Residential Automation
News
Louisville 'Extreme Makeover: Home Edition' house unveiled to thousands
Hughes gets personal 3-D
reveal of finished
'makeover' November 15, 2007
By Angie Fenton The Courier-Journal
The crowd cheered as
Patrick Henry Hughes
emerged from an SUV
limousine yesterday
afternoon.
His father, Patrick John
Hughes, lifted his son
from the vehicle and set
him in his wheelchair
before they both waved
to the more than 5,000
spectators gathered
around their Buechel
Bank Road home.
The family — including
Patricia Hughes and
brothers Cameron, 12,
and Jesse, 16 — stood
behind the "Extreme
Makeover: Home Edition"
recreational vehicle as
Ty Pennington and his
fellow designers led the
crowd in the
much-anticipated cheer,
"Move that bus!"
As the vehicle rolled
down the driveway to
reveal the new home,
Elite Homes Vice
President "Rocky"
Pusateri presented a 3-D
model of the residence
to Patrick Henry Hughes.
The 19-year-old, who was
born without eyes, was
able to feel what his
family could see: a new
home designed and
constructed in 105 hours
by the ABC show's cast
and crew and hundreds of
local volunteers with
the goal of making it
easily accessible for
him.
The Extreme Makeover
crew selected Patrick
Henry Hughes and his
family to be the
recipients of the show's
108th renovated
residence. Their old
home was demolished
Friday; a large tree
that was in their front
yard is now in the
backyard.
Their above-ground pool
has been replaced with a
handicapped-accessible
ground-level pool,
complete with a
wheelchair ramp coming
from Hughes' new,
apartment-like portion
of the home.
The crowd watching from
the perimeter of the
house and across the
street remained as the
family entered the home
to begin taping their
reactions to its many
features, room by room.
One of the most amazing
aspects of the house is
a verbal-command
automation system that
has been installed in
Patrick's portion of the
3,200-square-foot home.
It was donated by EyeOn
Automation, a division
of Hitcents, which is
based in Bowling Green,
Ky.
"We felt our system was
a perfect fit for him,"
said Hitcents president
Chris Mills, 25, who
owns the company with
his brother, CEO Clinton
Mills.
The home is equipped
with technology that is
able to respond to 350
verbal commands, from
opening doors to
changing the channel on
the flat-screen
television to telling
the time or outside
temperature.
"The coolest thing is
... Patrick can say,
`Computer goodnight'"
and the system prepares
the home for bedtime,
Chris Mills said. It
shuts off or dims
lights, makes sure the
doors are locked and
will even play mellow
nighttime music.
The technology cost
"over six figures" and
required 10 to 15
workers nearly around
the clock for three
weeks to have the system
customized and ready.
"It was just a lot of
dedication, but it was
something we all wanted
to happen," Mills said.
A number of the Hughes'
friends attended the
"reveal." Among them was
Diane MacKenzie, a
Spanish teacher at
Atherton High School,
where Patrick Henry
Hughes was once her
student. He now is
pursuing a degree in
Spanish at the
University of
Louisville.
"I'm overwhelmed with
emotion," said MacKenzie,
who was surprised
earlier yesterday
morning when she and her
colleagues — Pat
Cantwell, a guidance
counselor, and Steve
Lin, Atherton's choir
director — were ferried
to the site in a
limousine by Elite
Homes.
"Everyone wants to cheer
for someone who wins a
big prize, for someone
who's doing something
for those in need,"
MacKenzie said. "This is
one of those moments
when your heart feels
like it's going to skip
a beat."
Tomorrow, the Hugheses
will address the public
at a news conference at
11 a.m. in front of
their new home.
Reporter Jason Riley
contributed to this
story.

Host and designer Ty
Pennington with the
Hughes family members as
they got their first
look at their new home. |