ᐅ New Semi-Detached House – Is Investing an Extra $10,000 Worthwhile for a Smart Home?

Created on: 17 Jan 2021 17:11
G
Giggz123
Hello everyone,

we are currently planning the construction of our half of a semi-detached house. Initially, I was considering a KNX solution for home automation, but the reality as homebuilders is catching up with us, and the budget is getting tighter. Due to the plot, we are tied to a construction company that handles all trades (including electrical) with their own staff. The contract is expected to be signed soon.

The construction company seems to have limited expertise regarding smart home systems, so I’m now considering how to best proceed.

At the moment, the plan is for conventional electrical work (about 8,000 EUR), plus additional services for almost 4,000 EUR net to install a LAN connection in every room and reach a total of 100 power outlets and 20 lighting points (there may still be some missing).

We still have about 10,000 EUR left, so the entire (smart) electrical installation can cost around 22,000 EUR. We have also planned 13 roller shutters / blinds, which — for now — will have conventional electrical control.

Requirements - Must Have:
  • Lighting:
    • Central control of lights (preferably all, if necessary by floor, room, or selected areas); partial dimming
  • Shading:
    • Central control of roller shutters / blinds with automated shading
  • Power:
    • Make approximately 10+ power outlets switchable

Nice to Have:
  • Avoid residual current devices (RCDs) if justifiable via smart home (I do not intend to actively control heating)
  • Connection to controlled residential ventilation system
  • Integration of voice control
  • Window contacts
  • Visualization
  • Presence detectors
  • Sonos integration
  • Intercom system integration (Doorbird, Busch Jäger Welcome)
  • Alarm system functionality (via presence detectors / sensors, possibly also a proprietary system, e.g. Busch Secure@Home)

Options:
1. Conventional wiring plus standalone radio solutions (this is what we currently have in the rental apartment: Somfy roller shutters, HUE lights, etc.), integrated into a common visualization platform (such as ioBroker and others)
2. Proprietary system, currently the favorite is probably Free@Home with central actuators, allowing a possible later switch to KNX if needed. Alternatively, Homematic Wired might be an option.
3a. KNX with the must-haves and preparation (cabling) for nice-to-haves / as much as possible
3b. KNX with must-haves, nice-to-haves via radio solutions / gateways, integrated into a common visualization (ioBroker and others)

I’ve read a lot about this but somehow keep going in circles...

Do you have any advice on how to best approach this now? Should I create a room schedule and request various offers for options 2 and 3? Should I look for a qualified system integrator / smart home expert who can offer both options 2 and 3? Or is this basically unrealistic with the given budget, and I should focus on option 1?

Although construction doesn’t start until summer, if I want to try to contract the electrical trade elsewhere, I only have about 4 weeks left.

I am not completely ruling out KNX and could also imagine doing some work myself. Has anyone used a solution where they hired a planner, had the control cabinet assembled and shipped, then had the construction company’s electrician install all the wiring, and finally configured everything themselves?

Many thanks in advance!
R
RE-1407
9 Apr 2021 15:31
RotorMotor schrieb:

Thank you for the information.
I just realized that my first reaction was completely mistaken.
It wasn’t an extra cost of 17k but rather 39k plus or minus 10k for the “standard”?
That’s obviously much further from the idea in this thread.

However, if you only consider the “KNX points” from the quote, it’s just 14-20.
But without cables, so it’s hard to separate.

What exactly is included in the sensors category?
If I understood correctly, there were about 5 occupancy sensors?

Here you go!
So 10k was the standard price I would have had to pay for this trade, but I subtracted that.
Currently, I have to pay 39k to have the points I described fully functional.
Of course, this includes items unrelated to KNX.
The difference compared to the 10k mentioned by the original poster keeps growing...

The package includes 32 room controllers / touch sensors, 4 occupancy sensors and 1 motion detector in front of the front door.
Mycraft9 Apr 2021 17:35
RE-1407 schrieb:

contains 32 room controllers / touch sensors;
So, does that mean each room gets 2-3 installed? If I remember correctly, you mentioned a total area of only about 145 m2 (1560 sq ft)?
untergasse439 Apr 2021 18:18
A brief word on room controllers: I don’t see the point of room controllers. They are completely unnecessary if you already have some kind of visualization system. The control is done by the actuator anyway, they take up wall space, and the programming effort is noticeably higher. Considering that underfloor heating settings hardly ever change and it doesn’t really matter whether you can read the temperature in every room at any time. Additionally, the Jung KRM TS D room controllers are really difficult to use.
Tarnari9 Apr 2021 18:59
What exactly should I understand by a room controller? Is it something like the control center from MDT, more like a glass touch panel, or something entirely different?
Mycraft9 Apr 2021 19:11
@Tarnari

Both actually. Just check on Jung’s website. It starts with simple multi-gang switches like MDT and goes up to control panels. However, they are all called room controllers.
Tarnari9 Apr 2021 19:15
OK, thanks. I’ll take a look.

Edit: I didn’t actually check the application itself. But I don’t find it appealing. Not ugly. But not attractive either. Although, of course, that’s a matter of personal taste.