers, property managers, and asset managers are working with daily.”
Simplifying Implementation
One of Bryckel’s key differentiators is its approach to implementation. Unlike legacy systems that require extensive setup, Bryckel aims to be frictionless.
“I literally call ourselves a ‘no UI UI company,'” Ahuja explains. “All you have to do is log in and start putting your documents in, and we will extract information about your company. We’ll extract your brand logo and brand colors. Everything is ready to go.”
The platform employs what Ahuja calls “multi-agentic workflow” but doesn’t require users to build agents themselves, a common pain point in an industry where technical sophistication varies widely.
“Everything is a tool,” she says. “You say, ‘I want to abstract the lease.’ Upload. Bryckel does everything. I want to assess lease risk? The only question we’re going to ask is from the landlord’s perspective or tenant’s perspective. Upload, and we’ll do everything.”
This simplicity is by design. “We are very diligent and religious about limiting every workflow to less than three steps,” Ahuja emphasizes. “Your decision-making model is: I want to do this, I only need to give this much context to Bryckel, and I’m going to get what I want as a polished deliverable.”