From Curiosity to Control: Veera Malisetty’s Self-Hosted Smart Home System

Written by jonstojanjournalist | Published 2025/09/11
Tech Story Tags: self-hosted-smart-home | veera-malisetty | home-assistant-integration | raspberry-pi-automation | zigbee-and-z-wave | smart-home-privacy | offline-home-automation | good-company

TLDRFrustrated by fragmented smart home apps, Veera Malisetty designed a self-hosted system on Home Assistant and Raspberry Pi. Using Zigbee/Z-Wave devices and Apple HomeKit, his platform unifies appliances, works offline, secures data locally, and avoids cloud fees. The result: a private, resilient smart home that adapts to his family’s lifestyle.via the TL;DR App

Home automation platforms let homeowners regulate everyday appliances with just a few taps.


However, behind the scenes, these systems are much more complicated than they need to be. Many devices are locked into specific brands and rely on their own standalone apps, with no easy way to sync or communicate across systems. Instead of simplifying daily life, these tools can end up adding unnecessary complexity.


That’s the challenge that Veera Malisetty set out to solve. With over a decade of experience in systems design and a personal interest in home automation, he’s built a custom smart home system tailored for him and his family. The goal? Unify multiple platforms into a single interface that can run offline, adapt to real-world context, and stay easy to use — all using off-the-shelf hardware and open-source tools.


How Veera Identified the Gaps in Smart Home Technology

After earning his degree in electronics and communication engineering from Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University, Veera Malisetty began his career working on backend infrastructure at companies like Swayam Infologic and Quantela Inc.


He then spent nearly six years at Square Panda, a company that develops educational tools and digital devices to help young children learn to read. Over time, he rose to become the company’s global director of engineering, overseeing daily technical operations and leading efforts to integrate technologies like Bluetooth.


Throughout these roles, Veera gained a deeper interest in technology and began looking for ways to reliably apply it outside of work. This aligned with an already existing interest: smart home tech, which lets homeowners control appliances like lights, locks, and thermostats from their phones rather than physical switches.


He’d already noticed how frustrating it was to manage devices that couldn’t work together: Most products come with a separate app, with unique login and setup configurations and no way to communicate with other brands — even when connected to the same network. As a result, simple tasks like dimming the lights or locking the door meant jumping between multiple apps, turning what should be a seamless experience into a tedious one.


Instead of waiting for a solution, Veera decided to build his own, a platform that uses affordable, off-the-shelf devices and can run reliably over time without relying on third-party services.


Building an Integrated, Private Smart Home Platform


Veera started by setting up the system’s backend on Home Assistant, an open-source platform that offers a customizable dashboard and supports integrations across a wide range of smart home brands. He hosted it on a Raspberry Pi, a compact computer whose low power consumption would allow him to run 24/7 without significantly increasing power costs. 


Since his household regularly uses devices like iPhones and Apple Watches, Veera chose Apple HomeKit as the main user interface, which would allow his family to control the platform through Siri voice commands and the Home app. The household’s Apple TV also served as the system’s central hub, giving his family easy access through a familiar device.



The system runs on a local network, avoiding reliance on Wi-Fi or third-party internet connections. To achieve this, Veera selected smart home devices that use Zigbee and Z-Wave, wireless protocols that create a local mesh network that allows devices to communicate with each other and exchange data directly. This ensures the system remains active even during mass internet outages, and all data is processed and stored locally — avoiding recurring cloud fees and keeping his family’s information private. When a family member is away, they can securely access it through a self-hosted, encrypted web interface available only via VPN, ensuring remote control without exposing personal data to third parties.


Managing this many disparate platforms required a high degree of fine-tuning: Veera had to manually configure each smart home device to integrate with Home Assistant and strip away cloud dependencies to keep everything running locally, which often meant digging into their internal systems and running into hidden bugs or technical limitations.


But despite the challenges, Veera was able to deliver a unified smart home platform that gives his family complete control and visibility over nearly every device in the house. This includes lighting, door locks, air conditioning, kitchen appliances, security cameras, and even holiday decorations.


The result is a smart home that fits seamlessly into Veera and his family’s daily life — adapting to their routines, enhancing security, and working reliably in the background.


Making Home Automation More Efficient And Safe

When he’s not tinkering with the infrastructure that runs his home, Veera works as a senior software engineer at a global retail corporation. Outside of work, he shares lessons from his career on Medium, where he’s written about his smart home platform project and has offered practical guidance for engineers navigating startup environments.


By designing a system that fits his family’s lifestyle, stores data locally, and works offline, Veera Malisetty’s passion project is a blueprint for how smart homes can be not only convenient but also secure, resilient, and built to last.


Written by jonstojanjournalist | Jon Stojan is a professional writer based in Wisconsin committed to delivering diverse and exceptional content..
Published by HackerNoon on 2025/09/11