Interesting read, some good ideas for home theaters. The cost was more than we (well, most of us) would/could pay, but hey
Designing and building a professional audio studio is a complex and expensive undertaking. And not just every architect and contractor can be counted on to know the critical factors involved in doing it right. There are 5 studios in my building. Yesterday, I shared the plans showing my main mixing room, which is the largest one. I hired an experienced architect and a construction manager to take care of the day-to-day details but a handyman that came with the building did most of the actual construction. Skilled, experienced carpenters, electricians, and finish people don't come cheap. The difference between the dollars that Jack of Pirate Audio charged the tenant in the middle of the building to build his beautiful room and what Jamie charged me was quite substantial...may 4-5 times as much per hour. My room cost several hundred thousand dollars and the Astound Studio (that showed up on the cover of Mix magazine) was well over one million!
Figure 1 - The Astound Sound Studio - this was the professional photo used for the cover of Mix magazine.
I saved a lot of money and we had to rework some things but at the end of the day, the room sounds fabulous. It's the little things that will get you...like avoiding screws that go through multiple layers of dry wall and sound board or having an experienced finish carpenter take care of the double solid core doors that must close with an airtight whoosh.
The expensive room even has a custom "studio door" that seals out every external noise. It should because it cost over $8000. It's the only thing that the tenant insisted he be able to take with him when his term is up (I'm sure I will be purchasing the door…at a discount). Everything else stays...the expensive floating floor (they poured a layer of concrete on a form that is elevated 3 inches from the building slab on rubber squares), the designer fabrics that were stretched and steamed on the walls, the light cans that were encased in their own isolation boxes, and the elaborate 40 foot HVAC routing that guarantees that no wind noise is created as air flows in and out of the room. Everything is separated by rubber seals. No nails, no screws, or electrical conduits were allowed to punch through the multiple layers in the space. A hole is a hole is a hole...and sound gets through even the smallest openings.
My studio doesn't have its own concrete floor. The floors joists are isolated from the outside world using dense rubber runners. But I did construct a room within a room to keep outside disturbances from compromising the interior space. Another less expensive room was build for much less money. I closed up a window and had Jamie build two new interior walls (non parallel walls) isolated from the existing room with rubber all around.
Figure 2 - AIX Studios looking into the iso booth.
And there's a new tenant coming in to a space that was formerly my office. I spent part of Sunday removing the suspended acoustic ceiling. Tomorrow, Jamie and I will start building a hard ceiling comprised of 10-inch joists. They will be isolated from the walls with rubber. The ceiling will be a layer of sound board and then a layer of drywall. There will be boxes placed around each of the light cans, lots of insulation, and then a layer of sound board topped with 3/4" plywood on the top. The HVAC will be run around the perimeter in 16" ducting to isolate the air noise. We'll add a solid core door with some weather striping and the new tenant will be able to make loud music inside.
The walls are painted drywall and they are parallel. The plan calls for fabric covered sound panels on one end and heavy theatrical drapes on the other. The reflections will be minimized.
Designing and building a professional audio studio is a complex and expensive undertaking. And not just every architect and contractor can be counted on to know the critical factors involved in doing it right. There are 5 studios in my building. Yesterday, I shared the plans showing my main mixing room, which is the largest one. I hired an experienced architect and a construction manager to take care of the day-to-day details but a handyman that came with the building did most of the actual construction. Skilled, experienced carpenters, electricians, and finish people don't come cheap. The difference between the dollars that Jack of Pirate Audio charged the tenant in the middle of the building to build his beautiful room and what Jamie charged me was quite substantial...may 4-5 times as much per hour. My room cost several hundred thousand dollars and the Astound Studio (that showed up on the cover of Mix magazine) was well over one million!
Figure 1 - The Astound Sound Studio - this was the professional photo used for the cover of Mix magazine.
I saved a lot of money and we had to rework some things but at the end of the day, the room sounds fabulous. It's the little things that will get you...like avoiding screws that go through multiple layers of dry wall and sound board or having an experienced finish carpenter take care of the double solid core doors that must close with an airtight whoosh.
The expensive room even has a custom "studio door" that seals out every external noise. It should because it cost over $8000. It's the only thing that the tenant insisted he be able to take with him when his term is up (I'm sure I will be purchasing the door…at a discount). Everything else stays...the expensive floating floor (they poured a layer of concrete on a form that is elevated 3 inches from the building slab on rubber squares), the designer fabrics that were stretched and steamed on the walls, the light cans that were encased in their own isolation boxes, and the elaborate 40 foot HVAC routing that guarantees that no wind noise is created as air flows in and out of the room. Everything is separated by rubber seals. No nails, no screws, or electrical conduits were allowed to punch through the multiple layers in the space. A hole is a hole is a hole...and sound gets through even the smallest openings.
My studio doesn't have its own concrete floor. The floors joists are isolated from the outside world using dense rubber runners. But I did construct a room within a room to keep outside disturbances from compromising the interior space. Another less expensive room was build for much less money. I closed up a window and had Jamie build two new interior walls (non parallel walls) isolated from the existing room with rubber all around.
Figure 2 - AIX Studios looking into the iso booth.
And there's a new tenant coming in to a space that was formerly my office. I spent part of Sunday removing the suspended acoustic ceiling. Tomorrow, Jamie and I will start building a hard ceiling comprised of 10-inch joists. They will be isolated from the walls with rubber. The ceiling will be a layer of sound board and then a layer of drywall. There will be boxes placed around each of the light cans, lots of insulation, and then a layer of sound board topped with 3/4" plywood on the top. The HVAC will be run around the perimeter in 16" ducting to isolate the air noise. We'll add a solid core door with some weather striping and the new tenant will be able to make loud music inside.
The walls are painted drywall and they are parallel. The plan calls for fabric covered sound panels on one end and heavy theatrical drapes on the other. The reflections will be minimized.