After living with spastic paraplegia all his life, Jason Price had wanted to create a home where it really felt like his home. A professional in the disability field, he had some resources that could help him get started, but he still needed a company that could bring his idea of a accessibility focused smart home to fruition. Eventually, he came to settle on Crestron as the control system of choice before being introduced to Isaac Rosario, VP and Lead Programmer of Voyager Home Systems (Oklahoma).
From there, Isaac and his team set about automating and connecting nearly every single process in the house, from the lights to the door locks to the shower all the way down to the doors themselves. He also set about connecting the entire control system to be centralized on an iPad connected to Jason’s chair, so he could control any aspect of the home no matter where he was located.
“I think we’ve set a new bar for what accessible living can be like,” Jason says. “Think about this: even people that don’t have severe disabilities are going to age. They’re going to need more access as their life continues, so home access, I think, is something that’s going to be very important in the future.”
“Normally in the houses we do for high-end residential, it’s more of going in and filling up the house with as much automation moreso because they need it, they have to have it,” Isaac notes. “We’ve done some mobility stuff before, but this was the first time we’ve gone into an entire job thinking everything has a purpose.”
Every aspect of the project needed to be researched to understand how they worked, not just for Voyager, but for Jason as well.
RF Transmitters and Ingenuity Enable Motorized Smart Doors
Perhaps one of the most challenging aspects according to Isaac were the door systems. As Jason noted, it was very difficult during the project to find a company that was doing automated interior doors and supported integration into a smart home system. That was a big sticking point for the request: the doors needed to look like residential doors. No giant button that needed to be pressed to open them.
“Several times I though we were at an impasse on a few things, but never once did Isaac say ‘I agree with you, we can’t get this done,’” says Jason. “He always said, ‘Not only are we going to get this done, we’re going to get it done pretty simply.’”
Instead, Isaac got crafty, back end engineering a solution that would allow Jason to remote access control the doors through Crestron. Contact loader wiring and plenty of Crestron wireless pieces got the job done quickly and effectively.
“We ordered a lot of what were basically RF transmitters to hook them up to my system so that, from my system, we could toggle each door independently. Then we could tie it into a control system to allow him to do just that [open doors]. So, on his iPad, he has a button for the front door, side door and such to where he can just toggle certain doors at a time.”
Seamless Service Provides the Backbone for the Accessible Smart Home
Tying everything back to the iPad was the next big step, and perhaps the one that Isaac had the most fun with, being the first time he and his team needed to take a step back and look at everything. “It was no longer a throw all the money at it and make it cool type of thing,” as he puts it.
In fact, it’s a lot more difficult to find parts of the home that aren’t integrated into the iPad. Everything that had the capacity to be automated and controlled remotely was, from the doors to the lights to even the shower. Everything was made to be controllable from the house and on the go, with Isaac being able to make on the fly changes as necessary thanks to the new Crestron Home System the team used.
Of course, with such a heavy emphasis on connectivity and wireless communication, Isaac and Voyager needed to ensure that everything worked seamlessly. Selecting the internet was the first step, monitoring and ensuring that it stayed running was the next, and Voyager continues to provide these services for Jason, notifying him of any potential outages, before Jason notices it himself.
“I live in a world that was designed for people who walk, so I always have to look at it from a different perspective, but now, when I’m home, I feel like I’m finally in a place that was designed for me,” Jason says.
If you want to hear more on how Isaac and Jason tackled this project, listen in on our podcast for the subject, as we discuss the methods, inspirations and more with our exclusive guests.