Screen sizing
Defined during design and verified before handoff.
South Florida
We design home theater design for South Florida homes and businesses with clear planning, professional installation and ongoing support.

Designed as a complete system
The objective is not to add disconnected devices. It is to create a theater planned around room geometry, viewing distance and acoustic performance. Our process begins with the people who use the property: their routines, problem areas, preferred controls and expectations for support. We then review wiring, network capacity, power, equipment locations and compatibility before specifying hardware.
Good integration is most noticeable in its simplicity. Rooms and sources need clear names, scenes need to reflect real routines, and owners need to know what to do when they want a change. We document the system and explain its everyday operation instead of leaving behind a collection of unrelated apps.
In an existing property, we identify equipment that can remain and components that limit stability. In new construction, we coordinate cable paths, enclosures, ventilation, power and network locations before walls close. Early coordination lowers rework and leaves sensible options for expansion.
Final scope depends on property size, construction, included subsystems and the degree of personalization. A site review is therefore more useful than a generic package price. Our proposals separate infrastructure, equipment, programming, installation and support so the investment is understandable.
Real work and infrastructure

Typical scope
Defined during design and verified before handoff.
Defined during design and verified before handoff.
Defined during design and verified before handoff.
Defined during design and verified before handoff.
Process
Design decisions
A successful home theater design project depends on stable power, network coverage, cable pathways and an accessible equipment location. We review these elements before selecting components. When existing infrastructure is suitable, we use it; when it creates a limitation, we explain the consequence and prioritize corrections. This prevents an attractive feature from being undermined by a weak connection, poor ventilation or unidentified wiring.
The experience needs to work for owners, family members, guests and authorized staff. We organize rooms, sources and scenes in everyday language. Wall controls keep essential actions available without reaching for a phone, while the app supports deeper adjustments and appropriate remote access. During handoff, we walk through the most important routines and distinguish between changes the owner can make and adjustments that require professional programming.
We do not assume that products with mobile apps automatically integrate well. For home theater design, we confirm models, software versions, communication methods and required controllers before finalizing design. We also consider replacement availability, updates, remote service and how a future change could affect other rooms. A well-planned system allows selected components to evolve without forcing the entire property to be rebuilt.
Installation includes labeling, cable organization, configuration and testing of the agreed functions. We check behavior from physical and mobile controls, verify relevant zones and record the information needed for service. Documentation does not need to be complicated; it needs to identify important equipment, connections and design decisions when the system is maintained, expanded or diagnosed later.
Technology changes, and household routines change with it. Support expectations are therefore discussed with the proposal: how adjustments are requested, what may be diagnosed remotely and when an on-site visit is appropriate. We recommend keeping equipment accessible and coordinating before replacing an internet provider, router or central device. These practices reduce interruptions and make future service more efficient.
Project readiness
Before approving home theater design, it helps to identify who will use each space, which functions should remain available during an internet outage and which areas need remote control. We also document finish restrictions, work-hour requirements, coordination with other trades and equipment the client would like to keep. These answers shape the system architecture and prevent the design from being based only on a product demonstration.
The final proposal identifies what is included and excluded, any electrical or construction responsibilities, and the conditions needed to schedule installation. If work is phased, we establish a logical sequence: infrastructure and network first, essential functions next, and comfort, entertainment and refinement after that. Each phase should deliver a usable result while leaving the next phase possible without reopening completed work.
Florida properties also require attention to outdoor exposure, humidity, heat, storms and seasonal occupancy. Exterior equipment needs to match its environment, while central components need ventilation, electrical protection and service access. No connected system can remove every risk, but responsible planning reduces avoidable failure points and makes future response more orderly.
FAQ
With a consultation and review of the space, infrastructure and practical priorities.
Yes. We assess existing pathways, wireless options and phased work to reduce disruption.
Yes. Handoff includes testing, organized controls and guidance for the agreed features.