Building a Home Theater Room
The Home Theater: Redefining Home Entertainment
It seems like the days of the family sitting around a big tabletop radio listening to “fireside chats” were from the far distant past – but it was only a little more than 60 years ago. Gone are the days when the only home entertainment system was a wooden box with a cloth-covered speaker filled with glowing tubes and crystals. As with so many other aspects of modern life, the technological advances in home entertainment have come quickly, and the results have been staggering.

Today, more homeowners than ever before are taking advantage of these marvels of modern science, style and engineering. Utilizing the latest advances in high-definition television, incredibly realistic sound systems, powerful video game devices and wireless internet capabilities, people are designing home theaters and media rooms in record numbers.

Following the trend of all modern electronics, high-definition television components have been getting less and less expensive. The state-of-the-art plasma TV of a few years ago is selling today for a mere fraction of its original cost, as newer, more cutting-edge technology has come along, season after season, to take its place. Advances come so quickly it is sometimes hard to make a decision to purchase, so fearful are we that today’s high-end television will become second-rate technology very soon – sometimes before we even finish paying for it!
Not to worry. Like every other aspect of home remodeling, home theater rooms are, first and foremost, defined by your budget. Rest assured that even those hi-def televisions at the lower end of the price scale are far, far superior to their predecessors, and miles beyond what they are replacing.

Often, a chair is just a chair, is just a chair. But in the home theater room you’re designing, this is not the case. Since your new room will undoubtedly take advantage of sophisticated, home theater surround sound system, the size, shape and texture of the chair will be of great importance to audiophiles. For example, home theater chairs with high backs tend to impede the signals coming from the rear speakers, and can change the characteristics of the speaker in front of you.
There is an optimal distance and height the chairs should be in relation to the screen and the speakers, and if hiring an expert is not in your budget, you can get a good education in the technical design aspects on the internet. There are even e-books available at low cost, which will take you step-by-step through the entire process of designing and constructing your new home theater.
Decide whether or not you can afford to carve out part of your budget for a design professional. As always, professionals can be expensive, but can actually save you much grief, and much money, because you will be assured of buying the right components for your room and budget the first time, and perhaps avoid costly mistakes.
You will also find many home theater design magazines on the newsstands and in the bookstores – a few dollars are well-spent on these full-color publications, to get ideas and inspiration. Done properly, a well-designed and executed home theater will not only provide you and your family with hours and hours of great entertainment, but will also be of great benefit to your home’s market value.
