How Far Should You Go? Danbury CT
There are typical phases in a residential construction project: foundation, framing, electrical and plumbing, sheet rocking, and finishing. Often, home theater projects dont fit that formula. You may need to do a phase of sheetrock between framing stages, requiring the builder to rotate one of his sheetrock crews in early.
Magnolia Home Theater
(203) 798-9699 2 INTERNATIONAL DR Danbury, CT Carston Stereo
(203) 744-6421 146 Old Brookfield Rd. Danbury, CT Integrated Electronics, Inc.
203-775-9292 106 Federal Road Brookfield, CT Office Technology Solutions, Inc.
(203) 544-7687 115 Portland Ave Redding, CT Office Technology Solutions, Inc. (203) 544-7687 115 Portland Ave Redding, CT 06896
Services Audio / Video, Home Automation / Systems Integration / Home Networking, Home Theater, Multi-Room Audio, Telephone Systems Brands Panasonic Pioneer Sony Denon Russound Escient Toshiba IEI Lutron Boston Acoustics Sonance Middle Atlantic Onkyo and others Certifications One or more employees at this company have achieved CEDIA Professional Certification status:- John Belfatto, CEDIA Certified Professional EST II Corbo Associates Inc.
(860) 210-9676 PO Box 169 Roxbury, CT Corbo Associates Inc. (860) 210-9676 PO Box 169 Roxbury, CT 06783
Services Acoustical Design, Audio / Video, Home Theater, Multi-Room Audio, Wire and Cable / Power Management Brands Denon Ci(Receivers,Separates,BluRay)• Sony(Displays)• Focal(Speakers)• APC(PowerConditioners)• Velodyne(Subwoofers)• Ethereal(Cables)• Samsung(Displays)• SONOS(Audio)• Philips(Remotes)• Niles(Interconnects)• Netgear(Networks)• Certifications One or more employees at this company have achieved CEDIA Professional Certification status:- Colin Corbo, CEDIA Certified Professional EST II Integrated Electronics Inc.
(203) 775-9292 51 Sugar Hollow Rd Danbury, CT Integrated Electronics Inc. (203) 775-9292 51 Sugar Hollow Rd Danbury, CT 06810
Services Audio / Video, Home Automation / Systems Integration / Home Networking, Home Theater, Lighting Control, Motorized Window Treatments / Home Theater Curtains Brands ADA,Canton,Crestron,Denon,Draper,Escient,Faroudja,Fujitsu,Genelec,JBLSynthesis,Lexicon,Lutron,MatrixAudio,MiddleAtlantic,Niles,RequestMultimedia,Rockustics,Runco,Salamander,Sony,Snell,Sonance,Speakercraft,Stewart,Triad,Velodyne,Xantech Certifications One or more employees at this company have achieved CEDIA Professional Certification status:- Eric Rossi, CEDIA Certified Professional EST III (Advanced EST), CEDIA Certified Professional EST II Sounds Incredible Mobile, LLC
(203) 778-3330 128 Federal Road Danbury, CT Lights...Camera...Action...
(203) 438-7000 54 Danbury Rd PMB 415 Ridgefield, CT Lights...Camera...Action... (203) 438-7000 54 Danbury Rd PMB 415 Ridgefield, CT 06877
Services Home Automation / Systems Integration / Home Networking, Home Theater, Lighting Control, Motorized Window Treatments / Home Theater Curtains, Security / Access Control / Surveillance / Gate Access Brands ADA,ARCAM,Denon,CAT,CATMBX,NEWPORT AUDIO,THETA DIGITAL,KEF,RBH,RUNCO,MONSTER,AUDIOQUEST,CRESTRON,VANTAGE,SAVANT,MIDDLEATLANTIC,STEWARTFILMSCREEN,DRAPER,DALITE,FURMAN,APC,QSCAUDIO,TRIAD,CIEMATECH AND FOTRESS SEATING Certifications One or more employees at this company have achieved CEDIA Professional Certification status:- Anthony Pavia, CEDIA Certified Professional EST II Sierra Audio Video Designs
203-459-8887 59 Beach Tree Lane Sierra Audio Video Designs Monroe, CT Wired Ltd.
(914) 725-4899 29 Wildwood Rd Katonah, NY Wired Ltd. (914) 725-4899 29 Wildwood Rd Katonah, NY 10536
Services Audio / Video, Designing for Individuals with Special Needs, Furnishings, Home Automation / Systems Integration / Home Networking, Home Theater, Multi-Room Audio, Multi-Room Controls, Multi-Room Video, Telephone Systems, Wire and Cable / Power Management, Home Networking, Home Health, Service Repair, Preventative Maintenance, iPhone / iPad integration Brands Nuvo, Sonos, Nuvision, Sony, Samsung, Sharp, Denon, Canton, Parasound, Sonance, Niles, Xantech, Panamx, Omnimount, etc. Certifications One or more employees at this company have achieved CEDIA Professional Certification status:- Howard Gorenfeld, CEDIA Certified Professional EST II
Proper design and engineering of a home theater is essential, but just as crucial is the documentation of the design. Its important to know exactly what level of detail to go into on a project design.
After designing more than 150 rooms, I can safely say that I have experienced the process of translating plans into actual, finished home theater products. Sometimes the end result depends on the quality of the design, sometimes the detail in the drawings, and sometimes the thoroughness of the builder. In most cases these three factors combine to affect the final outcome of the project, but they can also work entirely independently of each other.
I have seen roughly documented designs get executed to perfection, and meticulously drafted plans turn into complete chaos. Here are some reflections and observations from the field:
1) Understand that builders are used to certain types of construction. They go through the same motions and processes day in and day out. Construction of a home theater can be really different in process from regular residential construction, even if the building materials themselves are similar. You need to work with the builder to explain the intent and help him or her see how construction phases can be different from the norm.
2) Document phases of construction. There are typical phases in a residential construction project: foundation, framing, electrical and plumbing, sheet rocking, and finishing. Often, home theater projects dont fit that formula. You may need to do a phase of sheetrock between framing stages, requiring the builder to rotate one of his sheetrock crews in early. For example, the riser in a home theater needs to go in after walls are sheet rocked to ensure proper sound isolation. Someone needs to predict when the sheet rocking will be needed and outline it for builder.
3) Be prepared to use colors and multiple views in your documentation. You need every tool at your disposal to communicate your design intent. Use as many actual photographs of real projects as you can. If past projects relate to the current one, paste in a few pictures as examples of what you are telling the builder to do.
4) Use your intuition in determining if something is sufficiently described. If anything in a design seems vague to you, it will most likely be dense fog to the builder. Remember: youve done this before, the builder hasnt. He or she has no past experience on which to base an interpretation of the plans.
5) Document chronologically. Start with a full plan view and one elevation of the room. Then go on to drawings that build chronologically per the phases of construction.
6) Describe precisely every device, fastener, and bracket. If a part or piece influences the final result of the project, make sure a monkey couldnt mistake it for something else. Use as many pictures, model number references, cut sheets, and sketches, as you need. Paper is less expensive than re-dos.
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