What’s Included

What a Samsung Frame TV Installation in King City Actually Includes

A Samsung Frame TV installation in King City covers a site survey against every wall the Frame is going on across the property — and on a multi-structure King Township estate that is rarely a single wall. The standard scope per screen is the no-gap flush wall mount, a recessed power outlet behind the screen, the in-wall route for the Invisible Connection optical cable, the One Connect Box placement, the bezel selection against the room’s millwork and floor palette, and the Art Mode calibration with a curated starter art rotation. On a Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township multi-structure property, that scope is coordinated across the main-house great room, the principal-bedroom feature wall, the interior coach-house guest suite, and the interior pool-house lounge as a single estate AV program — not as four unrelated installs.

Most King City Frame TV work falls into one of three property-reality tracks. The first is a single-Frame retrofit in a Spring Hill country condominium suite or a 1960s King City village-core ranch — a one-visit install on a standard drywall partition, the same scope as any single-Frame install elsewhere in the GTA. The second is a multi-Frame estate install across a Kingscross Estates, Estates of King Township, or Nobleton custom-built property, where two to four Frame TVs are coordinated across the main house and one or more outbuildings — main-house great room, principal-bedroom feature wall, interior coach-house guest suite, interior pool-house lounge — with a shared bezel palette, a shared Art Mode curation, and a shared equipment room. The third is a heritage farmhouse retrofit in Schomberg, Laskay, Kinghorn or Pottageville, where the substrate is 19th-century plaster-and-lath over a fieldstone-foundation farmhouse, the millwork is original wide-plank pine, and the fastener pattern is mapped against the lath before the bracket touches the wall. Every track uses the same no-gap bracket, the same Invisible Connection optical cable, and the same Art Mode calibration; the survey decides which track the property sits in. See the broader pattern at Samsung Frame TV installation across the GTA.

No-Gap Flush Bracket

The Frame ships with the bracket. The wall has to be plumb across the screen’s full footprint — a few millimetres of bow at any corner shows as a visible gap.

Recessed Power Outlet

Low-profile recessed outlet box installed by a licensed electrician behind the screen. A standard surface outlet would push the bezel 25 mm off the wall and break the flush look entirely.

Invisible Connection Cable Run

Fibre-optic ribbon routed in-wall through the stud cavity, inside a chimney chase above the fireplace, or behind a paint-matched surface raceway on heritage plaster-and-lath substrate.

Bezel + Art Mode Calibration

Modern matte-black, Beveled walnut, or Studio Stand bezel matched to wall paint and millwork; ambient-light sensor stepped to the room’s actual daylight curve; starter art library curated.

Multi-Structure Estate

How a Multi-Frame Estate Install Works Across the Main House, Coach House, and Pool House in King City

On a King City estate property — Kingscross Estates, The Estates of King Township, the larger Nobleton custom builds, the deeper King City North builds — two to four Frame TVs are routinely coordinated as a single estate AV program. The main-house great room takes a 75- or 85-inch Frame above the fireplace surround or on the feature wall opposite the sectional; the principal-bedroom feature wall takes a 55- or 65-inch Frame; the interior coach-house guest suite takes a 55-inch Frame on the suite’s living-area partition; the interior pool-house lounge takes a 65-inch Frame on the lounge wall opposite the seating. Every screen runs the same bezel finish, the same Art Mode curation, and the same Sonos or Control4 source — coordinated from a single main-house equipment room, not from four unrelated AV racks. For the broader audio-visual scope across the same homes, see home theatre installation in King City.

The estate-tier King Township property is structurally different from a single-house GTA install in three ways. First, the survey covers every Frame position in one visit rather than one room — the bezel sample set is held against the millwork in the great room, the principal bedroom, the coach-house guest suite, and the interior pool-house lounge on the same afternoon so the bezel finish reads consistent across the property. Second, the cable plant is multi-structure — the main-house Frames route their Invisible Connection optical cables back to the main equipment room through standard in-wall fishing, but the coach-house and pool-house Frames need an inter-building cable run handled as part of the same scope (covered in the dedicated section below). Third, the equipment room becomes the anchor for the whole property — one rack carries the source devices for every Frame, the network gear that feeds them, and the Sonos or Control4 controller that drives the Art Mode rotation and the daily source switching from a single app. The result is a coordinated install: one survey, one estimate, one bezel palette, one Art Mode curation, one equipment room, and one fixed-price quote.

Why we do not split a multi-structure estate Frame install across separate AV racks

A four-Frame estate property could in principle run four separate small AV racks — one per screen position, each with its own source devices and its own network drop. We do not do this on a King Township estate. A single main-house equipment room with one rack carrying every source is faster to service, easier to update when a new game console or streamer is added, and avoids the failure mode of one room having a stale source while the rest of the property is current. The rack lives in a basement equipment room, a main-floor millwork niche, or a coat-closet conversion depending on the floor plan; the location is decided at the survey against the inter-building cable path.

Editorial overhead diagrammatic illustration of a King Township Kingscross Estates property showing the main house, the coach house, and the interior pool house with stylised cable run connecting all three to a main-house basement equipment room and a Samsung Frame TV symbol at each interior position
Kingscross Estates · Coordinated Multi-Structure AV Program
Pre-Wire During Framing

Why Pre-Wire During Framing Is the Cleanest Plan for a King City Custom New-Build

King City and the wider King Township see a steady cadence of custom new-builds — Kingscross Estates infill, The Estates of King Township French-country detached, deeper King City North builds, Nobleton estate builds. The cleanest Frame TV plan on those builds is to run the cable plant during the framing phase, before drywall closes. Every Frame position gets a low-voltage Cat6 home-run, a recessed 1-gang outlet box, conduit for the Invisible Connection optical cable, and a labelled pull-string back to the main equipment room while the studs are open and the framer is still on site. The retrofit-into-finished-drywall path is always available later, but the pre-wire path costs less per screen, leaves no patch-and-paint scar, and runs the cable in the cleanest stud-cavity route the framing allows.

The pre-wire visit is a two-step scope. The first step is a framing-stage walk with the homeowner, the architect or designer, and the general contractor before the electrical rough-in trade closes — the Frame positions are marked on the studs with the screen-centre height drawn out at full scale, the One Connect Box destination is marked in the proposed equipment room, and the inter-building cable path is mapped if the property includes a coach house or pool house. The second step is the rough-in itself, done in coordination with the electrical trade — recessed outlet boxes are set behind every Frame position, the Invisible Connection conduit is run inside the stud cavity from the screen position back to the equipment room, low-voltage Cat6 home-runs are pulled, and pull-strings are left in every conduit so the optical cable can be drawn through after the drywall closes. The drywall trade then closes the wall over a clean cable plant. When the property reaches finished-millwork and floor-finish stage, the screens are hung, the bezels are fitted, the One Connect Boxes are mounted in the equipment room, and the Art Mode calibration is done against the actual finished-room daylight — not against a paint-sample mock-up.

Frame vs Terrace

Can the Samsung Frame TV Go in an Outdoor Pool Pavilion or a Covered Porch in King City?

No — the Frame TV is not rated for outdoor or high-humidity environments, and we do not install it in an outdoor pool pavilion, a covered porch, or an open-air loggia even when the pavilion is roofed. Samsung’s own product guidance excludes the Frame from outdoor and high-humidity installs and recommends the Samsung Terrace as the outdoor-rated option. On a King Township estate property where the homeowner wants a screen on the outdoor pool pavilion, the loggia, or a partially-covered outdoor seating area, we install a Samsung Terrace there and keep the Frame for the interior positions — main-house great room, principal bedroom, interior coach-house guest suite, interior pool-house lounge.

The distinction matters on a Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township property where the outdoor scope and the indoor scope often blur. The Frame is the right answer for a fully enclosed, conditioned room — a great room with a fireplace, a principal bedroom, a coach-house living suite, a pool-house lounge inside the building envelope. The Terrace is the right answer for anything outside that envelope — an uncovered patio, a partially-covered loggia, a pavilion roof open on three sides, a screened-in porch with seasonal humidity swings. The two products use a similar Tizen-based interface so the daily user experience is consistent across the property, but the Terrace has the IP55 weather-resistant rating, the anti-glare anti-reflection panel for daytime outdoor viewing, and the boosted brightness needed for outdoor light. Specifying the Frame in an outdoor or pavilion position would void Samsung’s warranty and would shorten the panel’s service life in a way that is not a savings worth making on an estate-tier property. The Frame-vs-Terrace decision is made at the survey, per position, against the actual envelope condition — not against the wishlist.

Schomberg & Laskay Heritage Farmhouse

Can a Samsung Frame TV Be Installed in a Schomberg, Laskay, Kinghorn or Pottageville Heritage Farmhouse?

Yes — the Frame is one of the few televisions that actually fits a King Township heritage farmhouse interior. The matte panel and the magnetic bezel read against the original wide-plank pine floors, the original plaster-and-lath walls, the exposed barn-board feature walls, and the fieldstone fireplace surrounds typical of a Schomberg, Laskay, Kinghorn or Pottageville 19th-century farmhouse — the way a framed painting hung on the wall would read. The retrofit is careful work, not standard drywall fastening, but the Frame is the right television for it.

Three substrate conditions show up in a King Township heritage farmhouse and the technique changes with each. Original plaster-and-lath wall: the no-gap bracket fastens into the original wood lath behind the plaster face rather than spanning a plaster-only section that could crack under load; a 19 mm plywood backer is added across multiple lath strips where the lath spacing does not line up with the bracket’s hole pattern, and the backer is hidden behind the screen. Original barn-board feature wall: the bracket fastens into the original board-and-batten where the boards run over a solid backing — the hardware is concealed behind the screen, and the bezel is selected against the warm board patina so the screen reads as a deliberate framed picture against the wood.

Fieldstone fireplace surround: a custom steel mounting plate spans the stone face in the screen footprint, the no-gap bracket bolts to the plate, and the recessed outlet is core-drilled through the stone with a water-cooled carbide core bit in a single pass to avoid chip-out — the same technique used on a stone-clad surround elsewhere in York Region, applied here to an older and harder fieldstone surface. In every case the cable route is decided against the original millwork — a paint-matched surface raceway is the realistic fallback where the plaster face or the original wide-plank pine floor cannot be opened for a clean in-wall pull. The broader fastener and substrate playbook lives under TV wall mounting.

  • Lath-spacing map taken by tapping the plaster face at the survey, before any fastener goes in
  • 19 mm plywood backer spanning multiple lath strips where lath does not align with the bracket pattern
  • Custom steel mounting plate spanning the fieldstone face in the screen footprint
  • Water-cooled carbide core-drill through the fieldstone for the recessed outlet, single-pass to avoid chip-out
  • Paint-matched surface raceway as the realistic fallback where the original wide-plank pine floor cannot be opened
  • Beveled walnut bezel matched to warm board-and-batten patina and original wide-plank pine
Schomberg heritage farmhouse interior in King Township with a 55-inch Samsung Frame TV mounted flush against an exposed barn-board feature wall, Beveled walnut bezel matched to original wide-plank pine floor and warm exposed beam ceiling, screen displaying a quiet warm Canadian landscape painting in Art Mode
Schomberg · 19th-Century Farmhouse Retrofit
Inter-Building Cable Plant

How the Frame TV Cable Plant Runs Between the Main House and a Coach House or Pool House

Between buildings on a King City estate property, the cable plant is a direct-burial Cat6 trench from the main-house equipment room to the coach house, the pool house, or the detached garage — not a wireless bridge. A typical Kingscross Estates lot is two acres or larger, and the distance from the main equipment room to the pool house or coach house is routinely 30 to 100 metres. A buried Cat6 conduit run carries the network and source signal from the main equipment room to a small distribution shelf inside the outbuilding, and the Invisible Connection optical cable for that building’s Frame runs the short interior distance from the distribution shelf to the back of the screen. The structured-wiring backbone behind all of this is the same one we build for any whole-property network installation.

Three things drive the inter-building plan. First, the trench. The cable plant is buried at code depth in a conduit run from the main equipment room out under the lawn or the driveway to the outbuilding’s foundation penetration, sealed against frost and water at both ends. The trench is planned at the survey against the existing landscape and the existing irrigation, and is coordinated with the homeowner’s landscaper when the lot has a maintained planted bed. Second, the outbuilding distribution shelf. A small wall-mounted shelf inside the coach house or pool house carries a network switch, the One Connect Box for that building’s Frame, and a power supply — the Frame’s optical cable runs from the box to the back of the screen, the network switch backhauls to the main equipment room over the buried Cat6 trench, and the Sonos or Control4 controller in the main rack drives the source switching from there. Third, the cable budget. The Invisible Connection optical cable has a 15-metre continuous-run ceiling without an in-wall splice, which is why the One Connect Box lives in the outbuilding rather than back in the main-house equipment room — the box is local to the screen, and the inter-building backhaul is Cat6 not optical ribbon.

One Connect Box Placement

Where the One Connect Box Goes in a King City Multi-Structure Install

In the main house, the One Connect Box for each Frame lives in the main-house equipment room — a basement equipment closet for a Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township build with a full basement, a main-floor millwork niche for a Spring Hill condominium suite or a King City village-core ranch, or a converted coat closet for a heritage farmhouse where no purpose-built equipment room exists. In each outbuilding — the coach house, the interior pool house — the box lives on a small wall-mounted distribution shelf local to that building’s Frame, because the Invisible Connection optical cable has a 15-metre continuous-run ceiling that cannot be stretched across an inter-building trench.

Three rules drive the placement on every property. First, convective airflow — the box generates heat under load, and a sealed cabinet without venting will shorten the box’s service life; the equipment-room shelf and the outbuilding distribution shelf both use a real vent slot in the cabinet door or a deliberate gap at the cabinet back. Second, the optical cable length — Samsung’s stock ribbon is 5 metres, the extension brings the maximum continuous run to 15 metres, and an in-wall splice voids the optical-fibre warranty. Third, serviceability — the HDMI inputs and the power input on the back of the box have to be reachable for future swaps without dismantling the millwork or pulling a screen off the wall. On a multi-structure estate the third rule is the reason the boxes live on a shelf with a hinged front cover rather than being buried inside a sealed niche.

Bezel Selection · French-Country Palette

How to Pick the Samsung Frame TV Bezel Against The Estates of King Township French-Country Palette

Bezel selection is decided at the survey by holding the three bezel samples — Modern matte black, Beveled walnut, and the Studio Stand frame — against the actual wall finish, the millwork, the floor palette, and the room’s daylight curve. The Estates of King Township French-country detached subdivision and the wraparound-veranda French-country custom builds elsewhere in King City share a recognisable palette: limewashed or warm-painted wall finishes, Provence-style oak or whitewashed-oak millwork, wide-plank European-oak or warm-stained engineered hardwood, dormer-and-veranda warm afternoon light. Against that palette, Beveled walnut consistently reads sympathetic and the Studio Stand frame is a strong runner-up in a feature-corner sitting room.

The Modern matte-black bezel is the strongest reading as a standalone object — sharp edges, contemporary feel, no warm grain. Against the French-country palette in King Township it consistently reads visually cold and out-of-place once it is held against the limewashed wall finish and the warm wide-plank European-oak floor in afternoon light. The Beveled walnut bezel is the working default because the warm walnut grain locks into the oak millwork and the warm floor palette and reads as deliberate furniture against the limewashed wall — the screen disappears into the room as a framed painting would. In Kingscross Estates great rooms with more contemporary millwork — warm-stained walnut or warm-stained European-oak built-ins, warm engineered-hardwood floor — the Beveled walnut bezel reads consistently the same way as it does in The Estates of King Township.

In a Schomberg or Laskay heritage farmhouse the bezel is picked against the original wide-plank pine floor and the original barn-board patina — Beveled walnut still usually wins, but a darker warm-stained beveled bezel can be brought to the survey as a sample if the original woodwork has deepened with age. The Studio Stand frame is a specialty option that turns the screen into a tripod-mounted easel piece — useful in a principal-bedroom feature corner, a Spring Hill condominium den, or a coach-house guest suite where the wall opposite the seating is a window rather than a partition.

Screen Sizing

What Size Samsung Frame TV Fits Best in a Kingscross Estates Ravine-Vista Great Room and the Other King City Rooms

The screen size is decided at the survey against the seated sightline from the principal seating and the wall composition, not against the room’s total square footage. A 55-inch Frame fits a Spring Hill condominium living room, a King City village-core 1960s ranch, a coach-house guest-suite living wall, or a principal-bedroom feature wall. A 65-inch Frame fits a Nobleton family room, an interior pool-house lounge, or a smaller Estates of King Township sitting room. A 75-inch Frame fits a Kingscross Estates great room with the principal seating 3.5 to 4.5 metres from the screen. An 85-inch Frame fits the deeper Kingscross Estates ravine-vista great rooms where the seated sightline is more than 4.5 metres from the screen and the wall composition can absorb it.

Two rules drive the call. First, the seated sightline. From the centre of the principal seating, the screen should occupy roughly 30 to 40 degrees of horizontal field of view for a cinematic Frame Mode rendering — closer than that and the screen reads as oversized in a room used for daily living, further than that and the screen reads as undersized in a great-room composition where it is meant to be a deliberate framed element on the wall. Second, the wall composition. The screen has to read as a framed picture against the wall it lives on. In a Kingscross Estates great room with a ravine-side window wall on one side and a stone or stone-veneer fireplace surround on the adjacent wall, the screen footprint should sit visually inside the surround face with a deliberate margin of stone on every side; on a coach-house living partition the screen footprint should not crowd the adjacent window or door casing; in a Schomberg farmhouse parlour the screen footprint should sit visually below the original picture-rail or below the original beam line. Where the wall composition and the seated sightline disagree, the wall composition usually wins because the framed-picture effect is the reason the Frame is being installed.

Pricing

How Much Samsung Frame TV Installation Costs in King City

Samsung Frame TV installation in King City starts at $199.99 for a single-screen flush install on a standard drywall partition. Multi-Frame estate scope across a Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township property is quoted per screen as separate line items with a coordinated multi-position discount applied where the property is surveyed and installed in one visit. Inter-building direct-burial Cat6 trench runs, core-drilled fieldstone fireplace recessed outlets, Schomberg or Laskay heritage-farmhouse plaster-and-lath fastener work, surface-mount paint-matched raceway fallbacks, pre-wire-during-framing rough-in scope, and screens over 65 inches are quoted separately at the survey based on scope, substrate, and access.

Three things change the figure once the survey is complete. First, the property reality. A single-screen Spring Hill condominium suite or a single-screen King City village-core ranch retrofit lands closest to the starting price. A multi-Frame Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township estate program is quoted per screen, against the inter-building cable plant, and against the equipment-room scope. A Schomberg or Laskay heritage farmhouse retrofit is quoted against the substrate work — the plaster-and-lath fastener pattern, the optional plywood backer, the fieldstone fireplace core-drill — not just the bracket. Second, the One Connect Box plan. A 5-metre stud-cavity run to a basement equipment room directly below is the cleanest condition; a 15-metre run that has to navigate a chimney chase or a Kingscross Estates deeper floor plan takes longer, and an inter-building cable plant to a coach house or pool house is its own line item. Third, the pre-wire path. A new-build pre-wire scope is rough-in only at the framing stage with the screen-hang and Art Mode calibration happening months later when the property is finished — the rough-in is quoted separately from the finish-stage hang.

The estimate is fixed-price once the survey is done — there is no surprise after the work begins. See the broader fixed-price scope across services at SetupTeam pricing.

Typical Project · Kingscross Estates

How a Multi-Frame Estate Install Typically Unfolds Across a Kingscross Estates Property in King City

Kingscross Estates King City principal-floor great room at late afternoon with a 75-inch Samsung Frame TV running Art Mode above a stone-clad gas-fireplace surround, Beveled walnut bezel, west-facing ravine-vista window wall filtering warm afternoon light through deciduous canopy, warm wide-plank engineered hardwood, French-country-influenced limewashed wall finish

A typical multi-Frame estate install on a Kingscross Estates property in King City coordinates three Frame TVs as a single AV program — a 75-inch Frame in the principal-floor great room mounted flush above the stone-clad gas-fireplace surround, a 55-inch Frame in the principal bedroom on the feature wall opposite the seating, and a 65-inch Frame in the interior pool-house lounge on the wall opposite the seating — all three running the Beveled walnut bezel finish, all three running the same Art Mode curation, all three driven from a single main-house basement equipment room over a coordinated cable plant that includes a 60-metre direct-burial Cat6 trench from the equipment room out to the pool house. The survey covers every position in one visit, the bezel sample set is held in every room on the same afternoon, and the estimate is one fixed-price coordinated scope.

The work runs across three coordinated visits — a survey visit, an electrical-and-trench visit, and a mount-and-Art-Mode visit. The survey decides the screen-centre height for every Frame against the seated sightline in each room, marks the recessed outlet position behind every screen footprint, and maps the inter-building cable path from the main-house basement equipment room out to the pool house. The licensed electrician sets the recessed outlet boxes for the great-room and bedroom Frames, core-drills the stone fireplace surround in the great room for the recessed outlet behind the 75-inch Frame, and runs the optical cable inside the chimney chase down to the basement equipment room. In parallel, the inter-building trench is dug at code depth from the equipment room out under the lawn to the pool-house foundation penetration, the buried Cat6 conduit is pulled, and a small wall-mounted distribution shelf is installed inside the pool-house lounge with the pool-house Frame’s One Connect Box on it.

The mount visit hangs the three screens, fits the Beveled walnut bezel on each, magnetises each bezel in place, loads the shared starter art rotation on every screen, and calibrates Art Mode in each room against that room’s actual daylight curve at the time of day the homeowner uses the room — late afternoon in the west-facing ravine-vista great room, evening in the principal bedroom, mid-afternoon in the pool-house lounge. More installations of this kind appear under recent installation work.

3Frames · One Estate Program
60 mDirect-Burial Cat6 Trench
3Coordinated Visits
Beveled walnut across all three screens 75″ great room · 55″ bedroom · 65″ pool house Single basement equipment room driving every Frame Licensed · WSIB · $2M Liability

Scenario framing — representative Kingscross Estates multi-Frame install pattern. Specific homeowner project references available on request after a survey.

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Planning a King City Frame TV install?

Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township multi-Frame estate scope, pre-wire-during-framing for a King Township custom new-build, Schomberg or Laskay heritage farmhouse retrofit, fieldstone fireplace core-drill, or an inter-building direct-burial Cat6 trench — tell us the property and the screen positions. We’ll respond with a written fixed-price estimate.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Samsung Frame TV FAQs
King City Projects

Samsung Frame TV installation in King City starts at $199.99 for a single-screen flush install on a standard drywall partition. Multi-Frame estate scope across a Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township property is quoted per screen as separate line items, with a coordinated multi-position discount applied where every screen is surveyed and installed in one visit. Inter-building direct-burial Cat6 trench runs, fieldstone fireplace core-drilled recessed outlets, Schomberg and Laskay plaster-and-lath fastener work, surface-mount paint-matched raceway fallbacks, pre-wire-during-framing rough-in scope, and screens over 65 inches are quoted separately at the survey.
No. The Frame is not rated for outdoor or high-humidity environments and Samsung’s own product guidance excludes it from outdoor and pavilion installs. The Samsung Terrace is the outdoor-rated alternative — IP55 weather-resistant, anti-glare panel, boosted brightness for outdoor light. On a King Township estate property where a screen is going on the outdoor pool pavilion, the loggia, or an open-air entertaining area, we install a Terrace there and keep the Frame for interior positions — main-house great room, principal bedroom, interior coach-house guest suite, interior pool-house lounge.
Yes. The matte panel and the magnetic bezel read against original wide-plank pine floors, original plaster-and-lath walls, exposed barn-board feature walls, and fieldstone fireplace surrounds the way a framed painting would. The retrofit technique changes per substrate — the bracket fastens into the wood lath behind the plaster face for a standard heritage wall, into the original board-and-batten where a barn-board feature wall is involved, and into a custom steel mounting plate spanning the stone face for a fieldstone fireplace. A plywood backer across multiple lath strips is added where the lath spacing forbids a direct bracket fix.
Yes — pre-wire during framing is the cleanest plan for a King City custom new-build. Every Frame position gets a low-voltage Cat6 home-run, a recessed 1-gang outlet box, conduit for the Invisible Connection optical cable, and a labelled pull-string back to the main equipment room while the studs are still open. The retrofit-into-finished-drywall path is always available later, but the pre-wire path costs less per screen, leaves no patch-and-paint scar, and runs the cable in the cleanest stud-cavity route the framing allows.
A direct-burial Cat6 conduit trench at code depth from the main-house equipment room out under the lawn or driveway to the outbuilding’s foundation penetration. Inside the coach house or pool house, a small wall-mounted distribution shelf carries a network switch and the local Frame’s One Connect Box; the optical cable runs the short interior distance from the box to the back of the screen, and the buried Cat6 backhauls to the main rack. The Invisible Connection optical cable has a 15-metre continuous-run ceiling, which is why the One Connect Box lives in the outbuilding rather than back in the main equipment room.
Yes for a true flush no-gap install. The no-gap bracket holds the screen at zero millimetres proud of the wall, which only works if the outlet sits behind the screen rather than on the wall face. Where the substrate cannot take a recessed outlet — some King Township plaster-and-lath walls, some metal-stud cavities, some concrete walls, the fieldstone face on some heritage farmhouse fireplaces — a paint-matched surface raceway runs the cable down to the baseboard line as the realistic fallback, or a custom steel mounting plate spans the stone face on a fieldstone surround.
Yes, with the right substrate prep. A stone-clad gas-fireplace surround takes a custom steel mounting plate spanning the surround in the screen footprint, a no-gap bracket bolted to the plate, and a core-drilled recessed outlet through the stone face. Direct-vent gas fireboxes common in Kingscross Estates and the Estates of King Township custom-build stock do not produce mantel-level surface heat that would damage the screen, but the electrician confirms the surface-temperature window at the survey.
Main-house Frames terminate in a main-house equipment room — a basement equipment closet for a Kingscross Estates or Estates of King Township build with a full basement, a main-floor millwork niche for a Spring Hill condominium suite or a King City village-core ranch, or a converted coat closet for a heritage farmhouse. Outbuilding Frames terminate on a small wall-mounted distribution shelf inside that outbuilding because the Invisible Connection optical cable has a 15-metre continuous-run ceiling that cannot be stretched across an inter-building trench.
Beveled walnut is the working default across The Estates of King Township French-country detached, Kingscross Estates custom builds, Nobleton estate builds, and most Spring Hill condominium suites because the rooms share a recognisable warm palette — limewashed or warm-painted wall finishes, Provence-style oak or whitewashed-oak millwork, warm wide-plank European-oak or warm-stained engineered hardwood. The Modern matte-black bezel reads visually cold against that palette in afternoon light and is consistently rejected at the survey.
A single-screen retrofit on a standard drywall partition in a Spring Hill suite or a King City village-core ranch finishes in one visit of 3 to 4 hours. A multi-Frame estate install across a Kingscross Estates property — three or four screens in the main house plus an outbuilding screen with an inter-building trench — runs across three coordinated visits: a survey visit, an electrical-and-trench visit, and a mount-and-Art-Mode visit. A new-build pre-wire scope splits across two phases — the rough-in at framing stage with the framer still on site, and the finish-stage hang and Art Mode calibration months later when the property is finished.
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We work directly with King City and King Township homeowners across Kingscross Estates, The Estates of King Township, Spring Hill, the King City village core, Nobleton, Schomberg, Laskay, Kinghorn, and Pottageville. One survey, one fixed-price estimate, bezel and Art Mode calibration set for every room’s actual daylight curve. Read customer reviews or explore the broader King City service area.

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