What is a Supervisory Network?

The Supervisory Network is the network segment within an industrial OT architecture responsible for higher-level supervision, Monitoring, and control. It connects systems such as SCADA, Historian, MES, Engineering Stations, and operator interfaces to the underlying Control Network.

The Supervisory Network typically resides at levels 2 and 3 of the Purdue Model, between the field level (PLC/IO) and the business layer (IT/MES).


🧠 How does the Supervisory Network work?

  1. Data collection and visualisation
  1. Command transmission to controllers
  • Sends setpoints or commands to field equipment via OPC UA, Modbus, S7
  • Manages alarms, recipes, and batch information
  1. Connection to other networks

🏭 Application in industrial automation

  • Visualisation and operation of production processes
  • Historical data logging with Historian
  • Centralised PLC configuration via Engineering Station (TIA Portal, etc.)
  • Interface with IT for reporting, OEE, and batch information
  • Remote monitoring and maintenance via VPN or Remote Access

Typical components:


🔐 Security aspects

The Supervisory Network is an important attack target: ensure good separation and monitoring.


🔍 Supervisory vs. Control Network

Aspect Supervisory Network Control Network
Function Monitoring, visualisation, logging Real-time control
Latency requirements Moderate Very low
Typical devices SCADA, Historian, Engineering Station PLCs, IO, drives
Security Based on user authorisation Based on network segmentation

📌 In summary

The Supervisory Network is the link between the field level and business operations, where data is collected, presented, and analysed. Good segmentation, access protection, and Monitoring are crucial to the safety and reliability of the OT infrastructure.