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havarocky

Where do we put the TV and Components?

havarocky
11 years ago
last modified: 11 years ago
Looking for some advice. This is a picture of the only wall we can use to place a tv in our new house. We don't love the idea of tv over fireplace but for now, it's the only option. Question is, if we were to put the TV over the fireplace, where would we put the components. We have a toddler and a newborn on the way so having buttons and dials out of reach is one consideration. If we got a tower and placed it where the chair is, would we need a tower on both sides? There isn't much of a shelf on the mantle to put the cable box. Thanks.

Comments (7)

  • PRO
    Mona Ives
    11 years ago
    I would suggest you store the media components across the room in another single entertainment console. Utilize RF (radio frequency) so that your remote does not have to be pointed at the coponents for them to work.
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    Interesting idea. I hadn't thought about that. I wonder if the verizon fios box comes with RF builtin. Otherwise, I am sure I could find an adapter.
  • PRO
    Mint Design
    11 years ago
    You can paint the wall with silver screen paint and use a projector. You may not even need a tv. I believe you can have your cable tv run directly to the projector as well as your xbox 360 or apple tv for streaming video. I am not an av specialist but my clients are having this sort of thing done and we plan to do the same shortly....whenever I have time to devote to my own home..it is like the cobbler whose children have no shoes! LOL! Any av specialists out there?
  • PRO
    JAN MOYER
    11 years ago
    Put the tv over the mantel. Put ALL components in a closet, or in any storage piece you want and it need NOT be near the tv. The I.R repeater takes care of that. The cable box can even go in the basement! Call a sound tech/electrician. You will need him in any case! I don't know what you mean when you say "tower".... newer tv's have speakers built in.
  • jwbarry
    11 years ago
    I like the suggestion about hiding the components in a cabinet and using the RF for the controls.
  • lilyw
    11 years ago
    Check out Seura, they have mirrors that change to TVs: http://www.seura.com/product/premier/
  • PRO
    Joe Gates Construction, Inc.
    11 years ago
    Recessing the TV into the wall is a good option and you may have room to do so. It would take a hole in the wall the determine, but looks so much sleeker than plopping a flat screen on the wall. You could also cover it with a sliding door or art piece when not in use.
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    Thanks everyone for the feedback....keep 'em coming. Just to re-iterate, my main issue is not with exposing the tv (though those mirror tvs are super cool). My problem is where to hide the components. By tower I had meant a cabinet/bookshelf to store the components. I see all these gorgeous family room pics online and wonder where others have put the cable box (at a minimum) and then other items like blueray/dvd etc. Thanks again for the comments.
  • glorfred
    11 years ago
    With your tv wall mounted above the fireplace, perhaps you could utilize some shelving (with doors or screened to prevent reprogramming by small fingers) under the windows. You might be able to create a wrap around custom look to incorporate your fireplace. Wires could be buried in the wall. I've seen this done and it actually turned out nicely.
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    @glorfred - do you have any pictures to describe the shelves you are talking about. Would love ideas on how to incorporate shelves into the the fireplace....maybe even little benches to look out the window on top of these shelves/benches?
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    @glorfred - do you have any pictures to describe the shelves you are talking about. Would love ideas on how to incorporate shelves into the the fireplace....maybe even little benches to look out the window on top of these shelves/benches?
  • pattikite
    11 years ago
    I dislike TVs over the fireplace. They are in competition with one another. Look at me, look at me. No!, look at me! Does your tv absolutely have to be in this room?
  • glorfred
    11 years ago
    I will try to find some pictures. But you are on the right track...window seats would be awesome!
  • PRO
    JAN MOYER
    11 years ago
    Is it a slow news day? Show the rest of the room, and the furniture! Happy to recommend a cabinet to store the "box and dvd"... call the tech man/electrician, and show him where you will locate that. It really is that simple, and don't make a simple thing hard. Components will be hidden from sticky fingers, the tv will be in the best location for the room, and you can move on to bigger more important things.
  • valarie395
    11 years ago
    Your picture doesn't show your corners, but we had the same problem in our living room. We purchased a corner tv component stand and that worked out great. I dont know how that would work with your seating plan, but it might be worth a try.
  • PRO
    Ladesic & Scott Builders
    11 years ago
    I would recommend using a newer thin flat screen and have a carpenter make a nice picture frame for it. When the news or whatever you watch in bed isn't on you can program the TV to display a variety of art or family portraits on the screen. It will look like what you turned it into, A work of art.
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    I'm uploading 3 pics with floor plans with images of the house's main floor. We do not take occupancy of the house for a few months so this is the current owner's furniture set. We are in the market for new furniture that is family room friendly but our style is similar to that in the pictures.

    We know we can put the tv in the corner as the current owners, but we find the viewing distance for the tv to be quite far. Also with toddler and a newborn we need wall space for toys, swings, bouncy chairs and stuff and think that the far wall (adjacent to the entranceway) is the best placement for these things ( though it does bother me that you will walk into the house and see toys right away. But it's the reality for us)

    We can consider other layouts for couch so that the tv is not above the fireplace, but we are stumped. We dont want to put our couch back to the fireplace.

    So ideas welcome!
  • PRO
    JAN MOYER
    11 years ago
    You do have another spot! Float the sofa perpendicular to hearth to define living from dining area. Put the tv flat on the shared powder room wall. Buy a shallow cabinet considerably wider than the television to support the tv, and hold components, and kid junk. Opposite the sofa, you will have room for a comfy chair/ ottoman or even two chairs. This will avoid a visual "wall" near the entry. Your living room is twelve feet in width, so a slightly shorter sofa , less bulky would be best. You will have a nice view of both tv and fire, and it will keep the living area from feeling as a hallway.
  • summilux
    11 years ago
    low height cabinets for audio equipment under both windows. You can have them made with glass doors to address the kids issue. The TV can go on the wall above the fireplace. If you're up for drywall alterations, by making a recessed opening you can put some of the cables behind the drywall. If you want to hook up the TV to external speakers, it may be worth the mess. Yes, there are wireless speakers, but the sound quality compared to cable connection is not there yet.
  • etr111
    11 years ago
    We moved into a new home just a few months ago and had the very same situation. We weren't crazy about the TV over the fireplace either, but it was really our only option. The home is new construction and the builder had already installed a conduit over the fireplace that ran into the adjacent master bedroom where we have our media closet. We had a tech install the TV and HDMI cables (one to cable box and one to the BluRay) and a RF component. They programmed everything to work with our cable remote. No wires or components in the room. We had another contractor (friend) frame out the area above the fireplace so it wouldn't just look like another TV hung on the wall (it's basically the focal point of our great room). Here is a photo before the TV was installed (sorry, it's the only photo I have right now - though happy to send one of the finished product).
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    @janmoyer - i did a mockup of what I think you are describing. Please see attached and confirm?
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    last modified: 11 years ago
    @etr111 - thanks for sharing. would love to see the finished product. I see that the wall is very similar to ours with the windows on either side of the fireplace. Ours also is a newish construction (but we are not the first owners). The wiring for TV also is above the fireplace as well.
  • PRO
    JAN MOYER
    11 years ago
    Hi havarocky. Listen, even just the sofa and ONE chair and ottoman, and a large round coffee table (no sharp corners) You have an infant and a toddler. Don't clutter the place with too many small storage pieces, and find a home for coats other than the front hall closet. I think you will need that for toys, books, toddler stuff. This is a wide open space, and your challenge is not the tv. It is how to live in it with very small children, and not trip over the inevitable kiddie stuff.When you add a rug to the living area... make it large enough, so all seating fits on it. You can do amazing things with broadloom, made just the area rug size you want... lots of great stuff out there. Think crawling babies.....
  • Rachael Can
    11 years ago
    Hi, we have pretty much the same set up in our living room. We hung the tv over the fireplace and we have components on another wall entirely. We hired someone to wire the tv to the components on the other wall. It wasn't cheap (around $600) but it was worth it to not have wires and components exposed. Good luck!
  • PRO
    JAN MOYER
    11 years ago
    ps.... that spot where they have the gigantic plasma tv is a good wall for a tall storage piece. Use it for toy clutter !
  • mamadoots
    11 years ago
    If you don't want to see the TV when you aren't watching it, build a frame around it and hang shutters , small doors, or something similar on the frame (think window frame). The shutters can be opened and closed when needed. If done right, this can look like a really cool piece of artwork.
  • nancymckinnis
    11 years ago
    I have the same dilemma - can electrician move wires/etc. or do you need a special audio/visual person?
  • PRO
    Theresa's Interiors
    11 years ago
    I like Jan's solution, however, depending on the intensity of light from the window there will be glare, which can be controlled by your wood blinds. If you choose to have cabinets under the window, which I like also, there is a mechanical device that is a scissor lift fitted in the cabinet, it can be controlled with a remote, and can lift up and down. A solution depending on the dimensions under the window for the size of your existing tv or new. If you use the cabinets for your components, storage and seating, frame the tv surround, install flat cabinet doors and have someone come in and paint the fronts of the doors artistically, a scene, a phrase, etc. One drawback is to physically open the doors when viewing, and we are so spoiled....This was done in our bedroom over the fireplace, and it totally disappeared which was the goal, but... "good exercise" when already in bed and decided to watch tv. So, either way, you will have to get up to close the blinds or open the cabinets, or let the scissor lift do the work. Your cabinet man will be able to provide the lift and install, if you go that route. Fun decisions!!
  • PRO
    Theresa's Interiors
    11 years ago
    Another thought is to build out from window to window a cabinet that houses, collections, childrens toys, (hidden), books? etc. this will really make it all organized and disappear, think ahead, of what storage needs you will have as your family grows.
  • valarie395
    11 years ago
    I agree about floating the furniture. Your room is plenty big to do that. It will help with freeing up wall space also. Then the corner idea might just work.
  • Rachael Can
    11 years ago
    We used an audio/visual company to do the wiring and to hang the tv.
  • nancymckinnis
    11 years ago
    Thank you
  • miacometlady
    11 years ago
    I would build a boxed seat' under each window that you can put a cushion on top and shelving underneath for the componants. I had 4 under four myself so i know what it is like to try to child proof your home. A good carpenter good build doors that open and recess back into the unit so you do not have to worry about sharp edges of doors. The kids will like looking out the window (although nose juice is inevitable). Also put the child locks on the window that do not allow them to open them more than you want.
  • havarocky
    Original Author
    11 years ago
    @miacometlady - our dog also would appreciate the window seat!
  • bellman
    11 years ago
    I put my tv on the wall and components in a near by closet and ran the wires under the floor behind the walls. They have remote controls that work thru walls. Anyway that is what I did and it works fine and leaves me with valuable floor space that would otherwise be taken up by components.
  • jackake
    11 years ago
    Seating in two locations. The window for one place to enjoy the fireplace and then the sectional for the TV area. I am sure the chairs could be pulled up when extra seating is needed.
  • barbkool
    11 years ago
    last modified: 11 years ago
    CORRECTION:The box seats on both sides, or one side, . Install the bottom of box seat on one side with the controls, THE OTHER SIDE WITH COMPONENTS. You can use glass, smoke, others, doors of choice to close from kids., The remote is helpful in comfort with this set up, it is simple and easy. You could put your tv inside the wall or get flat screen: on the left wall from the couch area, put tv there and put couches facing that on the other side of fire place, you have both views. Use that wall for more than chairs. You coul d also make two sections of space in that area, it look large, turning some couches different views. Use a room divider for certain area if possible. Use shelves over fireplace for other needs. Work with it. I see it now. Barb in Oceanside.
  • Lisa D. Nelson
    10 years ago
    Did you ever get any ideas? We are in the same boat?
  • decoenthusiaste
    10 years ago
    last modified: 10 years ago
    What does the rest of the space look like? is there a wall that has a closet next door where the gear could be stashed? Please comment and add more pix.
  • ScotExpat Cali
    10 years ago
    I just posted a design dilemma asking similar question in a way. If you go to hgtv and view the Candice Tells All (Candice Olson) episode aired Oct 23 entitled "The Art of the Update" and go to the very end of the show where they do the "reveal" you will see she hung the TV on the wall over a mantle shelf - - nothing on wall under shelf -- but it looked like there was some type of thin, sleek, electronic gizmo almost as wide as the TV, sitting on the mantle right under the TV. I think the components were on the bookcase around the corner? There has to be a way?
  • Tara Westergren
    10 years ago
    I have an idea for you...but it was difficult for me to put into words so I drew it out for you!
    The design uses the idea that you would put the cables inside the wall so that they are hidden and then uses curtains to hide where you plug everything in. with a shelf system above the TV. If you need info on how to put cables in the walls I'll send you a link
  • felixgrantham
    10 years ago
    Why is this the "only" wall where the TV can go? Please post pics of the rest of the room & you may get some new ideas. Sofa doesn't always have to face the fireplace, it often looks nice positioned to one side at a right angle to the f/p (with f/p to the side)

    TV over f/p is not very ergonomic or good looking. If you must hang it there, I'd have a carpenter build out a nicely paneled cabinet to enclose it with a mirror on the front.
  • gmamma
    10 years ago
    How about to the left or right of the mantle? We have much the same issue in our 1980's home and have the tv to the left of the hearth in a cabinet slightly in front of the window. I din't think I would like it there but have lived with it for 30+ years. It is slightly angled toward the seating area and works great !
  • solincia
    10 years ago
    Do you have a basement? You could have an electrician drop a coax line, ethernet, hdmi and infrared extender across and down the wall to the basement, so the cables and the box are hidden & don't show, and install an electrical socket behind the tv to plug it in.