, that dream quickly collided with a harsh architectural reality. Before the first sledgehammer could swing, a survey revealed a trio of structural terrors: asbestos in the exterior walls and laundry sinks, lead in the bathroom tiles, and a persistent rodent problem in the crawl spaces. It is a sobering reminder that "tech-forward" doesn't mean much if the bones of the building are hazardous. These discoveries forced an immediate pivot. While the team handles the cosmetic and technological gutting, certified professionals must step in to mitigate the toxic materials that decades of previous owners left behind.
Tactical Deployment in the Crawl Space
While the humans avoided the contaminated zones, the team deployed the
into the literal trenches. This wasn't a standard living room test; it was a deployment into a rat-infested crawl space filled with debris. The vacuum’s Starite 2.0 system, utilizing 3D time-of-flight sensors and an RGB camera, proved its worth by mapping a subterranean environment that had likely never seen a floor plan. It successfully navigated millimeter-precise positioning to identify a scary discovery: an improvised electrical mess where an extension cord was hot-glued into armored cable to power an outdoor fountain.
There’s Asbestos in the Tech House
Tearing Down the Past
With the hazardous zones cordoned off, the team turned their attention to the aesthetic crimes of the interior. Removing layers of blue carpeting revealed more than just old staples; it uncovered the oddities of past DIY attempts, including carpet inexplicably glued to the walls. As
and the crew ripped through the dining and living areas, the goal shifted toward a full "down-to-studs" demolition. This isn't just about destruction; it’s about infrastructure. Stripping the house to its skeleton allows for a clean slate to run the networking and electrical upgrades necessary for a modern server-backed home.
Balancing Innovation and Livability
Despite the chaos of falling drywall and ancient dust, the long-term vision remains centered on the "partner approval factor." A house can be a gamer haven, but it must still function as a home. This means consulting engineers and interior designers to ensure the transition from a cramped, old-school kitchen layout to a modern tech hub doesn't sacrifice basic human needs, like usable counter space or a place for a full-length mirror. The day ended with a realization that progress is often messy and hidden—found in a digital map of a crawl space or the removal of a single room’s worth of blue shag carpet.