The Home You See: Smart Living in 2076
In 2014, audiences watched agents in Kingsman: The Secret Service communicate through holographic projections. In 2076, that technology defines the modern smart home.
Integrated into 76% of connected households, smart glasses have replaced screens, remotes, and static interiors. With a glance or voice command, residents adjust lighting, temperature, and security — but they also redesign the home itself.
Walls change colour and texture through digital overlays. A minimalist apartment can become a sleek sci-fi interior; a bedroom can shift into a quiet forest retreat. Activate “cinema mode,” and the living room darkens as panoramic screens stretch across the walls, immersive sound filling the space — visible only to those wearing the glasses.
The same system powers “presence mode,” allowing friends and family to appear as life-sized holograms inside the home. Distance no longer determines who sits at the table. In fact, 64% of users now host at least one holographic guest in their home each day.
“It’s not just smart,” says homeowner Maya Okafor. “It lets us choose what our home feels like every day.”
Yet constant spatial mapping enables this flexibility. Each household processes nearly 3 terabytes of environmental data per week, raising questions about privacy and whether reality inside the home is still shared — or individually filtered.
In 2076, the smart home is no longer built with bricks alone. It is built with perception.
“It’s not just smart,” says homeowner Maya Okafor. “It lets us choose what our home feels like every day.”

Integrated into 76% of connected households, smart glasses have replaced screens, remotes, and static interiors.
64% of users now host at least one holographic guest in their home each day.