For more than a century, the wall switch has remained largely unchanged.
Its role has been simple: turn lights on and off.
Even many of today’s “smart” switches do little more than add dimming, scene recall, or wireless communication. Yet the buildings we design today are expected to do far more. They must adapt to changing uses, support occupant wellbeing, conserve energy, and provide intuitive experiences without adding complexity.
At BubblyNet, we asked a simple question:
How smart can a switch be?
The answer is surprisingly transformative.
A switch should not simply control lighting. It should become an intelligent interface between people and the built environment.
From Lighting Control to Experience Control
A traditional switch controls a circuit.
A BubblyNet switch controls an experience.
Each button can be programmed to perform multiple functions, including lighting control, scene recall, tunable white adjustment, shade control, occupancy overrides, HVAC interaction, and building-wide automation.
A single button can recall a scene with a tap and adjust lighting levels or color temperature with a press-and-hold. Functions that traditionally required multiple controls can now be consolidated into a single, elegant interface, reducing wall clutter while increasing functionality.
The result is a cleaner architectural aesthetic and a more intuitive user experience.
Designed for Predictable Human Behavior
Technology should behave the way people expect.
Consider a common frustration in many lighting control systems: a user dims a zone to its lowest level and then turns it off. The next person presses ON and sees no visible response because the system recalls the previous level of zero.
The lighting is technically on, but the space appears dark.
BubblyNet eliminates this confusion through Predictable Behavior logic.
Whenever a space is turned on or returned to an occupied state, the system ensures that lighting always returns to a visible level. Occupants receive immediate visual confirmation that the system is responding, creating a more intuitive and reliable experience.
Good technology should never require explanation.
The First Truly Intelligent Multi-Way Switch
Traditional multi-way switching relies on traveler wires connecting switches together.
Wireless alternatives often eliminate the wiring but simply duplicate commands without understanding the current state of the space.
BubblyNet takes a different approach.
Every switch, sensor, mobile device, and controlled load continuously shares state information across the network. If a scene is recalled from one switch, every other switch immediately understands which scene is active. If lighting levels change from a mobile device, every switch reflects the updated condition.
Occupancy sensors, schedules, and automation routines all participate in the same shared understanding of the space.
The result is not simply wireless switching.
It is a synchronized control ecosystem where every interface always knows what is happening.
Advanced Scene Control Without Complexity
Architectural spaces rarely serve a single purpose.
A conference room may support presentations, collaboration sessions, video conferencing, cleaning operations, and after-hours use—all within the same day.
Most control systems require a dedicated button for each scene, leading to increasingly complex keypad layouts.
BubblyNet allows a single button to cycle through up to sixteen scenes across multiple zones.
Presentation.
Collaboration.
Cleaning.
After Hours.
All accessible from one button.
Because scene status is synchronized across the network, every switch always knows which scene is currently active and which scene comes next.
The wall remains simple while the experience becomes richer.
Spaces That Respect Design Intent
Not every scene should be overridden by a casual button press.
BubblyNet allows scenes to be prioritized.
For example, a scheduled event, hospitality mode, cleaning sequence, or building-wide energy strategy can temporarily take precedence over local controls. Once the event concludes, normal operation is automatically restored.
This preserves both occupant flexibility and the designer’s original intent.
Circadian Lighting That Adapts Throughout the Day
As wellness-focused design becomes increasingly important, lighting systems are expected to support human comfort and biological rhythms.
BubblyNet allows scenes to incorporate circadian lighting strategies that gradually adjust intensity and color temperature throughout the day.
When occupants temporarily override the lighting—for example during a presentation—the system can automatically return to the circadian schedule after a defined period, restoring the appropriate light level and color temperature for that exact time of day.
The transition is seamless and invisible.
The architecture remains focused on people rather than technology.
Bringing Movement to Light
Lighting can do more than illuminate.
It can communicate
BubblyNet supports animated lighting sequences that create visual movement through a space.
An exit button can trigger a gentle sequence guiding occupants toward an egress path. Hospitality spaces can create arrival experiences. Public environments can reinforce way-finding or special events.
Light becomes an active design element rather than a static utility.
Human Control and Automation Working Together
Occupants increasingly expect buildings to respond automatically to their presence.
Yet automation should never feel restrictive.
BubblyNet integrates occupancy control directly into the switch experience, allowing users to override occupancy behavior, temporarily modify automated settings, or restore normal operation whenever desired.
The result is a balanced relationship between intelligent automation and human preference.
The building responds without taking control away from its occupants.
Tunable White Without Specialized Interfaces
Tunable white lighting is becoming a standard feature in workplace, hospitality, healthcare, and educational environments.
Unfortunately, adjusting color temperature often requires dedicated interfaces or mobile applications.
BubblyNet places tunable white control directly at the wall switch.
A simple press-and-hold can transition a space from warm, hospitality-inspired lighting to cooler, task-oriented illumination. Each button can be tailored to the specific needs of the environment, supporting everything from executive offices to guest rooms and conference spaces.
Sophisticated lighting control becomes effortless.
Meaningful Feedback
Good interfaces communicate clearly.
BubblyNet switches provide visual, tactile, and system-level feedback to confirm user actions and communicate operational status.
LED indicators can reflect room conditions such as Do-Not-Disturb status synchronized on all switches, occupancy modes, energy-saving states, or custom building functions. Haptic feedback confirms button presses. Diagnostic indicators simplify maintenance and troubleshooting.
Occupants gain confidence that the system is responding exactly as intended.
Freedom from Control Wiring
One of the greatest hidden costs in building controls is wiring infrastructure.
BubblyNet eliminates the need for dedicated control wiring.
Switches can be powered by line voltage, low voltage, or long-life batteries, allowing placement virtually anywhere.
Glass walls.
Concrete walls.
Millwork.
Historic buildings.
Retrofit projects.
Temporary partitions.
When spaces evolve, controls can move with them—without demolition, conduit, or disruption.
For architects, this creates new freedom to place controls where they best support the user experience rather than where wiring happens to exist.
Software-Defined Spaces
Buildings are constantly changing.
Departments expand.
Tenants relocate.
Conference rooms become offices.
Open spaces become enclosed rooms.
Traditional control systems often require rewiring or replacing hardware when layouts change.
BubblyNet switches are software-defined.
A switch can be reassigned to new zones, scenes, occupancy groups, lighting systems, or environmental controls entirely through software.
The physical interface remains in place while the space evolves around it.
This dramatically extends the useful life of both the building and its control infrastructure.
Beyond Lighting
Perhaps the most significant shift is recognizing that a switch no longer needs to be limited to lighting.
A single button can coordinate:
Lighting
Shades
HVAC
Occupancy settings
Plug loads
Hospitality room modes
Building-wide automation sequences
The wall switch becomes a unified interface for the entire environment.
Reimagining the Wall Switch
The wall switch has remained one of the least-evolved elements of the built environment.
Yet it is one of the most frequently touched.
At BubblyNet, we believe it should become one of the most intelligent devices in the building.
Not simply a switch.
Not merely a dimmer.
Not just a keypad.
But a software-defined architectural interface that understands the state of the space, synchronizes with every connected system, and gives occupants effortless control over their environment.
So how smart can a switch be?
Smart enough to transform the way people interact with buildings.