Published On: December 27, 2013

Multi-million Dollar Home Theaters Booming

Published On: December 27, 2013
Last Updated on: October 31, 2020
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Multi-million Dollar Home Theaters Booming

Home Theaters have overtaken sports cars, swimming pools, commercial kitchens, and elaborate gardens as the new way to show up your neighbors. With Americans spending $14 billion on home theaters last year it seems to be the latest way to...

Multi-million Dollar Home Theaters Booming

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Home Theaters have overtaken sports cars, swimming pools, commercial kitchens, and elaborate gardens as the new way to show up your neighbors. With Americans spending $14 billion on home theaters last year it seems to be the latest way to make your friends and neighbours jealous (unless you invite them over to use it often). From utilizing wild custom designs to being able to obtain films the same day they are released in theaters, a lot has changed from the days of having just one single-screen theater per town.

From CNN

"Our guys do $2 million-plus installations all the time," said Ron Fleming, a sales director at the Custom Electronic Design & Installation Association (CEDIA).

The most expensive theater Jeremy Kipnis, of Connecticut-based Kipnis studios, has built so far was for an Argentine tycoon and cost $6 million.

Just building the room to house the 30-seat theater alone cost $2 million or so. The projector system, screen and content delivery technology cost almost $2 million, and the sound system was another $2 million.

Helping to fuel this high-end trend are online services that deliver access to movies as soon as they are released in public theaters.

"The rich and famous don't want to fight in line to see a movie," said Kipnis. Instead these wealthy families can watch new releases in the comfort of their home.

Prima Cinema, which sends first-run films over the Internet to its clients, contractually limits a home theater's size to no more than 25 seats due to the licensing agreements attached to many films. The service is pricey: Prima charges about $35,000 for the hardware and $500 for a 24-hour rental.

"I was a little taken aback by the cost," said Karen Freedman, who uses the Prima system in her Los Angeles home. But the $500 rental fee pales in comparison with the half million or so she paid to VIA International to build her 16-seat home theater.

And Freedman, a real estate developer who is married to an entertainment industry exec, said she has turned the screenings into events. She invites friends over for viewings, serving up catered meals or snacks.

While gaining access to first-run films are of importance to some, others are all about ambiance.

Sci-fi themes are common, with theaters designed to look like the bridge of the Starship Enterprise. Others are built to look like Bruce Wayne's Batcave or with a "Pirates of the Caribbean" motif.

Donny Hackett designs home theaters in and around the Nashville area that range from a half-dozen seats to as many as 15 and are priced from $50,000 to $200,000. His design themes range from Paris cityscapes to Tennessee Titans to 1950's diner.

He has had a dozen clients ask him to incorporate his "Titanic" motif into their installations. It features a tracery domed ceiling, like from the movie set, with 1,000 fiber optic stars. Others give him carte blanche on the design.

"I've been lucky,"he said. "They give me a blank slate and I provide the accents that surround the technology."

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