Missouri Integration Firm Provides a Client
with the Home Theater That He Always Wanted

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This client, for whom Elite had done previous work, had owned several nice entertainment systems but never a fully automated home or a
dedicated theater, which is the gem of this $500,000-plus installation.
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Some of life’s best gifts arrive later than others.
When a retired physician in the St. Louis area
built a 5,000-square-foot custom home in an upscale
golf community, he knew he wanted a dedicated theater
to feed his passion for classical music, opera, and
film. Jeff Erickson, president of Elite Enterprises Inc.
in St. Peters, Missouri, obliged and then some.
Elite Enterprises is a smaller, 22-year old
company serving the St. Louis metro area with
a background in big-time commercial AV
integration projects, according to Erickson, a self-described
“gadget nerd” who is into A/V test and
measurement gear.
This client, for whom Elite had done previous
work, had owned several nice entertainment systems
but never a fully automated home or a dedicated
theater, which is the gem of this $500,000-
plus installation.

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The theater’s constant-height video projection system
combines a Digital Projection Titan with anamorphic
lens, Lumagen video processor, and a Stewart
CineCurve screen with masking.
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In addition to its 13-seat theater the home also
includes a complete Crestron automation system
(TPMC-8X touchpanels and Cameo keypads
controlling lights, HVAC, security, intercom, and
A/V). Theater sound features a Bag End speaker
system (11 MM-8H mid-field studio monitors,
three S12E-I subs, three D18E-I subs, and two ETrap
electronic bass traps) with audio processing and amplification by Lexicon, Crown, and BSS
Soundweb. The constant-height video projection
system combines a Digital Projection Titan with
anamorphic lens, Lumagen video processor, and a
Stewart CineCurve screen with masking.
Working Closely with the Builder
“Structural changes had to be made to accommodate
the theater space we wanted,” Erickson said.
“The theater is in the basement and required a
deeper dig by the builder for the stadium-style seating.
We had to work closely with the builder and architect
to make sure the construction requirements
for this room were properly implemented.”
Elite has used Bag End loudspeakers for years in
commercial work and in some residential jobs, according
to Erickson. He says that he found the MM-8H
studio monitor to have a consistent coverage pattern
and very appealing sound with high-output capability.
“We needed compact boxes because we were limited
up front by the large screen size verses the available
wall area (we did not want to use a perforated
screen),” he said. “Plus, we wanted to use the same
speaker for LCR and surround. Most small boxes
can’t meet the criteria we established for this project.”
Using Bag End’s E-Trap for the first time, Erickson
said, enabled him to reduce the theater’s most
egregious resonant peaks without committing a significant
portion of the room to bass traps. “Dealing with
the lower end of the audio spectrum is always one of
the most difficult challenges in small rooms,” he said.
“Many people resort to heavy-handed EQ to correct
this problem, but the real problem is not the speaker
response, it’s the room. With the E-Trap, we knocked
out some nasty problems in the room, leaving the
speakers alone. We will definitely use these again.”
Keeping Aesthetics in Mind

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The 13-seat home theater features a Bag End speaker system
(11 MM-8H mid-field studio monitors, three S12E-I subs,
three D18E-I subs, and two E-Trap, electronic bass traps)
with audio processing and amplification by Lexicon, Crown,
and BSS Soundweb.
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Elite’s customized design for the theater included
the appearance and location of acoustical panels
and columns, resulting in a sophisticated room with
dark wood with a modern flair.
“Jeff handled a difficult juggling act, incorporating
effective acoustic treatment and cosmetics into a
good product mix,” said Bag End president Jim Wischmeyer.
“This was his chance to install a professional
Bag End speaker system into a home theater. When
you design a room like this, either residential or commercial,
so often there are ‘cosmetic police’ making it
hard for A/V people to do the best job. The trick is
combining the art with the acoustics so that there is
little or no trade-off in performance. Jeff did a nice job
of working with everyone to ensure that the room met
and exceeded the client’s rather high expectations.”
To round out the client’s wishes for a true theatrical
experience, Elite installed the DPI video projector
and the Stewart screen. “Because the screen
was over 11 feet wide, we needed a three-chip projector
with some horsepower,” Erickson said. “DPI
products provide stunning results.”
Currently, Elite’s residential work accounts for
60 to 70 percent of its revenue. “An important
change for me was adjusting my thinking from
large-room acoustics and live sound reinforcement
to that of small residential spaces with playback systems,” Erickson explained. “The goals are still
great sound and video, but you are dealing with a
different set of challenges and expectations that you
don’t encounter in large public areas.”
Erickson said that retaining full control is essential
to a design-build company like Elite. “In a lot
of bid work, you can end up with an unhappy client
due to no fault of your own, because the original design
was bad,” he said. “We prefer to work directly
with the client. We want the person who will be sitting
in the room to be part of the design process.
We want to impart our enthusiasm.”
The satisfaction, Erickson believes, comes in the
direct response from the client, which you don’t
always get when working in a public facility. “I always
try first to establish who the client is,” he said.
“Everyone has different priorities and different lifestyles.
You have to get into a client’s head because
their perceptions of technology versus the reality
sometimes differ, and it’s up to you to close that gap.
Compromises have to be made in every project. The
key is to remember that you need to manage the customer’s
expectations as well as the project.”
Bag End Is On Both Sides Now

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Visit Bag End online to learn more about the brand’s
commercial/residential crossover potential.
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Bag End is highly regarded for its professional product
line, widely used in houses of worship, nightclubs,
recording studios, and film production. But the
company has been dabbling in the residential market
for years, according to its president Jim Wischmeyer.
In the mid-1990s, Bag End introduced its
IN FRASU B self-powered subwoofer system with RCA
connectors, aimed at the residential channel. “We
sold hundreds and got high reviews,” Wischmeyer
said. “That really put us into the residential market,
but we’re small, and we didn’t have the impact
of mass production. Subwoofers were just starting to come on, and our
system was pricey, starting at about $1,500.”
The dabbling has grown over then years, though residential still only
represents five percent of Bag End’s business.
“We’ve all taken our lumps with the economic
downturn,” Wischmeyer explained, “so crossing over
into other compatible markets is important to us. A lot
of residential contractors do the occasional commercial
job, and that’s where we’re a good find to supply both
markets as well as to provide some expertise.”
Bag End devotes a page in its price guide for
residential systems, and has re-packaged recording
studio products as home theater systems.
“Clearly, residential is a much bigger market,”
Wischmeyer concluded, “but I don’t think there’s a silver bullet for increasing
it. I’ve never been one to bet the farm.”
Elite's Commercial Crossover
There’s been a lot of talk
about CEDIA ESCs crossing
over to light commercial work,
but Elite Enterprises actually
came from the other direction,
having added the residential
segment to its pro division
more than 10 years ago.
“I started on the pro/
commercial side doing clubs
and small church jobs,” said company president
Jeff Erickson. “From there we grew into larger
sound reinforcement and mixed A/V projects for
clients that included many churches, colleges,
the St. Louis Gateway Arch, the St. Louis Zoo, and
a local minor league baseball park.”
At first, residential work was a hobby for Elite,
but with the advent of HDTV
and given what he saw in the
burgeoning home automation
realm, Erickson’s interest
peaked, and Elite Home
Systems was born.
“I liked the idea of working
directly with the sole decisionmaker/
check writer, verses
dealing with committees or
company employees who were spending other
people’s money,” he explained. “And it looked
like residential had some good profit potential.
I started to get a feel for where our niche was.
We bring a lot to the table, due in part to my
background in acoustics and systems design.”