Many shading systems still react to rigid lux limits. When clouds change, this leads to unnecessary movements, inconsistent behavior and a restlessness that users perceive directly in everyday life. This is precisely where blind control with onework CORE comes in. Instead of fixed threshold values, a dynamic brightness value is calculated that jointly evaluates real lighting conditions, the position of the sun, cloud cover, façade orientation and usage. The result is smooth, predictable and stable shading behavior.
The decisive difference lies in the control architecture. The intelligence is not in the drive and not in the gateway, but at system level in onework CORE. As a result, shading is not viewed in isolation, but is brought together with lighting and climate functions in a cross-system room automation system. At the same time, the system remains open, KNX-based and can be integrated regardless of the manufacturer.
Movements are only triggered when they are really functionally necessary. This reduces unnecessary cycles and improves user acceptance. In addition, the slat position and degree of opening are not only used for glare protection, but also for energy efficiency. In this way, the shading function supports summer heat protection, daylight utilization and energy harvesting as part of a larger room logic.
It is important for planners that the same conditions lead to the same reactions. It is precisely this reproducibility that creates design reliability. For operators, it is important that the system works locally, deterministically and scalably. The result is not an isolated façade function, but a resilient lever for comfort, energy efficiency and stable operating processes.
Blind control with onework CORE turns shading into a genuine room function. Not reactive, but systemic. Not nervous, but stable. This is precisely the difference between technology and sensible automation in modern working and usage environments.