Make it Your Own

You bought the house. Now you need to make it a home. There's much to be done before the last paintbrush is cleaned and curtains get hung just so. Inspirational ideas and advice are yours for the taking as you explore this section.

Sell Your Home With Strategically Placed Artwork

Photography, oils, watercolor, posters: your walls say so much about you, sometimes even too much.

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Does Your Entrance Say Welcome or Walk Away?

Putting extra effort into your home's reception area will leave a lasting impression on potential buyers

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Great Kitchens Sell Homes

To sell your home fast, showcase your kitchen as a clean, modern, inviting and immaculate environment.

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Basement Renovations

Is adding the extra space worth it?

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Careful Landscape Planning Yields Big Payoffs

Landscaping projects can be a big commitment of both time and money. But by carefully planning your landscape design, you can make it come in on time and on budget.

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Building a Welcome Mat for Your Home

Your driveway should say, come on in.
With proper installation, seasonal and setting considerations and the proper care, it's a great way to enhance your home and its character.

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Building Green from Basement to Rooftop

Creating an environmentally friendly home is not a simple exercise. It requires research, planning, design and execution. The secret to success is being able to make informed decisions.

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Choosing the Right Glass for Your Home

Windows are for more than just looking through. Putting energy-efficient glass in your windows can lower your heating and cooling bills significantly.

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Smart Homes – What’s Out There?

A Smart Home is a house or apartment that is equipped with special structured wiring, enabling occupants to program and remotely control an array of automated home electronic devices by entering a single command.

thermostat

A technology called Powerline Carrier Systems (PCS) is used to send coded signals along a home's new or existing electric wiring from a control center to programmable switches or outlets where they are received by the “appliance,” then enabled.

From a compact video touch panel or computer, you can manage your home theater, audio distribution, security, heating, air-conditioning, lighting, Internet, lawn sprinklers and more. You can start the kids’ movie downstairs, shut the blinds in the living room, turn on patio music for your guests, control your internal climate or arm your security system by simply selecting Good Night on the screen. In the morning, check your stocks online while waiting for the preprogrammed coffee pot to finishing brewing. Additional options include being able to access your Smart Home remotely using a mobile phone or laptop.

Residential integration key to home automation

While you likely already have the beginnings of a home automation system with your programmable thermostat, that’s a long way from a complete system. There are more than 5,000 individual home automation tools and options on the market today. The key, however, is linking the systems/appliances so that they can be centrally controlled.

Most likely, there are already companies in your area providing these “resident integration services.” Most provide connectivity, equipment, software and services, and are happy to sit down with you and help you select the products and options to suit your lifestyle and budget.

Before signing a contract, do a little front-end research:

  • See if your integrator is certified by a professional organization such as the Custom Electronics Design and Installation Association – the global trade association for companies that specialize in planning and installing of custom electronic systems for homes.
  • Ask for references where similar installations have been performed and call or visit them if possible.
  • Makes sure your contract covers difficult access since older homes may present surprises such as double bricking or plaster walls.
  • If you are building a house, the integrator can put in the “structured wiring” to serve your home automation needs. They can also retrofit existing homes.
  • Can your existing computer be used to offset some of the cost? Possibly, however, that will depend on its generation, speed, storage and other factors you can explore with your residential integrator.

As Smart Homes have yet to become the norm, also think of what a fantastic resale feature and added value upgrading to a Smart Home system will contribute to your home.