What’s Included

What’s Included in a Samsung Frame TV Installation in Oakville

A Samsung Frame TV installation in Oakville covers the planning step (which wall, which screen size, how the screen sits with the room’s south-facing light), the no-gap flush wall mount, the recessed power outlet behind the screen, the in-wall or millwork route for the Invisible Connection optical cable, the One Connect Box placement, the bezel selection against the room’s finishes, and the Art Mode calibration including the curated starter art rotation — done in one visit for a single-screen retrofit and coordinated across two visits when an Old Oakville heritage substrate or a Joshua Creek multi-building scope is involved.

Most Frame TV installs in Oakville begin with a wall-and-light conversation. The wall has to take a no-gap mount, which means it needs a recessed electrical box behind the screen rather than a surface-mount outlet that would push the screen 25 mm proud of the wall and ruin the flush look. The light conversation matters more in Oakville than in most GTA municipalities because Oakville is a south-facing lakeshore town — the principal great rooms in South Oakville lakefront detached homes face due south toward Lake Ontario and take strong direct sun across the floor and the lower walls for most of the year. The Frame’s matte anti-glare panel handles the light, but the screen wall placement decision still has to land deliberately. See Samsung Frame TV installation across the GTA for the broader service pattern.

The Invisible Connection optical cable — Samsung’s near-transparent fibre-optic ribbon that carries both signal and power from the One Connect Box to the back of the screen — needs a clean route, either inside a stud cavity in a drywall partition, behind a paint-matched surface raceway on a poured-concrete condo demising wall or a heritage plaster-and-lath wall, or hidden inside fitted millwork. The One Connect Box itself needs a permanent home that is ventilated, accessible for future HDMI source swaps, and out of sight. The bezel — Modern, Beveled, or the Studio Stand frame — gets selected against wall paint and room finishes before the order is placed. And then Art Mode needs calibrating: the ambient-light sensor dims the screen to match the room, the motion sensor wakes and sleeps the picture, and the curated art library gets loaded with the household’s preferred rotation.

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 stud cavity, inside fitted millwork, or behind a paint-matched surface raceway on heritage plaster or concrete condo demising walls.

Bezel + Art Mode Calibration

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

Oakville context: No competitor in Oakville publishes a dedicated Samsung Frame TV install page anchored to Old Oakville heritage, to South Oakville lakefront-and-ravine geometry, to Joshua Creek estate-equestrian scope, or to Bronte Harbour east-facing condos. Closest content is the SetupTeam parent /resources/samsung-frame-tv-installation-what-to-know/ article and generic GTA TV-mounting service pages that list flat Frame TV pricing without local anchoring.

South-Facing Room Geometry

Where to Mount a Frame TV in a South-Facing South Oakville Lakefront or Sixteen Mile Creek Ravine-Front Great Room

In a south-facing South Oakville lakefront or Sixteen Mile Creek ravine-front great room the Frame TV almost always goes on the east-facing or north-facing partition wall opposite the south-facing window wall, rather than on the window wall itself. South Oakville’s shoreline faces due south, so principal lakeside-facing rooms in Old Oakville, Morrison, and Eastlake take high direct sun across the floor and the lower south wall for most of the year. Mounting the Frame on a wall that runs perpendicular to the window wall keeps the screen out of the direct sun path, lets the matte anti-glare panel handle the reflected ambient brightness, and keeps the Art Mode picture reading at consistent brightness from morning through late afternoon.

Oakville’s geography is fundamentally different from Etobicoke’s in a way that matters for Frame TV placement. Etobicoke’s Humber Bay shoreline faces west, so lakefront condo and detached great rooms there take late-afternoon west light — strong but directional and time-limited. Oakville’s Lake Ontario shoreline faces south, so principal lakeside-facing rooms take high direct sun across most of the daylight arc rather than only late afternoon. In the Old Oakville lakefront stock south of Lakeshore Road East and in the Morrison and Eastlake estate detached corridor immediately east of Sixteen Mile Creek, the typical principal great room has a long south-facing window wall (sometimes the full width of the room) opening onto a deep lakeside lot.

Mounting the Frame on the south wall itself — on a pier between window units or above a low credenza below the glazing — almost never works: the screen sits in directional sun, the matte panel still has to fight reflected glare off the window mullions, and the Art Mode picture goes flat. The cleaner pattern is to mount the Frame on the east-facing or north-facing partition wall opposite or perpendicular to the south-facing glazing. The Sixteen Mile Creek and Bronte Creek ravine-front detached homes (Morrison, Eastlake, and the older detached around Bronte Creek east of Bronte Road) follow the same rule with a different orientation — the principal great room faces the ravine east or west, the Frame mounts on a wall perpendicular to the ravine glazing, and the matte panel handles the diffused reflected light from the canopy. The Art Mode ambient-light sensor calibrates to each room’s daylight curve at install, and we set the motion-sensor wake-and-sleep against the household’s typical occupancy pattern so the picture is brightest when the room is in use and dims down through the brightest midday hours when the room is empty. Picking the right wall is also where SetupTeam’s broader AV services across Oakville conversation starts.

South Oakville lakefront great room interior at midday with a 75-inch Samsung Frame TV mounted flush on the east-facing partition wall, the south-facing window wall flooding the room with direct sun on the white-oak floor, matte Frame screen reading at consistent brightness with a soft Art Mode landscape, glimpse of Lake Ontario beyond a deep lakeside lot
South Oakville Lakefront · Partition Wall Install
No-Gap Flush Mount

How the No-Gap Flush Mount Actually Works on Common Oakville Wall Types

The no-gap flush mount sits the Samsung Frame TV at zero millimetres proud of the wall — the screen sits dead flush, like a framed picture. The mount ships with the TV. It uses two heavy-duty hooks recessed into the wall and a shallow ridged back on the screen that drops onto them. The Oakville specifics are the wall type: drywall over wood-stud partition (the volume substrate in Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, Iroquois Ridge, Palermo, and the post-2000 Bronte and Morrison stock), plaster-and-lath (common in pre-1900 Old Oakville Heritage Conservation District detached), poured concrete demising wall (Bronte Harbour and Lakeshore Road condos), and masonry-clad fireplace surrounds (common in Morrison, Eastlake, Glen Abbey, and Joshua Creek family-room mantels) — each needs a slightly different fastener and outlet treatment.

The flush mount is the entire point of buying the Frame. A wall-hung black TV reads as electronics; a flush-mounted Frame in Art Mode reads as a framed picture. The bracket is unforgiving: the wall has to be plumb across the full footprint, and even a millimetre of bow at one corner shows as a visible gap. Drywall over standard 16-inch wood-stud framing in a Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, Iroquois Ridge, or Palermo detached home accepts the mount cleanly — the recessed outlet drops into a low-profile electrical box, and the hooks fasten into the studs with structural lag bolts. A pre-1900 Old Oakville plaster-and-lath wall needs a careful fastener pattern (the heritage substrate is unforgiving of standard drywall anchors and prone to hairline cracking around new openings), so the recessed outlet box gets cut with a slow-speed plaster saw and the mount fastens either into the wood studs after a careful stud-finder pass or with plaster-rated toggle fasteners.

A Morrison or Glen Abbey masonry-faced gas fireplace surround needs a custom steel mounting plate fastened to the substrate behind the stone or tile cladding, with the outlet core-drilled through a chase. A poured-concrete condo demising wall in a Bronte Harbour or Lakeshore Road tower needs masonry anchors and a surface-mount cable raceway rather than an in-wall run, because the demising wall cannot be opened. The recessed outlet is non-negotiable in all four cases — a surface outlet would push the screen 25 mm off the wall and break the flush mount entirely. Where the conversation is broader screen mounting rather than a Frame-specific install, the supporting service is professional TV wall mounting in Oakville.

Cross-section architectural detail of a Samsung Frame TV flush-mounted with the no-gap bracket against a typical Oakville drywall partition wall, Beveled walnut bezel at zero millimetres proud, recessed power outlet visible behind the screen, Invisible Connection optical cable exiting through a low-voltage plate at the base of the wall
No-Gap Profile · Cross-Section
Old Oakville Heritage

Installing a Frame TV in an Old Oakville Heritage Conservation District Home

Yes — Old Oakville Heritage Conservation District homes accept a Samsung Frame TV install with a few substrate adjustments. The District covers the original 19th-century lake-port village core south of Lakeshore Road East, where pre-1900 Loyalist and British-era detached stock typically carries plaster-and-lath interior walls and original wood framing. None of these wall types reject the Frame, but the plaster-and-lath substrate needs a different fastener pattern and a more careful recessed-outlet approach than modern drywall does. Heritage planning rules in Oakville govern exterior alterations and demolitions inside the District; interior changes — including a flush-mounted Frame TV with a recessed outlet and an in-wall cable run — are generally outside the heritage permit scope.

The Old Oakville Heritage Conservation District is one of the oldest formally designated heritage districts in Halton Region. The street pattern — Trafalgar Road, King Street, Allan Street, Reynolds Street, Navy Street, Thomas Street, William Street, Robinson Street, and the historic Lakeshore Road East corridor — is largely 1830s-through-1900 lake-port village fabric, with two-storey clapboard, board-and-batten, and red-brick detached homes on tight lots. The Frame TV install conversation in this stock has three real considerations: the wall substrate, the room geometry, and the heritage-rule confirmation.

Plaster-and-lath walls are the volume pre-1900 interior substrate and they take a Frame install with a careful approach — recessed outlet cut with a slow-speed plaster saw to avoid cracking the surrounding plaster key, the no-gap mount fastened either into the original wood studs (located with a quality stud finder on a careful first pass to avoid missed strikes) or with plaster-rated toggle fasteners that distribute load through the lath. The room geometry tends to read smaller than a Bayview Hill or Erin Mills great room — the formal parlour and the family sitting room in a pre-1900 Old Oakville detached home are often 11 to 14 feet wide rather than 18 to 22 — so the screen size is usually a 55 or 65 rather than a 75 or 85. The cable route normally runs in-wall through the stud cavity if the substrate cooperates, with the One Connect Box concealed inside a built-in millwork bay or behind an existing console; in older plaster-and-lath walls where opening the substrate is undesirable, a paint-matched surface raceway runs the cable cleanly down to a media console at the baseboard. Where the household’s older wireless coverage is unreliable, the supporting service is Wi-Fi optimization for older Oakville homes.

Most Frame TV interior installs sit comfortably outside the permit scope, but the homeowner’s own designation document is the source of truth on this point. Homeowners on a designated property should confirm the specific designation level and any property-specific heritage attributes with the Town’s heritage planning staff before any work that could touch the exterior.

  • Magnetic stud finder rated for plaster — locate original wood framing before any cut
  • Recessed outlet cut with a slow-speed plaster saw to avoid cracking the plaster key
  • Plaster-rated toggle fasteners where direct-to-stud mounting is not possible
  • Cable route in-wall through stud cavity, or behind a paint-matched surface raceway
  • Bezel selection coordinated against original baseboard and casing profiles
  • Interior install scope generally outside heritage permit review — confirm exterior touches with Town heritage planning
Old Oakville pre-1900 heritage detached parlour or family sitting room with a 55-inch Samsung Frame TV mounted flush on a softly painted plaster wall above a traditional console table, Beveled walnut bezel matched to original baseboard and casing profiles, late-afternoon light through tall double-hung windows
Old Oakville Heritage · Plaster-and-Lath Substrate
Joshua Creek Estate Compound

A Multi-Building Frame TV Install Across a Joshua Creek or Eastlake Equestrian Estate

A Joshua Creek or Eastlake equestrian-estate Frame TV install usually covers two or three buildings rather than just the main house — typically a Frame in the main-house family great room, a second Frame in the coach-house or guest-house lounge, and sometimes a third Frame in a stable-side tack-room or owner’s viewing lounge. The compound scope is what changes the install conversation: each building gets its own One Connect Box and its own cable run, the network coverage has to extend from the main-house structured-wiring rack out to the coach-house and stable buildings (typically via buried fibre or hardened outdoor wireless backhaul), and the install sequence is planned as one coordinated multi-building visit rather than three separate calls weeks apart.

The Joshua Creek estate corridor in east Oakville and the Eastlake estate stock immediately south of Lakeshore Road East include a small but distinct set of equestrian and multi-building estate properties — main house with a separate coach-house or carriage-house, occasional secondary guest-house, and in a handful of cases a horse stable with an owner’s viewing lounge or a tack-room lounge that doubles as a casual hospitality space. The Frame TV install conversation in those compounds is dominated by three factors. First, the buildings: each building gets its own One Connect Box because the Invisible Connection cable cannot bridge between separate structures, and each install has its own wall-and-light decision (the coach-house lounge is often a smaller, lower-ceiling space than the main-house great room, so a 55 or 65 sized to the room beats a 75; the stable-side lounge is usually a single-storey utility-style space where a 43 or 55 sized to the lounge wall reads correctly).

Second, the network: a multi-building compound needs structured-wiring backhaul between buildings so each Frame’s HDMI sources — Apple TV, satellite or streaming receiver, gaming console — sit on the same household network rather than as isolated islands. Most multi-building Joshua Creek estates already have buried fibre or hardened outdoor wireless mesh between buildings; if they do not, we coordinate with a network installer to put it in before the Frame work goes live. Third, the install sequence: a multi-building install is planned as one coordinated visit with the survey covering all buildings on the same day, the electrical work blocked across all buildings on a single visit, the cable-and-millwork and Art Mode calibration handled on a closing visit, and a labelled rack-side cable map left at the main-house equipment rack covering every One Connect Box across the compound. Where the estate runs whole-home scene-and-shade automation, the supporting service is Control4 smart home integration across estate properties.

Joshua Creek estate compound exterior with the main house and a separate coach-house lounge visible at warm late afternoon, plus inset interior of the coach-house lounge with a 55-inch Samsung Frame TV mounted flush on a deliberately quiet feature wall, Beveled walnut bezel
Joshua Creek Estate · Multi-Building Scope
Bronte Harbour Condo

A Samsung Frame TV Install in a Bronte Harbour or Lakeshore Road East-Facing Waterfront Condo

Yes — Bronte Harbour and Lakeshore Road waterfront condos take a Samsung Frame TV install cleanly, and the install conversation is meaningfully different from a west-facing Humber Bay condo install. Most Bronte Harbour units face east toward the harbour mouth and Twelve Mile Creek rather than west across the open lake, so they take strong morning light off the water rather than the late-afternoon west light that defines Etobicoke’s Humber Bay condition. The matte Frame panel handles the morning light cleanly, but the screen-wall placement and the Art Mode ambient-light calibration get set for a morning-bright, afternoon-shaded daylight curve rather than the opposite curve.

The Bronte Harbour cluster sits at the mouth of Bronte Creek (formally Twelve Mile Creek) and includes a mix of post-2000 mid-rise condos with east-facing harbour glazing, west-facing glazing toward the open lake, and north-facing glazing back into the Bronte Village street fabric. The east-facing units are the ones that read most distinctively for a Frame TV install. Mounting the Frame on an interior partition wall opposite or perpendicular to the east-facing harbour glazing keeps the screen out of the direct morning sun path; calibrating the Art Mode ambient-light sensor against a morning-bright, afternoon-shaded daylight curve makes the rotation read at consistent brightness through the day.

The wall constraint in a Bronte Harbour condo is the same as in any concrete-tower condo: most demising walls are poured concrete that cannot be opened for an in-wall cable run, and many interior partitions in the newer towers are light-gauge steel framing with concrete board that condo bylaws prevent opening if they touch a demising or shaft wall. The clean install pattern is a low-profile paint-matched surface raceway running from the back of the screen down to the One Connect Box on a media console or inside a fitted media cabinet at floor level — a 3 mm-tall flat raceway in the same wall colour disappears at viewing distance. Where the install happens during an initial move-in renovation, the One Connect Box and the cable disappear into the millwork. Lakeshore Road condo units west of the harbour follow the same pattern with a west-facing glazing condition closer to the Etobicoke Humber Bay reference. Where the building’s wireless coverage needs hardening for streaming, the supporting service is UniFi installation in Oakville condos.

The recessed outlet still needs installing in all condo scenarios; a licensed electrician installs a low-profile recessed box using a surface-mount adapter plate, and we coordinate with building management when the alteration policy requires it (most Bronte Harbour and Lakeshore Road buildings require management approval for any demising-wall penetration).

Bronte Harbour east-facing condo great room at soft early morning with a 55-inch Samsung Frame TV mounted flush on the interior partition wall opposite the east-facing harbour glazing, view of Bronte Harbour and the lake horizon through the glazing, low-profile paint-matched cable raceway running discreetly to a media console
Bronte Harbour · East-Facing Morning Light
Glen Abbey · West Oak Trails · Iroquois Ridge

A Frame TV in a Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, or Iroquois Ridge Detached Family Room

A Samsung Frame TV install in a Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, or Iroquois Ridge detached home is normally a single-screen over-fireplace install in the family great room. The substrate is conventional drywall over wood studs and the room geometry is the established-suburban family room — 18 to 22 feet wide with a 9- or 10-foot ceiling and a gas fireplace on the feature wall. A 65-inch is the volume size in Glen Abbey and West Oak Trails family rooms; a 75-inch fits the larger Iroquois Ridge family rooms and the newer Palermo and North Oakville executive detached stock.

The 1980s-2010s established-suburban detached inventory that defines Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, River Oaks, Iroquois Ridge, and the newer Palermo / North Oakville build-out makes up the volume of Oakville Frame TV installs. The drywall-over-wood-stud substrate takes the no-gap mount conventionally — the recessed outlet drops into a low-profile electrical box behind the screen, the mount fastens into the studs with structural lag bolts, and the Invisible Connection optical cable runs in-wall through the stud cavity down to the One Connect Box living inside the existing media cabinet or on a vented shelf in a basement equipment rack.

The volume install scenario is the over-fireplace mount: the Frame sits flush against the masonry-faced or tiled fireplace surround above the mantel, the recessed outlet is core-drilled through a chase above the mantel, and a custom steel mounting plate fastens to the substrate behind the cladding when the surround is stone, slate, or marble. Mounting height for an over-fireplace install is typically 130 to 145 cm from the finished floor to screen centre for a 65-inch (mantel-height permitting), and ergonomics are weighted toward the seated viewing distance rather than the standing line. The bezel choice in Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, and Iroquois Ridge family rooms is usually a Beveled walnut against warm-stained millwork or a Modern matte-black against a re-modernised contemporary palette. Art Mode for the family-room Frame is calibrated as a slightly brighter, more rotation-active library than the lakefront-room Frame — the family room takes more daily television use than a formal South Oakville lakefront living room, so the screen is more often on as a TV and the Art Mode rotation runs as the standby state between use. Where the family room is part of a wider media-room conversation, the supporting service is home theatre and media room installation in Oakville.

Glen Abbey or West Oak Trails detached family room with a 65-inch Samsung Frame TV mounted flush above a tiled or stone-clad gas fireplace, Beveled walnut bezel reading against warm-stained millwork, late-afternoon natural light through a back-yard-facing window
Glen Abbey · Over-Fireplace Retrofit
One Connect Box

Where the One Connect Box Goes in an Oakville Retrofit

In an Oakville retrofit the One Connect Box lives in one of four common places: inside the existing media cabinet or millwork bay below or beside the screen (the volume Glen Abbey and West Oak Trails pattern), on a vented shelf inside a basement equipment rack with the Invisible Connection cable running in-wall down a chase (the Morrison, Eastlake, and Iroquois Ridge over-fireplace pattern), inside a fitted media cabinet at floor level connected by a paint-matched surface raceway (the Bronte Harbour and Lakeshore Road condo pattern), or inside a heritage-discreet built-in millwork bay below the screen connected by a surface-mount raceway when the plaster-and-lath substrate is best left unopened (the Old Oakville heritage pattern).

Each Frame TV has its own One Connect Box and its own Invisible Connection optical cable — the boxes do not daisy-chain. In a Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, or Iroquois Ridge over-fireplace retrofit the box typically sits in the existing TV console or media cabinet directly below the mantel, and a 5-metre Invisible Connection cable handles the run. In a Morrison or Eastlake estate over-fireplace install the cable often runs in-wall through a chase down to a basement equipment rack — a 10- or 15-metre Invisible Connection cable covers the full vertical distance — because the basement is the natural home for the HDMI source equipment in a multi-source household.

In a Bronte Harbour or Lakeshore Road condo the box sits inside a fitted media cabinet at floor level or inside built-in living-room millwork, and a 5- or 10-metre Invisible Connection cable runs down through a low-profile paint-matched surface raceway. In an Old Oakville heritage home the heritage-respectful pattern is to keep the plaster-and-lath substrate unopened where practical: the One Connect Box sits inside a custom-built millwork bay below the screen, and a paint-matched surface raceway runs the cable cleanly between the two without cutting the substrate. The 5-metre, 10-metre, and 15-metre Invisible Connection lengths cover virtually every Oakville scenario; the right length is chosen at the install survey based on the screen position and the box location, and a labelled rack-side cable map is left at the equipment rack so future HDMI source swaps go to the correct screen. Where the basement equipment rack ties into a wider household backbone, the supporting service is structured network installation.

Media Console · Glen Abbey Over-Fireplace

One Connect Box inside the existing TV console or media cabinet directly below the mantel; 5 m Invisible Connection cable in the wall cavity. The volume Glen Abbey and West Oak Trails pattern.

Basement Rack · Morrison / Eastlake

Cable runs in-wall through a chase down to a basement equipment rack; 10 or 15 m Invisible Connection cable. The natural home for the HDMI source equipment in a multi-source household.

Fitted Cabinet · Bronte Harbour Condo

One Connect Box inside a fitted media cabinet at floor level; 5 or 10 m cable in a low-profile paint-matched surface raceway because the demising wall cannot be opened.

Heritage Millwork · Old Oakville

One Connect Box inside a custom-built millwork bay below the screen; paint-matched surface raceway keeps the plaster-and-lath substrate unopened.

Editorial diagram showing four common One Connect Box locations for Oakville Frame TV retrofits — a media cabinet bay below an over-fireplace Frame, a basement equipment rack with an in-wall chase up to the family room, a fitted condo media cabinet at floor level connected by a surface raceway, and a heritage built-in millwork bay below the screen connected by a surface raceway
One Connect Box · Four Oakville Retrofit Patterns
Sizing By Room

What Size Samsung Frame TV Fits Best in Different Oakville Rooms

The Samsung Frame TV ships in 32, 43, 50, 55, 65, 75, and 85 inch sizes. The most common Oakville fits are: 75 over a Morrison or Eastlake lakefront-or-ravine family-room fireplace, 65 in a Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, or Iroquois Ridge family room, 55 or 65 in an Old Oakville heritage parlour or sitting room, 55 in a Bronte Harbour or Lakeshore Road condo great room, 43 in a principal bedroom, home office, or coach-house lounge, and 85 in the largest South Oakville lakefront great rooms and the larger Joshua Creek estate main-house family rooms.

Sizing is part viewing distance, part wall scale, and part the role the screen plays in the room. The conventional rule (screen diagonal in inches roughly 0.84 times the seated viewing distance in inches) applies, but the Frame is also an art piece and has to read at viewing distance and at art distance — when the room is empty and the screen is showing a landscape painting. A 75 over a 4-metre-wide Morrison or Eastlake family-room fireplace mantel reads at the right scale for a 4 to 5 metre seated distance; bump up to 85 if the room opens into a double-height great-room volume. A 65 in a Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, or Iroquois Ridge family room reads at the right scale for a 3.5 to 4.5 metre seated distance.

A 55 or 65 in an Old Oakville heritage parlour or sitting room — typically 11 to 14 feet wide — keeps the screen scale in proportion with the room’s traditional millwork. A 55 in a Bronte Harbour or Lakeshore Road condo great room is the right scale for the typical sectional-to-screen distance without overwhelming a smaller room. The 43 is the default principal-bedroom, home-office, and coach-house lounge Frame. The 85 lands in the largest South Oakville lakefront great rooms where the south-facing window-wall scale supports a larger feature screen on the opposite partition wall, and in Joshua Creek main-house family rooms where the room scale similarly carries it. Where the choice is purely about screen mounting at any size, the supporting page is TV wall mounting in any size across Oakville.

43-inch · Bedroom / Coach House

Default principal-bedroom, home-office, and Joshua Creek coach-house-lounge Frame. Fits a single-storey utility lounge or tack-room lounge cleanly.

55-inch · Bronte Harbour Condo

Right scale for a Bronte Harbour or Lakeshore Road condo great room, and the principal-bedroom Frame in larger detached homes.

65-inch · Glen Abbey Family Room

Volume Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, and Iroquois Ridge family-room over-fireplace size. Also fits an Old Oakville heritage parlour or sitting room cleanly.

75-inch · Morrison Lakefront

Right pick for a Morrison or Eastlake lakefront-or-ravine family-room fireplace, and for the newer Palermo and North Oakville executive detached stock.

85-inch · Estate Tier

The largest South Oakville lakefront great rooms with double-height window-wall scale and Joshua Creek estate main-house family rooms with the room volume to carry it.

32 / 50-inch · Niche Use

32 for a powder room, kitchen banquette, or breakfast-nook art-piece install; 50 occasionally for a tight Old Oakville heritage parlour where 55 reads slightly oversized.

South Oakville lakefront double-height great room with an 85-inch Samsung Frame TV mounted flush on the east-facing partition wall opposite a south-facing two-storey window wall toward Lake Ontario, the screen reading at scale, midday light
South Oakville Lakefront · 85-inch in Double-Height Volume
Cost

What a Samsung Frame TV Installation Costs in Oakville

A standard Samsung Frame TV installation in Oakville typically falls between CA$650 and CA$1,400 depending on screen size, wall type (drywall versus plaster-and-lath heritage versus masonry-faced fireplace versus concrete condo demising), whether the outlet needs recessing (almost always yes for a true flush mount), whether the One Connect Box runs in-wall, in millwork, or to a surface raceway, and whether the install is a single screen or a Joshua Creek multi-building compound. A multi-building estate plan is quoted as a combined fixed-price estimate with a small efficiency credit on the consolidated cable and electrical work.

The variables are real. A 55-inch Frame on a drywall partition wall in a Bronte Harbour condo with a paint-matched surface raceway sits at the simple end. A 75-inch Frame on a stone-clad over-fireplace mount in a Morrison or Eastlake family room with the One Connect Box running 15 metres in-wall to a basement equipment rack — and a coordinated electrician installing a recessed low-profile outlet behind the screen — sits at the higher end. A 65-inch Frame on a plaster-and-lath wall in an Old Oakville heritage parlour with a heritage-rated fastener pattern and a surface-mount cable raceway sits in the middle.

A Joshua Creek or Eastlake multi-building install is quoted as a consolidated estimate across the main house, coach house, and any additional building. We give every estimate as a written fixed price after a brief on-site survey or a photo-and-measurements call; the price covers the no-gap mount (the mount ships with the TV but specialty masonry mounting plates, recessed outlet boxes, and any surface raceways are extras when required), the labour, and the Art Mode calibration. The recessed outlet itself usually requires a licensed electrician — we coordinate with yours or bring our own, and the electrical work is line-itemed separately so the breakdown is visible alongside recent SetupTeam work.

Typical Project · South Oakville Lakefront

How a Frame TV Install Typically Unfolds in a South Oakville Lakefront Detached Home

South Oakville lakefront detached home interior collage showing two Samsung Frame TV installs from a single retrofit — 75-inch in the principal great room on the east-facing partition wall opposite the south-facing Lake Ontario glazing, and 55-inch in the principal-floor study on the north-facing wall perpendicular to a Sixteen Mile Creek ravine view — both Beveled walnut bezel, each room in its own daylight light

A typical Frame TV install in a South Oakville lakefront detached home covers two screens — a 75-inch Frame on the east-facing partition wall in the principal great room opposite the south-facing Lake Ontario window wall, and a 55-inch Frame on the north-facing wall of a principal-floor study that opens onto a Sixteen Mile Creek ravine view. The work runs in two coordinated visits — one for the survey, the recessed outlets, and the cable runs, and one for the mounts, the bezel fits, and the Art Mode calibration. Each Frame’s Art Mode is calibrated against its own daylight curve so the lakefront-room screen reads consistently against south-facing high-direct-sun conditions and the ravine-room screen reads consistently against east-or-west-facing reflected canopy light.

Bezel is Beveled walnut on both screens, matched to the home’s warm wide-plank floor and warm-stained millwork package. The basement equipment rack location is set near the principal-floor great-room chase so a single set of in-wall Invisible Connection cables can run continuously from each screen back to colocated One Connect Boxes on labelled rack shelves. The Art Mode ambient-light sensor on the lakefront-room screen is calibrated specifically against the south-facing window wall’s brightest midday curve (typically 11 AM–3 PM in late spring through early autumn), and the motion sensor wake-and-sleep is set so the screen wakes when the room is occupied and dims down through the brightest midday hours when the room is empty.

Both Frames sit dead flush against their walls with no visible cabling, the recessed outlets disappear behind the screens, the bezel-and-millwork combination reads as deliberate furniture in each room, and the Art Mode rotation runs as the default state per room — the principal great room on the design-driven contemporary-landscape rotation against the south-facing lake-glazed light, and the principal-floor study on the muted rotation against the ravine canopy.

2Frames · One Visit Plan
75″Great Room Screen
55″Principal-Floor Study
Art Mode calibrated per room daylight curve Beveled walnut bezel matched to millwork Labelled basement rack · per-screen cable map Licensed · WSIB · $2M Liability

Scenario framing — representative South Oakville lakefront install pattern. Specific homeowner project references available on request after a survey.

Get a Quote

Planning an Oakville Frame TV install?

South Oakville lakefront partition-wall mount, Old Oakville heritage plaster install, Joshua Creek multi-building compound, Bronte Harbour east-facing condo retrofit, or a Glen Abbey over-fireplace install — tell us the property and the screen sizes. We’ll respond with a written fixed-price estimate.

Old Oakville · Morrison · Eastlake · Bronte Village · Bronte Harbour · Joshua Creek · Glen Abbey · West Oak Trails · River Oaks · Iroquois Ridge · Palermo · North Oakville Contact Us
Frequently Asked Questions

Samsung Frame TV FAQs
Oakville Projects

On the east-facing or north-facing partition wall opposite or perpendicular to the south-facing window wall. South Oakville’s lakeshore faces due south, so principal lakeside-facing rooms in Old Oakville, Morrison, and Eastlake take strong direct sun across the floor and the lower south wall for most of the year. Mounting the Frame on the perpendicular wall keeps the screen out of the direct sun path and lets the matte anti-glare panel handle the reflected ambient brightness.
Yes. The plaster-and-lath walls common in pre-1900 Old Oakville detached stock take a Frame install with a careful fastener pattern and a plaster-rated recessed outlet box; the newer early-1900s and post-1900 additions inside the District often use mixed substrates that take the install more conventionally. Town heritage rules typically govern exterior alterations rather than interior finishes — homeowners on a designated property should confirm specific designation attributes with the Town’s heritage planning staff before any work that could affect the exterior.
The no-gap wall mount ships with every Frame TV, but the magnetic interchangeable bezels — Modern, Beveled, and the Studio Stand frame — are sold separately. We bring sample bezels to the site survey so the colour and profile can be matched to the wall paint and the millwork before the order is placed.
Yes. A multi-building estate install is planned as one coordinated multi-building visit rather than three separate calls. Each building gets its own One Connect Box, each install has its own wall-and-light decision sized to the room, and the household network is verified to extend cleanly between buildings (most multi-building estates already have buried fibre or hardened outdoor wireless backhaul) before the Frame work goes live.
Bronte Harbour units that face east take strong morning light off the harbour rather than the late-afternoon west light that defines Etobicoke’s Humber Bay condos. The matte Frame panel handles either condition cleanly, but the screen wall placement and the Art Mode ambient-light sensor get calibrated for a morning-bright, afternoon-shaded curve rather than the opposite. Otherwise the condo install rules are the same — poured-concrete demising wall, paint-matched surface raceway for the cable, recessed outlet with a surface-mount adapter plate, and building-management approval where required.
Often yes. Most Bronte Harbour and Lakeshore Road buildings require management approval for any wall penetration on a demising wall, including a recessed outlet. We check the building’s alteration policy before booking and coordinate with the property manager when approval is required.
A 65-inch Frame is the volume fit above a Glen Abbey or West Oak Trails family-room fireplace mantel, sized for the typical 3.5 to 4 metre feature wall and a 3.5 to 4.5 metre seated viewing distance. A 75-inch lands in the larger Iroquois Ridge and Palermo family rooms. A 55-inch reads small on most Glen Abbey mantels.
No. The Frame uses an LED-backlit QLED panel rather than OLED, which is structurally immune to image retention. Art Mode also cycles the displayed image and dims with the ambient-light sensor, so a single picture is never held at full brightness for extended periods. Burn-in is not a Frame TV failure mode.
No. The Invisible Connection cable is a fibre-optic ribbon with terminated optical and power connectors at each end. It cannot be cut or spliced. It is sold in fixed 5-metre, 10-metre, and 15-metre lengths, and the right length is chosen at the install survey based on the screen position and the One Connect Box location.
A single-screen retrofit on drywall in a finished home typically runs three to four hours including the recessed outlet, the no-gap mount, the cable run, the bezel fit, and the Art Mode calibration. An Old Oakville plaster-and-lath install or a masonry-wall over-fireplace install in Morrison or Eastlake runs five to seven hours. A multi-building Joshua Creek estate install is normally split across two coordinated visits over one to two weeks.
Service Areas

Frame TV Installation Near You in the GTA

SetupTeam serves communities across the Greater Toronto Area.


Get Started

Book a Samsung Frame TV Installation in Oakville

We work directly with Oakville homeowners across Old Oakville, Morrison, Eastlake, Bronte Village and Bronte Harbour, Joshua Creek, Glen Abbey, West Oak Trails, River Oaks, Iroquois Ridge, and the Palermo and North Oakville build-out. One survey, one fixed-price estimate, room-geometry and Art Mode calibration set for your home’s south-facing or ravine-facing light.

Mon–Sun 8:30 AM–9 PM

Residential & Commercial AV Services

TV wall mounting, home theatre, Wi-Fi, home automation, and commercial AV across Toronto and the GTA.

(647) 464-0606
Mon–Sun: 8:30 AM – 9 PM