Cinema, at home.
A dedicated theater should feel like a scored room — every seat, every speaker, every lumen placed with intent. We build reference rooms for collectors, and flexible media lofts for families who still want to be wowed.
Engineered from the seat outward.
Great cinema rooms are not product lists. We start with the viewing distance, the sightlines, and the room's own acoustic character — then choose the screen, projector, and speakers that make that room sound right.
Once rough framing is in, we return for low-voltage wiring, acoustic treatment behind the fabric, lighting coves and step lighting, and a platform that hides subwoofers where they belong. What you see on delivery day is a single, integrated room — not a collection of components.

Every speaker in its place.
We calibrate every theater with professional measurement microphones — room EQ, subwoofer integration, speaker timing, and projector gamma — tuned for the exact seating positions you care about.
The result isn't louder or brighter. It's more natural. Dialogue sits with the actor. Score sits behind them. Effects move cleanly through the room.
What we build
- 01Dedicated reference theaters4K/8K projection, acoustic rooms, tiered seating.
- 02Luxury media roomsLarge flat panel, immersive surround, versatile lighting scenes.
- 03Hidden-TV family roomsLift systems, art-panel displays, in-wall concealment.
- 04Calibrated soundRoom EQ, subwoofer integration, speaker timing.
- 05Integrated lighting & shadesOne button from bright to movie-night.
- 06Kaleidescape librariesReference film playback without streaming compression.
Frequently asked.
What is the difference between a dedicated theater and a media room?
A dedicated theater is a sealed, light-controlled, acoustically-treated room built for one purpose — reference-grade picture and sound. A media room is a living space that performs cinematically when it needs to, with shades, seating, and acoustics tuned to coexist with everyday use. We design both, but the engineering choices diverge early.
How small a room can become a real theater?
Reference performance starts around 15' × 20' with 9' ceilings — enough volume for proper subwoofer behavior and an Atmos overhead layer. Smaller rooms are doable, but compromises stack quickly. We model the room before quoting.
Projector or large-format television?
Both have their place. A 100"+ projector on a properly black ceiling and treated walls delivers cinematic scale. A 97" or 115" MicroLED or short-throw laser display delivers brighter, ambient-light-tolerant viewing — better for media rooms that aren't sealed. We specify whichever survives your actual lighting conditions.
Do I need acoustic treatment if the room looks dressed already?
Almost always, yes. Fabric, rugs, and seating absorb high frequencies but leave bass and reflections untouched. Without targeted treatment — bass traps, first-reflection panels, broadband absorbers — even a $200,000 stack will sound thin and harsh. Acoustic design is what separates a theater from a TV in a room.
Can a theater be integrated into the smart home control system?
Yes — that's the default, not the upgrade. One press of "Movie" dims the lights, lowers the shades, fires the projector, switches the source, sets the volume, and routes audio to the right zone. We program it so it works the first time and every time.
What is a realistic budget for a dedicated home theater?
Quality dedicated theaters start around $150,000 turnkey for the AV scope alone — equipment, acoustic treatment, calibration, programming. Reference-grade rooms with Kaleidescape libraries, motorized masking, and high-end seating commonly run $250,000 to $750,000+. The construction trades add separately.


