Mac Slocum
04-04-07, 08:34 PM
Home Theater for Small Rooms
Adding home theater to a small space requires clever solutions and compromise.
It’s a common dilemma: You want a cool home theater system, but you only have a room with small dimensions. It seems either too narrow or too shallow. But still, you’re mesmerized by that 100-inch screen at the nearby electronics boutique. Well, the first rule of home theater physics is that you can’t fit 10 pounds of surround sound into a 5-pound room. Or can you?
http://www.electronichouse.com/images/uploads/too_cramped_01.jpg (http://www.electronichouse.com/article/room_solutions_too_cramped/)
Problem #1: Where Can It Go?
Oh yeah, and you’ll need a surround-sound receiver, maybe some amplifiers, a DVD player, perhaps a satellite or cable receiver, maybe even a media server and a DVR (digital video recorder)—you have a place to store all this, don’t you?
Solutions:
You could always leave all that audio and video gear right out in the open. But maybe that’s not such a good idea. “I don’t think I’ve ever installed a system for someone who wanted to look at the equipment,” says Kirk Attoian of Redondo Beach CA–based Interior Technologies, which installs home entertainment systems into a lot of space-challenged beach homes. “The biggest issue is; How do we hide these things?” he says.
For information on how to achieve big home theater in a small space, check out
http://www.electronichouse.com/article/room_solutions_too_cramped/
Adding home theater to a small space requires clever solutions and compromise.
It’s a common dilemma: You want a cool home theater system, but you only have a room with small dimensions. It seems either too narrow or too shallow. But still, you’re mesmerized by that 100-inch screen at the nearby electronics boutique. Well, the first rule of home theater physics is that you can’t fit 10 pounds of surround sound into a 5-pound room. Or can you?
http://www.electronichouse.com/images/uploads/too_cramped_01.jpg (http://www.electronichouse.com/article/room_solutions_too_cramped/)
Problem #1: Where Can It Go?
Oh yeah, and you’ll need a surround-sound receiver, maybe some amplifiers, a DVD player, perhaps a satellite or cable receiver, maybe even a media server and a DVR (digital video recorder)—you have a place to store all this, don’t you?
Solutions:
You could always leave all that audio and video gear right out in the open. But maybe that’s not such a good idea. “I don’t think I’ve ever installed a system for someone who wanted to look at the equipment,” says Kirk Attoian of Redondo Beach CA–based Interior Technologies, which installs home entertainment systems into a lot of space-challenged beach homes. “The biggest issue is; How do we hide these things?” he says.
For information on how to achieve big home theater in a small space, check out
http://www.electronichouse.com/article/room_solutions_too_cramped/