Home Comfort Optimizer

Assess and improve your home's lighting, temperature, sound, and tactile comfort with budget-friendly, reversible adjustments for different daily moods.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install home-comfort-optimizer

Home Comfort Optimizer

Fine-tune your home's lighting, temperature, sound, and ambiance for different activities and times of day.

When to Use

  • Your home feels "off" but you cannot identify why.
  • You want different moods for morning, work, evening, and weekend.
  • You rent and cannot make permanent changes.
  • You want small, reversible adjustments that improve how a space feels.

Workflow

Phase 1: Sensory Environment Assessment

Evaluate your home across four dimensions:

  1. Lighting: Brightness, color temperature, direction (overhead vs. task vs. ambient), natural light access.
  2. Temperature and airflow: drafts, stuffiness, humidity, seasonal variation.
  3. Sound: Background noise, echoes, silence level, unwanted sounds from outside or appliances.
  4. Tactile / texture: Hard surfaces vs. soft textiles, floor feel, seating comfort.

Note one or two priority dimensions per room.

Phase 2: Design Ambiance Recipes

Create preset configurations for common modes:

  • Morning: Bright, cool light; fresh airflow; minimal background noise; energizing textures.
  • Work / focus: Moderate brightness, neutral light; steady temperature; low ambient sound or white noise; clean, uncluttered surfaces.
  • Evening: Warm, dim light; comfortable temperature; quiet or soft music; soft textiles (blankets, cushions).
  • Weekend / cozy: Warm light; gentle airflow; nature sounds or quiet; layered textures and softness.

Phase 3: Select Reversible, Budget-Conscious Adjustments

Scope boundary: This skill is limited to reversible, sensory-level changes costing under $50. No furniture recommendations, paint colors, renovation advice, or medical/environmental health claims.

Examples of approved adjustments:

  • Swap to warm-toned or dimmable light bulbs.
  • Reposition curtains or add a tension rod with a light-blocking panel.
  • Place a small rug to absorb sound and add softness.
  • Use a fan or open windows for airflow.
  • Add a small plant for visual texture.
  • Rearrange existing textiles (move a throw from the sofa to a reading chair).

Phase 4: Room-by-Room Comfort Plan

  1. Pick the two most-used rooms.
  2. For each room, choose one ambiance recipe as the primary goal.
  3. List 2–3 specific, reversible adjustments to achieve that recipe.
  4. Estimate cost for each adjustment (should total under $50 per room).

Phase 5: Test and Iterate

  1. Implement one adjustment at a time.
  2. Live with it for 3–7 days before adding the next.
  3. Note what changed: Did the room feel different? Did you use the space more or differently?

Phase 6: Seasonal Comfort Review

  1. Adjust ambiance recipes seasonally: summer may prioritize airflow and brightness; winter may prioritize warmth and coziness.
  2. Review and update comfort plans quarterly.

What This Skill Does Not Cover

  • Home organization and storage: Use home-organization-blueprint for zone-based physical organization.
  • Seasonal item rotation: Use seasonal-home-refresh for swapping clothes, decor, and equipment by season.
  • Interior design or renovation: This skill stays strictly within reversible, under-$50 sensory adjustments.
  • Medical or environmental health advice: Adjustments are for comfort and ambiance, not treatment of health conditions.

Output Format

The output includes:

  1. Sensory Environment Assessment by Room
  2. Ambiance Recipes (morning, work, evening, weekend)
  3. Reversible Adjustment Menu (under $50, sensory-only)
  4. Room-by-Room Comfort Plan
  5. Test-and-Iterate Schedule
  6. Seasonal Comfort Review

Safety & Compliance

  • All adjustments must be reversible and renter-friendly.
  • No recommendations that require structural changes, electrical work, or permanent installation.
  • No medical or health claims about lighting, temperature, or sound adjustments.
  • This is a descriptive prompt-flow skill with zero code execution, zero network calls, and zero credential requirements.

Acceptance Criteria

  1. SKILL.md covers lighting, temperature/air, sound, and tactile dimensions.
  2. Ambiance recipes are practical and distinguishable.
  3. All recommended adjustments are reversible and budget-conscious.
  4. Explicitly excludes furniture, paint, renovation, and medical/environmental health claims.
  5. No executable code, API calls, or external dependencies.
  6. English-first.

Examples

Example 1: Basic Use

User says: "My living room feels cold and unwelcoming in the evening."

Skill guides: Assess the four sensory dimensions. Identify lighting and texture as priority areas. Propose warm-toned bulbs and relocating a soft throw blanket. Deliver output in the specified format.

Example 2: Detailed Session

User says: "I work from home and my office feels draining by 2pm."

Skill guides: Assess the office environment. Identify lighting and airflow as fatigue contributors. Propose a daylight-toned desk lamp and a small fan for air circulation. Design a "work mode" ambiance recipe. Schedule a 1-week test.