Working with West Side Electrical Service in Bethlehem for licensed electrical work, Seneca and Ryan decided five Sivoia QED® shades would suit the requirements of the project.
Sivoia QED shades, introduced in 2003, are engineered to provide elegant and precise movement through enhanced digital technology. The Sivoia QED family includes roller shades, Roman shades, and drapery track systems. Sivoia QED shades feature a low-voltage electronic drive concealed within the roller tube or as an external drive on the drapery track. The system offers near-silent operation (44dbA at three feet (1 meter)) and intelligent control through seeTouch™ keypads, IR (infrared) remotes or integration with Lutron light control systems. The system can be programmed with preset positions for the most effective control of daylight in a space.
Because the hotel is an historic building — and because it is in an historic section of the city — great care went into the selection of the fabric and color of the shades. After all, they would be seen clearly from outside the hotel. The hotel selected the Lutron PVC-free Blackout Premiere with flocked backing, a fabric with a subtle, sandy hue called Mississippi, which blends with the stately design of the space. The shades are white on the exterior-facing side, which saves energy by reflecting sunlight back out of the window, reducing solar heat build-up. Because it is a blackout fabric, no light can pass through. To ensure that no light at all enters the room when the shades are down, the fabric runs between side channels and the exposed, extruded-aluminum hembar comes to rest behind a sill angle. The rollers themselves are housed within a fascia with a top-back cover that is mounted on the mullion between the window and the windowed arch above it. The arches presented a unique challenge to Seneca and his team. To block the light entering the space through the arches, special wooden frames were designed and fitted with the shade fabric. Bachman Drapery Studios in Tylersport, Pennsylvania, designed the arch fittings and concealed the stitching with decorative gimping. The shades were wired back to an SVQ-10-PNL power panel, and are controlled by a five-button seeTouch standalone keypad.
The result, says Ryan, has his customers raving. For any event requiring use of the shades, hotel employees or the guests themselves can select one of four preset levels, and the shades drop in perfect, silent unison. No more pipe and drape; no more lost revenue. In fact, the installation has allowed Ryan to flip the space very quickly, allowing for multiple engagements in the Terrace Room each day. “Dealing with pipe and drape wasn’t just difficult for us,” says Ryan. “It was difficult for our customers. So to say our customers love these shades — that’s an understatement.”