9911 Seminole Blvd. Seminole, FL 33772 www.TBNweekly.com

Eco Houses Safety Harbor FL

The term “smart home” can easily conjure up ideas of automated convenience functions that most people in Safety Harbor could live without—spas that heat to the perfect temperature while you're driving home from work or a refrigerator that calls the grocery store when it runs out of milk.

Onsite Residential
1902 W. Main St.
Tampa, FL
Hometweethome.com
(727)669-1680
109 Meadowcross Dr
Safety Harbor, FL
Sunny Day Lawn Landscape
(727)725-2428
11 Booth Boulevard
Safety Harbor, FL
Leisure Lawn
(813)854-5426
330 Douglas Road East
Oldsmar, FL
James Poppenhouse
Scrubbing Bubbles Home Exterior Cleaning Systems

813-298-2059
1214 Forestwood Dr.
Oldsmar, FL
Strobel Design Build
2716 6th Ave South
Saint Petersburg, FL
George Hunt Landscape Materials
(727)797-7874
3404 Enterprise Road East
Safety Harbor, FL
Stewart Clive
(727)725-4207
3145 North McMullen Booth Road
Clearwater, FL
Jeremy
Sunroom Source

813-855-4173
430 Douglass Rd E
Oldsmar, FL
Statewide Termite & Pest Control- Inc.
(813)854-1960
3888 Tampa Road P.O. Box 60
Oldsmar, FL
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Eco Houses

Source: CUSTOM HOME Magazine
Publication date: November 1, 2007

By Rebecca Day

The term “smart home” can easily conjure up ideas of automated convenience functions that most people could live without—spas that heat to the perfect temperature while you're driving home from work or a refrigerator that calls the grocery store when it runs out of milk. In reality, the “smarts” in smart homes are nothing more than clever software programs written to meet the lifestyle needs of homeowners. Today more and more luxury homeowners want to put that brainpower to work on energy-efficient abodes that manage a home's daily functions in the most earth-friendly way possible.

To have a smart home—in which subsystems like lighting and HVAC team up to automatically respond to certain conditions—you need subsystems that have the ability to communicate their status. Some do that independently and others work best with a master control system that manages the tech chat.

A Crestron TPMC-15 touchpanel is the go-to device in EcoManor, an Atlanta-based real-world home that is doubling as an educational resource for area builders, architects, designers, manufacturers, and homeowners. David Hardy, president of Interior Media, programmed the touch-panel to control Crestron's own lighting system, three controllable thermostats, an array of Philips TVs, a Niles Audio multi-room music system, and a theater full of audio/video gear.

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