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A Technicolor
dream in your own home
by
Doug Brown
The
ads are everywhere for home theaters that come in a
crate for $299. But for the video-and-audio cognoscenti,
the whole thing is redolent of buying wine in a box:
Cheap, yes, but divorced from the pleasures and complexities
of, say, a 1970 Chateau Petrus.
Of
course, a magnum of 70 Petrus might set you back
$4,000. Similarly, a top-of-the-line home theater could
easily cost $150,000 or more. But you dont have
to take out a second mortgage to grace the house with
a new place to watch flicks, which is where the latest
in home entertainment is going. For $6,000, experts
say, homeowners can begin to transform their video-viewing
experience. Between $6,000 and $150,000, there is a
smorgasbord of choice.
The
degree to which consumers desire to replicate
or even surpass the visual and auditory atmospherics
of a movie theater helps to determine the costs, says
Ray Lepper, president of Home Media Stores in Richmond,
and vice president of the Custom Electronic Design and
Installation Association, the home theater trade association.
If the viewing room is a dedicated room, where
the primary purpose of the room is to recreate the experience
of the cinema, then we are going to build a home theater,
a theater in the home, Lepper says. What
most people live with who dont have dedicated
rooms and dont want to stop talking, turn down
the lights, and get rid of the phone, is a media room,
a multipurpose room. We live in that room, we play with
the dog, talk to the kids, talk to each other during
commercials. Once we know which way you want to go,
its easier to talk about it.
True
home theaters involve large, projection screens, Lepper
says. They use high-end sound systems in acoustically
engineered rooms, so that everything from whispers to
explosions can be heard without distortion. Lighting
is extremely important, and so is comfortable seating,
often with reclining chairs and motorized head rests.
All of the electronic pieces of the theater puzzle
the audio, the video, the lights get tied together
in a single, custom control device. Otherwise,
the systems would require a complicated array of clickers.
The minimum price for a true home theater, says Lepper,
is at least $20,000. You can continue to spend
money up into the hundreds of thousands, and they do
get better, he says. But Id argue
you can have a pretty good movie experience in a dedicated
room if you spend $20,000.
A
typical media room, on the other hand, will have a big-screen
television and surround-sound for about $6,000, including
installation. The system wont come with a fancy,
custom remote-control device, and the lighting wont
be engineered. Its OK, he says. Youre
not going to think youre at the theater. [But]
it will be fun.
Tom
Wells, president of Integrated Media Systems in Vienna,
specializes in high-end dedicated rooms. His systems
begin at about $20,000. The most ambitious clients typically
spend between $150,000 and $400,000 on the electronics,
seating, lighting, and other extras. One customer dropped
$750,000. Were electronic architects,
he says.
At
the dedicated home-theater level, one determinant of
price is the size of the projector, Wells says. The
bigger the projector, the more light output, so the
bigger the screen you can get. The budget gets bigger
and bigger. For about $20,000, he says, he can
install a system using high-definition digital video
and a crisp sound system. Its a good starting
point, he says. Its the difference
between a Rolls Royce and a 1962 Volkswagen Bug.
People
install home theaters for different reasons, he says.
Some people entertain a lot, he says, and when they
have 12 people over for a get-together there may
be a half-dozen people watching a movie while another
half-dozen are at the pool. Its also a great
carrot for corralling the extended family together in
one place for an evening.
Virginia
Business - January 2003
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