Your Home — Smart Outdoor Lighting

Most likely you have recently or will soon put up your outdoor holiday decor and this typically involves holiday lighting. Now, as you consider taking them down, let’s review your outdoor lighting and decide about how you want to make some home improvements. As you remove your outdoor decor, look over where lighting is bad, where do you have security concerns, do you have entertainment spaces that need different lighting when you have company over, outdoor steps that are a trip hazard due to bad lighting, etc….

Now divide your outdoor space into different zones. Most homes will have 4 zones: front, each side, and backyard. If you have a more complex outdoor space, you may want to divide into additional zones: back patio entertainment space, front walkway or driveway, etc…. When we set up smart lights, we assign them to a zone and then your controlling app will activate based on your choices one or more zones at a time. As an example, I may want my front door zone only to light up if it is nighttime and motion or doorbell activity at the front door. Another example would be motion detected in the backyard at night, but for safety, you want the backyard and both side yards to light up to ensure nobody can break into your home unnoticed.

So now that you know where you have concerns or issues as well as what you want to achieve, we can start looking at solutions. The first consideration is electrical. You do not NEED a wired power source because of the availability to use solar or battery solutions, but you need to know that before purchasing equipment. If you want items to be dependent on each other, the easiest solution is to keep everything in the same brand.

For purposes of this conversation I will use “Ring by Amazon” but multiple brands provide similar solutions. If you have a large estate, something like Josh AI is a great solution to automate and control multiple devices of different sources/brands. You are probably familiar with Ring doorbells, but they have motion activated cameras, floodlights, path lighting, etc… All of these items can be interconnected via their app, which you load onto your cell phone or access via your computer. Set up a zone called pathways, which could be solar-powered path lighting, that is set up to automatically come on from a dusk to down. For security, you can have your motion activated cameras automatically turn on any floodlight in their zone whenever it is dark and motion is detected. You could also add the “side zones” so that all sides of your house light up when the backyard cameras register motion. Finally, for an evening party, you can then turn on the “patio” zone. These lights could be setup on a dimmer so you have them provide the appropriate mode lighting and automatically override the evening motion activated full flood.

So as you set up and take down that outside holiday decor, review your setup for some home improvement opportunities. This is a great way to incorporate smart technology that provides the automation and improved security so you can simply enjoy your home. Give me a call if you want some help deciding on the correct equipment and how to design your lighting plan!

Upgrade your Outdoor Lighting using Smart Technology!

Are you thinking about adding some outdoor lights to your home? Have you considered if they are going to be controlled by a good old fashion switch or maybe a timer? What about using smart technology? The first question is — Why? What is the advantage to using smart lighting features instead of just a simple on/off switch.

  • Energy Costs — only having the lights on when you need it saves money!
  • Safety — something as simple as having multiple lights come on when a motion sensor activates can make all the difference in preventing theft and other property damage.
  • Convenience — almost everyone has at some point run around the house, flipping various switches to turn lights off. If you had them tied to smart controls, the “switch” could be in your phone (which is typically on you) and can perform more than just on/off.
  • Integration — The real power comes from integrating the lights to other systems. The most obvious one is your outdoor cameras. The motion sensor at the front of the house trips; now the cameras start, the lights at the front and either side of the house come on, etc…. If I am a thief, a lot of attention has just been put on my activities, and I’m leaving.

So what are my smart lighting options. First consideration is what do you currently have installed. For example, if you have a Ring or Blink doorbell those systems including outdoor light control and are already integrated together.

Other options with various pros and cons:

The New York Times wrote a pretty good article about some of the various options available! Link: https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/reviews/best-smart-outdoor-lighting-for-backyards-pathways-and-more/

Give me a call, and we can figure out what is the best solution for your needs. For some, it will be buying component pieces that can integrate together…especially if you already have some smart technology installed. For others, depending on your budget and what you are trying to accomplish, going with a specific brand of products that are already designed to work together is probably the right solution!