Selection-sheet ready
Create simple upgrade tiers a builder can present alongside finishes, appliances, lighting, and other premium options.
Widmer Estate Systems provides the systems-engineering layer behind refined residential automation, aligning the front-end interface, HVAC equipment, lighting, shades, ventilation, humidity control, networking, solar-aware optimization, trade handoffs, and owner modes around one documented operating strategy.
Instead of treating technology as a late-stage add-on, Widmer Estate Systems turns it into a defined builder package: planned early, documented clearly, and customized per home without reinventing the process every time.
Create simple upgrade tiers a builder can present alongside finishes, appliances, lighting, and other premium options.
Identify network drops, thermostat/sensor locations, touchscreens, shade wiring, AV pathways, rack space, and low-voltage infrastructure early.
Every estate can be unique while the engineering workflow remains consistent: scope, trade responsibilities, drawings, sequences, programming, commissioning, and as-builts.
Luxury technology packages fail when each trade assumes another trade owns the missing piece. Widmer Estate Systems helps prevent those gaps by defining responsibilities, handoffs, integration points, documentation requirements, and commissioning expectations before rough-in decisions become field problems.
We bring the builder, owner representative, HVAC contractor, AV integrator, electrician, low-voltage team, security, shades, networking, and controls scope into one coordinated operating strategy.
Standard residential controls and front-end graphics typically focus on devices, screens, scenes, and basic schedules. Widmer Estate Systems focuses on the complete operating intent: how the systems handshake, how equipment responds, how modes interact, how information is documented, and how the finished residence is supported after move-in.
The result is a more intelligent home package with fewer coordination gaps, clearer accountability, and a stronger handoff for the builder, homeowner, and service teams.
High-end homes often include capable front-end platforms, premium equipment, and strong local trades. The difference is whether those pieces are coordinated through a clear operating strategy before installation decisions become field assumptions.
We support the front-end experience by defining how the equipment, controls, points, modes, limits, and documentation should work behind it. The homeowner keeps the polished interface they expect, while the builder, HVAC contractor, AV integrator, electrician, and low-voltage team receive a clearer coordination basis.
Widmer Estate Systems acts as the systems-engineering meeting point: translating owner expectations, builder standards, mechanical requirements, front-end integration needs, and serviceability goals into a coordinated plan each discipline can follow.
Widmer Estate Systems adds the control strategy, documentation, and optimization layer that helps each discipline make decisions that complement the others. The goal is a cohesive plan, cleaner coordination, fewer assumptions, and a finished system that operates as one integrated estate technology package.
Defined technology scope, decision points, coordination notes, owner options, and commissioning expectations before small field choices become expensive rework.
Early coordination for thermostat/sensor locations, keypad intent, shade behavior, equipment spaces, rack locations, and visible technology impact.
Clear operating intent for modes, ventilation, humidity, staging, variable-speed behavior, economizer decisions, safeties, and serviceable settings.
Front-end teams keep the polished homeowner interface while receiving a cleaner point schedule, naming basis, scene intent, limits, and control responsibilities.
Pre-wire notes, power/network coordination, panel/rack considerations, sensor pathways, contact closures, relay interfaces, and future-service access points.
A quieter, easier-to-operate residence where comfort, energy behavior, and service records are treated as part of the finished luxury experience.
The front-end screen is the layer the homeowner sees. Widmer Estate Systems focuses on the strategy behind that screen: when to use outside air, when humidity or enthalpy makes outside air a poor choice, how to coordinate cooling, ventilation, shades, occupancy, vacation mode, and equipment protection, and how to keep those decisions adjustable and documented for the life of the home.
A luxury technology package should not feel like a pile of devices. It should feel like a coordinated operating layer for the home.
Room or zone-based comfort planning, humidity strategy, ventilation coordination, equipment protection, and homeowner-friendly behavior.
Layered scenes, keypad intent, daylight response, privacy, architectural coordination, and usable daily operation.
Structured cabling, wireless access planning, rack/equipment layout, UPS considerations, and serviceable documentation.
Distributed audio, media rooms, theater coordination, outdoor entertainment, and clean architectural integration.
Camera pathway planning, gate/intercom coordination, access logic, privacy-minded layouts, and integration points.

Widmer Estate Systems is backed by Widmer Engineering BMS Controls LLC — a controls-focused engineering company experienced in BAS/BMS design documentation, sequences of operation, front-end graphics, programming support, commissioning, troubleshooting, and software-assisted workflow development.
A premium add-on for builders, homeowners, HVAC contractors, and front-end integrators who want the residence to perform beyond basic thermostat logic, isolated device control, or timer-based maintenance reminders. The package uses engineered monitoring, baseline testing, equipment trends, zone behavior, and energy-cost visibility so the owner can see how the home is performing, what is costing money, and where attention is needed.
Review the existing or planned HVAC/control architecture, zones, equipment behavior, schedules, alarms, trends, setpoints, ventilation paths, humidity behavior, solar exposure, shade behavior, utility assumptions, and front-end integration needs.
Develop custom sequence logic for comfort, humidity, ventilation, occupancy, away/vacation modes, economizer or outside-air decisions, time-of-day solar response, shade coordination, equipment protection, energy-cost calculations, self-test routines, abnormal-change detection, and an integration point schedule that clearly defines what the front-end may read, command, trend, or display.
Support checkout, functional testing, trend review, owner settings, adjustable thresholds, baseline records, and documentation so comfort behavior, system health, zone energy impact, filter performance, and operating cost can be reviewed over time.
Translate energy behavior into estimated dollars by hour, week, month, system, and zone, helping the owner see which areas are costing money, which areas are performing well, and where improvements such as filtration, airflow correction, insulation, glazing, shading, schedules, or equipment tuning are financially justified.
Maintain a living performance record of the home so abnormal changes are visible: a zone losing energy faster than normal, restricted airflow, an unexpected pressure drop, a return-air problem, a door or window left open, a broken seal, a sudden envelope change, or another condition that needs attention.
Monitor equipment performance patterns so declining efficiency, abnormal compressor behavior, fan or motor issues, slipping belts, airflow restrictions, filter loading, pressure-drop changes, or refrigerant-side concerns are detected earlier and explained in plain operational terms.
Widmer Estate Systems positions optimization as measured engineering and commissioning—not guesswork, not calendar timers, and not generic savings claims. The system establishes baselines, monitors actual performance, documents results, estimates energy and dollar impact by zone, and shows when conditions such as filter loading, airflow restriction, pressure drop, or equipment drift are costing money.
These tiers are a starting framework for builder conversations. Estate Performance Optimization can be added to new construction, major remodels, or existing luxury homes where the owner wants better comfort behavior, cleaner integration, a more serviceable control strategy, and a clearer financial view of energy performance by zone.
Core smart infrastructure for refined homes that need reliable comfort, lighting, networking, and app-based control.
The recommended builder package for high-end custom homes needing deeper comfort, shading, AV, and coordinated automation.
Full-residence technology architecture for premium estates, second homes, specialty rooms, wellness spaces, and long-term serviceability.
The home is custom. The delivery method is disciplined. That is how builder relationships scale nationally without losing project-specific quality.
Define builder tiers, preferred platforms, homeowner options, AV/HVAC roles, local trade responsibilities, and the systems-engineering scope.
Review plans before rough-in and produce the technology/pre-wire basis for coordination with electrical, HVAC, AV, and millwork.
Develop logic, integration points, interface structure, naming conventions, scenes, schedules, solar-aware optimization modes, comfort behavior, zone energy-cost visibility, self-test routines, home-health records, filter-performance visibility, equipment-health indicators, and owner-facing controls.
Verify system behavior, support local trade checkout, document final settings, train the owner, and preserve service records.
Add a premium technology package without adding internal engineering overhead. Widmer Estate Systems supports the builder with repeatable offerings, clean coordination documents, and technical planning before installation.
Add controls-engineering depth without giving up the front-end relationship. Widmer Estate Systems can define HVAC/control logic, point lists, and commissioning documentation while your team delivers the polished owner interface.
A home that feels calm, not complicated: intuitive scenes, reliable comfort, strong networking, quiet technology, and documentation that makes the home easier to support years later.
Widmer Estate Systems is built from controls-engineering work used in demanding commercial environments where comfort, equipment behavior, documentation, remote support, and reliable operation matter. That background is translated into a residential package that helps builders deliver a more coordinated, intelligent, and serviceable estate technology system.
Early answers for builders, architects, designers, and homeowners evaluating how Widmer Estate Systems fits into a custom build.
No. The model is remote engineering, programming, documentation, and commissioning support combined with qualified local electricians, HVAC contractors, low-voltage installers, AV integrators, and builder trades.
New construction is the best fit because infrastructure can be planned before drywall. Select remodels or major renovations may also be a fit when walls, ceilings, mechanical systems, or electrical infrastructure are already being opened.
Yes. The package structure can be adapted into builder-specific names, selection-sheet language, option levels, and pre-wire requirements while still using Widmer Estate Systems as the engineering and programming partner.
The focus is not only installing devices or creating attractive screens. The focus is engineered systems: plans, scope responsibility, trade handoffs, sequences, point/control intent, pre-wire requirements, programming structure, commissioning steps, as-built records, and a repeatable builder workflow.
Widmer Estate Systems defines the technology scope, trade responsibilities, system handoffs, integration points, documentation requirements, and commissioning expectations before the project depends on field assumptions. That gives the builder, general contractor, owner representative, HVAC contractor, AV integrator, electrician, low-voltage team, and service teams a clearer basis for who is doing what and how the systems are expected to work together.
It is a practical handoff list for the front-end platform. It identifies which values should be displayed, trended, adjusted, locked out, alarmed, or used in scenes. It helps the AV/automation integrator expose the right controls without forcing them to invent HVAC logic.
Outside air is not automatically good just because it is cooler. A better strategy can consider temperature, humidity, enthalpy, occupancy mode, indoor conditions, and adjustable owner/project thresholds so the home uses outside air when it helps and avoids it when it increases latent load or comfort risk.
Yes. An engineered system identifies energy loss by zone, estimates how much energy is being lost, translates that loss into estimated dollars, and preserves a historical record of how the home normally performs. That gives the owner a clear financial basis for deciding whether a zone needs better insulation, improved windows, shading changes, schedule adjustments, airflow correction, filtration changes, equipment tuning, or further investigation.
Home health means the system learns the normal operating profile of the residence, runs quiet baseline checks when they are least disruptive, and highlights abnormal changes such as unusual zone energy loss, unexpected heat gain, pressure-drop changes, return-air problems, a door or window left open, a broken seal, or another condition that changes the home’s performance. Equipment health means the system watches performance trends so declining efficiency, airflow changes, compressor issues, fan or motor problems, belt slip, filter loading, and service concerns are identified earlier and explained in useful operational language.
No. The optimization layer is designed around measured performance, trend history, self-test routines, and system baselines. Filters are a good example: the system does not depend on a calendar reminder alone. It watches how airflow, pressure drop, equipment effort, and energy cost change over time so the owner can see when filter performance is costing money and when the wrong filter choice or a restricted airflow condition is affecting the system.
No. Widmer Estate Systems supports those teams by defining the control strategy, integration points, commissioning expectations, and owner-service documentation. The local trades still perform their normal installation, service, and front-end delivery roles.
Widmer Estate Systems is ready for builder partnerships, custom estate planning, front-end integration support, HVAC optimization review, intelligent home-health monitoring, remote programming support, and early design coordination.