A high-rise condominium in Atlanta was dealing with an issue that had nothing to do with traditional infrastructure—but was creating constant friction.
The community pool had a music system with open, unmanaged controls. Residents could walk into the clubhouse, change the music, adjust the volume, or turn the system off entirely. What started as a flexible amenity turned into a recurring source of conflict.
Residents would override each other’s music selections throughout the day. Volume levels fluctuated constantly. At times, music continued playing late into the night because no one shut it off.
Community Technology Services (CTS) was engaged to address the issue. The goal was not to remove flexibility, but to bring structure to an amenity that had no boundaries.
The issue wasn’t the music system itself. It was the lack of control.
Residents treated the pool audio system as an extension of their personal space. That created predictable problems:
For property management, this created a daily operational distraction. For residents, it created tension in a space intended for relaxation.
The board needed a way to standardize the experience without removing resident input entirely.
CTS approached the solution by first understanding how the space was used and where conflicts were occurring.
The objective was to balance three things:
A managed pool music automation system was implemented using a cloud-based platform with mobile app access.
The system was designed to remove unmanaged access while still allowing residents to influence what is played.
Key elements of the solution included:
This shifted control from individual residents to a structured, shared environment where input is balanced across the community.
Instead of one person controlling the experience, the system reflects the group.
Volume control was one of the primary sources of conflict, so it was removed from resident control entirely.
CTS worked with the board to establish a time-based volume schedule aligned with pool usage:
This created consistency. The system now matches the natural rhythm of the space without requiring manual adjustment.
Most residents responded positively once the system was in place.
They gained:
There were some objections, primarily from individuals who had previously controlled the system. This is a consistent pattern CTS sees across properties.
When control shifts from individuals to a standardized system, those who benefited from the old model often resist the change.
However, once the system is in place and operating, the overall community experience improves.
CTS has since implemented pool music automation across multiple condominium communities, and the patterns are consistent.
Key lessons include:
Boards that approach this as an operational improvement—not just a technology upgrade—see the best outcomes.
Pool music automation for condominiums is not about limiting residents. It is about creating a fair and consistent environment in shared spaces.
By aligning technology with how amenities are actually used, communities can reduce conflict, improve resident experience, and remove unnecessary strain on property management.
For communities dealing with similar issues, the starting point is simple: identify where lack of control is creating friction, and implement a structure that balances flexibility with consistency.