Distributed video systems in Houston for homes, conference rooms, and commercial spaces.
Obsidian AV designs distributed video systems that route sources cleanly to displays across the home or business, with control, cabling, racks, network planning, and supportability built in.
Distributed video is about routing the right source to the right display without confusion.
Whether it is a home, sports room, bar area, conference space, or commercial environment, distributed video needs clean source routing, display control, cabling, switching, rack planning, and user-friendly operation.
Multi-room video for homes, media rooms, sports rooms, commercial AV, and meeting spaces.
Source routing, display control, switching, cabling, racks, labeling, and network coordination.
Integration with Control4, Crestron, Savant, Q-SYS, or simple control interfaces where appropriate.
Supportable design for future service, expansion, troubleshooting, and equipment changes.
Connected AV services for complete systems.
Most AV projects touch more than one category. These paths keep the scope easy to understand.
Networked AV Solutions
Networking, racks, cabling, Wi-Fi coordination, and AV infrastructure for stable distributed systems.
Networked AV Houston →Residential AV Houston
Whole-home AV, media rooms, home theater, audio, video, and control systems.
Residential AV Houston →Commercial AV Houston
Conference rooms, displays, video walls, town halls, and supportable commercial AV systems.
Commercial AV Houston →How the project moves forward.
Review the space
Start with the room, use case, wiring, equipment location, and support expectations.
Design the system
Plan displays, audio, control, network, rack, cabling, and user experience together.
Install cleanly
Mount, wire, terminate, label, program, and test the system with serviceability in mind.
Tune and support
Commission the system, simplify operation, and leave a path for future service or expansion.
Common questions before starting the project.
What is a distributed video system?
A distributed video system routes video sources to multiple displays, often through a central rack, matrix, networked AV hardware, or control system.
Can distributed video work in a home?
Yes. Homes can use distributed video for media rooms, sports rooms, bedrooms, patios, and whole-home display control.
Can distributed video be used commercially?
Yes. Commercial spaces can use distributed video for conference rooms, displays, town halls, video walls, training spaces, and presentation systems.