Home systems often include plasma televisions, complicated controls for lights and mechanical equipment, whole-house sound systems, and home offices complete with local area computer networks. Some features require complicated custom-made cabinetry, and linking all these components together requires enough cabling to leave even experienced designers agog. Minnesota--based architect Dale Mulfinger of SALA Architects is still amazed at how much extra wiring is required even though complex electronic systems are now routine. "The amount of spaghetti is truly amazing" he says.
Builders and architects can feel lost when it comes to recommending and installing the kind of hardware that buyers ask for. As a result, system installers are often invited to join the planning process, ideally before construction has actually started. These specialists can offer valuable advice to clients while overseeing the installation of special cabling and hardware. But with construction often taking a year or more, good communication, wire detailed planning, and clearly defined roles for everyone on the jobsite are essential lot keeping problems at bayBuilders, architects, and installers themselves are universal in suggesting that planning for electronic systems start early. "The biggest thing is that you need to get in on the ground floor, in the beginning, because all that pre-wiring needs to go in when the house is being wired," says Joe Stanton, a Rhode Island custom builder and owner of JMS Builders. "It's much cheaper to go in and pre-wire rooms than it is to go back in and try to retrofit something later. So even if the people didn't think they wanted to have the latest and the greatest for networking and computers, it's much easier to run big cable and have the option to do all that."
Even when clients don't appear interested in extensive home entertainment systems or lighting and HVAC controls, installing the cabling allows them to change their minds later. And it probably will make file house more attractive when owners want to sell.
Stanton connects his client with a specialist he knows lie Call count on, then suggests that his clients sign a separate contract with him. That saves Stanton from fielding weekend calls later about a balky television or light control panel. "I make the connection and I recommend who they could use," he says, "but they write their contract direct and I stay outside of it. It's no different than me recommending an appliance store where they can pick out their appliances. They don't actually buy them from me."
Other builders may sign on a specialist but still prefer a closer connection with the work. For example, Matthew Beardsley, a custom builder in Bozeman, Mont., relies on an outside specialist for the installation, but wants to handle any trouble calls once the client has moved in. "We typically do everything," he says. "If the client has a problem, they call us, and we then contact the appropriate person. It's part of our way of keeping the client happy." One advantage of his approach is that it makes it easier to spot areas where planning or construction could be improved next time.
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