Hi all, newbie here so go easy on me! I'm gonna be as thorough as possible with my details so please bear with me!
We have recently move to Iceland from Ireland to build a studio in the HERE Creative Centre http://www.inhere.is. We are volunteers in this project and the budget is only as large as the amounts we can fundraise. We have started a Crowd Funding Initiative which can be seen here along with a video:
https://www.karolinafund.com/project/view/413
We have also applied for a government grant. If we get both we may have about 10K Euros to spend, but that would include some equipment to get us started on top of building materials. I have my own analog studio gear with me but that would just be used to get the place up and running. My main incentive in this project is that we build a really good sounding studio for little cost in materials, so that we can put maximum money into equipment. This is not my studio, as it will belong to the Creative Centre, but I will be able to come and use it whenever I like, and for minimal cost to the Artist compared to a lot of other studios .
We have quite a nice space to build it in! The building was once a Fish Factory and the 80 sq.m space we have was once the Ice Storage room. It is HEAVILY insulated on all faces with 200mm of polystyrene boards, then faced with about ~60mm of reinforced concrete on all faces except the ceiling. All original walls behind the insulation are solid mass concrete and about 200mm thick. The ceiling is corrugated steel (I sensed you shudder!) which is attached to 45x70mm timbers which are suspended by threaded steel bar from the main roof structure, which is made of much larger 120x45 timbers spanning the full width of the room. Between these large timbers and the steel ceiling there is 200mm of polystyrene insulation. Finally there is a great big 150mm thick wooden door which seals very well! I know all of this is great for thermal, but what about soundproofing? Well we did a "leak test" using a PA cranked up in the space and walked the whole building (unfortunately I don't have an SPL meter yet). Very little sound was heard when close to the room and once you go outside the factory or into non-adjacent rooms you'll hear nothing. We were well-impressed!
So from the above I assume that soundproofing of the space as a whole should not be needed. Please holler if you think we're misjudging this factor!... Now for the internal planning. I have attached a file which is a first draft of the floor plan but I have since been told that this is really bad! Control room is the wrong shape, illogical door layout etc. The space measures 11.5 x 7 x 3.4m high and is a rectangular cuboid. The entrance to the room is in the top-right (to the right of them guitar amps you can see). My task now is to try and re-design the space so that it will be OPTIMAL, before we start building. We have most of the building materials now so it's just a matter of finalising the plans!
And here is how we are planning to build the internal walls; Firstly vertical timbers at each wall reaching up to the timbers which support the steel ceiling. Staggered studs 600mm spaced, built as two separate walls on top of a pair of 75x45 planks with 10mm gap between them. Then 100mm rock wool within the cavity, one layer of 12mm sheetrock on each side followed by a second layer of 12mm sheetrock attached with green glue. Not sure yet on the finishing of the walls.
Until we get funding in we have been getting materials for free from Recycling centres, Film crews (yes!) and kind people . We now have enough timber to build all internal walls, floor 2/3 of the space, and cover a ceiling or two in nice pine. Also have about 50% of the rock wool needed along with a stack of sheetrock. Not bad for zero funds and determined scavenging eh!
As for the floor we plan to lay tongue & groove Pine (got it for nothing ) in the live room and control room on supporting timbers which will rest on a thin foam for cushioning/damping... Not sure of the spacing requirements yet but the floor timber is 20mm thick so I guess there's some standard for it. Not sure about the small iso rooms yet.
As for ceilings, we plan to remove the corrugated steel at least from above the live room and replace it with thin pine planks. And for the other rooms we were planning to build lower suspended ceilings using timber frames and either sheetrock or plywood (plywood because we got loads of it for free, but it could be a no no).
So here are the questions folks!
1. SOUNDPROOFING: Based on the rudimentary leak test that we did, are we OK to assume that the space will not suffer from external noise? Maybe this is impossible to answer without SPL readings...Noise getting out is not an issue where we are, on a harbour in a tiny Fjord in the wild East of Iceland
2. FLOOR PLAN: From recent feedback I think we need to scrap our first draft completely! Please can you give me any ideas on a possible floor plan. I am thinking of starting with the control room in the top-right, live room still taking up most of the left half, then iso rooms below control room.???
3. WALL STRUCTURE: Are we over-building the walls? Is it enough to just use a single plank base and stagger the studs on that? We do have enough timber collected to do what we had planned so it would be no extra cost to do double... sheetrock will be the money zapper here I think!
4. FLOOR STRUCTURE: Should we be considering a certain method here when applying a timber floor on top of a concrete one? Bearing in mind that under the concrete there is 200mm of polystyrene insulation before the actual mass-concrete floor...
5. CEILINGS: Should we remove the corrugated steel ceiling from the whole space and replace with something else, or is it possible to leave it and fit suspended ceilings in some of the spaces? I know it would probably be nasty acoustically and would resonate at all sorts of frequencies, but if we have insulated suspended ceilings this might not be an issue. We really wanna keep the full 3.4m height in the live room...
Any constructive feedback would be greatly appreciated! So please, air your thoughts Thanks in advance kind people!
Vinny & Una
A low-budget Studio build in East Iceland!
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Re: A low-budget Studio build in East Iceland!
Hi there Vinny & Una, and Welcome to the forum!
Photos would be helpful to understand the building better.
It seems what you are trying to do is to make a floating floor, but firstly you do not need one at all, and secondly that is not the correct way to build one, even if you did need it. Here is a very important thread that you need to read about floating floors: http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... f=2&t=8173
Fortunately you found this forum before you started to build! So now you can learn how to do it right.
Once again, you really need to read those books and get a better understanding of acoustics before you design or build your studio.
But probably your best plan would be to do nothing: You don't have a big enough budget to do anything up there.
So those would be my suggestions!
But please do post the initial layout that you mentioned, as well as a few photos of the building (inside and outside), so we can better understand what you have, and what you are planning to do.
- Stuart -
This is just my personal opinion, but I would actually do things the other way around: I would spend most of my money on the acoustics, and only some on gear. You can pick up very good quality gear for low prices on e-bay, but you can't pick up very good quality acoustics like that... I would spend a couple of thousand of that to get good speakers that are suitable for the room, then spend most of the rest on acoustics. You can have the best speakers in the world, but if the acoustic response of the room is lousy, then those speakers will sound terrible. On the other hand, if you have a room with great acoustics, then even mediocre speakers will sound good.My main incentive in this project is that we build a really good sounding studio for little cost in materials, so that we can put maximum money into equipment.
The reason you are getting such good isolation is the thick concrete and the large gap between the walls. The polystyrene is doing nothing useful there. It is great for thermal insulation, but pretty useless for acoustics. But the good thing is that you are already getting good isolation, so there's no need to touch that.It is HEAVILY insulated on all faces with 200mm of polystyrene boards, then faced with about ~60mm of reinforced concrete on all faces except the ceiling. All original walls behind the insulation are solid mass concrete and about 200mm thick.
And what is above that? What is the roof made of?The ceiling is corrugated steel (I sensed you shudder!) which is attached to 45x70mm timbers which are suspended by threaded steel bar from the main roof structure, which is made of much larger 120x45 timbers spanning the full width of the room.
Photos would be helpful to understand the building better.
It sounds like you have good isolation, which is excellent since you don't have enough budget to add more!So from the above I assume that soundproofing of the space as a whole should not be needed.
I think you forgot to attach that! There's no attachments at all on your post...I have attached a file which is a first draft ...
Before you start re-designing, I'd suggest that you get two books: "Master Handbook of Acoustics" by F. Alton Everest (that's sort of the Bible for acoustics), and "Home Recording Studio: Build it Like the Pros", by Rod Gervais. Those two give you the basic knowledge you need to get started on designing a studio. The first one will give you what you need to know about acoustics, and the second one is more about the actual design and construction.My task now is to try and re-design the space so that it will be OPTIMAL, before we start building.
It's probably more a matter of learning about acoustics and studio design, THEN finalizing the plans!We have most of the building materials now so it's just a matter of finalising the plans!
Ummmm... you already have your internal walls.... you said that the room is built "faced with about ~60mm of reinforced concrete on all faces except the ceiling. All original walls behind the insulation are solid mass concrete and about 200mm thick. So you already have both of your walls: the outer-leaf is the 200mm thick concrete, and the inner-leaf is the 60mm concrete. Adding more leaves to that can potentially DECREASE the isolation of low frequencies....And here is how we are planning to build the internal walls;
"reaching up to" is fine, as long as they don't touch. Assuming that you really do want to build interior walls, and don't mind the potential loss of isolation, then you cannot allow your new structure to touch any part of the existing structure. If it did, them yo would have even less isolation, due to the flanking paths. So your new extra inner-leaf walls can go almost up to the existing ceiling, but bot quite, and your new inner leaf ceiling must rest on top of those new inner leaf walls without touching anything else.Firstly vertical timbers at each wall reaching up to the timbers which support the steel ceiling.
Why so you need staggered studs???? That implies you are thinking of adding TWO new leaves, not just one!!! That would give you FOUR-leaf walls, which are even worse at isolating low frequencies that 3-leaf walls!!! I would suggest that you really need to pause in your plans, and buy those books to understand why you should only ever have 2-leaf walls, never 1-leaf, never 3-leaf, and certainly never 4-leaf....Staggered studs 600mm spaced,
Just as I expected: that would give you 4-leaf walls... A really bad idea. Don't do that.built as two separate walls on top of a pair of 75x45 planks with 10mm gap between them
12mm is too thin. Use only 16mm. 12mm is too flexible, the mass is too low, and the resonant characteristics.one layer of 12mm sheetrock on each side
Sorry, but that would be a major disaster. You cannot use Green Glue to "attach" anything! It is not glue! it does not stick. It is not adhesive. It is a viscoelastic polymer material that is specifically designed to act as a constrained layer damping compound between two layers of drywall or similar. It is NOT glue. You CANNOT use it to attach the second layer of drywall. Yes, you use it in between the layers, as directed by the instructions, but then you use either screws or nails to attach that drywall to the underlying studs, in the normal manner.followed by a second layer of 12mm sheetrock attached with green glue
Most people just tape and mud them, then sand and paint. Most of the surface will be covered by acoustic treatment anyway, so you won't see much of the drywall once the room is finished.Not sure yet on the finishing of the walls.
Floor??? What floor? You already have your final floor in place! There is no need for any additional flooring. You said that the current floor is concrete, which is excellent. There's no better floor than that for a studio. If the concrete is in really bad condition (cracked, chipped, uneven, badly stained, then you might want to put down something like laminate flooring, ceramic tiles, or linoleum, but that's about all. The final floor surface must remains, solid, massive, hard, and reflective.floor 2/3 of the space
Your ceiling should be the same as your walls: two layers of drywall together, screwed or nailed to the joists, with Green Glue in between. The ceiling wont be visible once the acoustic treatment is in place.and cover a ceiling or two in nice pine.
That's a really, really bad idea. That would basically mean that your studio floor would be a drum. It would be a resonant nightmare.As for the floor we plan to lay tongue & groove Pine ... in the live room and control room on supporting timbers which will rest on a thin foam for cushioning/damping...
It seems what you are trying to do is to make a floating floor, but firstly you do not need one at all, and secondly that is not the correct way to build one, even if you did need it. Here is a very important thread that you need to read about floating floors: http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... f=2&t=8173
Why You already have a steel ceiling that is giving you good isolation, and you plan to replace it with thin wood that won't? Please don't take this the wrong way, but you are not thinking this plan through very well. I would strongly urge you to stop all your plans right now, read through those books, the re-design the studio based on what you learn there. You are going about this entirely backwards, and you seem to be basing a lot of your plans on myth, misinformation, guesses, and internet lore. That's a really bad way to design a studio!As for ceilings, we plan to remove the corrugated steel at least from above the live room and replace it with thin pine planks.
Fortunately you found this forum before you started to build! So now you can learn how to do it right.
You want to make your ceilings LOWER??? WHY? Good acoustics needs large open spaces. Lots of air, lots of ceiling height. As much as you can get. There are people here on the forum who spend a lot of money to break out the floor in their rooms, dig down some more, then pour new concrete floors lower down so that they can have HIGHER ceilings. But you want to have lower ceilings?And for the other rooms we were planning to build lower suspended ceilings
Once again, you really need to read those books and get a better understanding of acoustics before you design or build your studio.
From what you say so far, it seems that you have reasonably good isolation, with the possible exception of the ceiling. However, you just mentioned "harbour", which makes me think of large diesel engines on both ships and trucks, as well as fog horns and other noisy things that happen around harbours.... are you SURE that your isolation is good enough to prevent those noises getting into to your studio, and messing up a recording? What about other noises? Wind, rain, thunder, aircraft, helicopters, trains, people, etc. There are many noises that could be a problem if they get into your studio.1. SOUNDPROOFING: Based on the rudimentary leak test that we did, are we OK to assume that the space will not suffer from external noise? Maybe this is impossible to answer without SPL readings...Noise getting out is not an issue where we are, on a harbour in a tiny Fjord in the wild East of Iceland
You didn't attach any diagram, plans, sketches or photos, so we can't see what you had in mind, and we can't see what is on the "top right" or the "left half"!2. FLOOR PLAN: From recent feedback I think we need to scrap our first draft completely! Please can you give me any ideas on a possible floor plan. I am thinking of starting with the control room in the top-right, live room still taking up most of the left half, then iso rooms below control room.???
It's not that you are over-building them, or under-building them: You are just not building them correctly. They would probably male your low frequency isolation worse than it is now, not better.3. WALL STRUCTURE: Are we over-building the walls? Is it enough to just use a single plank base and stagger the studs on that? We do have enough timber collected to do what we had planned so it would be no extra cost to do double... sheetrock will be the money zapper here I think!
Yes. The method you should be considering is "leave the floor alone!" It is concrete, it is thick, it rests on the ground, so it is prefect. It does not need anything else. The only exception is if the concrete is in poor condition, in which case you can lay something directly on top (no air in between), such as ceramic tiles or laminate flooring.4. FLOOR STRUCTURE: Should we be considering a certain method here when applying a timber floor on top of a concrete one? Bearing in mind that under the concrete there is 200mm of polystyrene insulation before the actual mass-concrete floor...
If you remove it, can you gain even more height? You mentioned beams and other things up there, above the metal, but what is above those? How much more room could you get up there?5. CEILINGS: Should we remove the corrugated steel ceiling from the whole space and replace with something else, or is it possible to leave it and fit suspended ceilings in some of the spaces? I know it would probably be nasty acoustically and would resonate at all sorts of frequencies, but if we have insulated suspended ceilings this might not be an issue. We really wanna keep the full 3.4m height in the live room...
But probably your best plan would be to do nothing: You don't have a big enough budget to do anything up there.
The three biggest issues I foresee here are firstly that you need to stop and learn some more about acoustics before re-designing your studio, and secondly that you have not mentioned anything at all about the most important issue in any studio: HVAC. You need that. You MUST have ventilation and air conditioning. You cannot have a studio without that. Studios are sealed air-tight, so there must be a properly designed HVAC system in place, to provide the air that people need to breath, and to evacuate the stale air, and also to control the humidity, as well as the temperature. You didn't mention that at all, but it is a major, important part of the studio. And it is expensive. Which leads to the third point: your budget. You mentioned a budget of about 10,000 Euros, but you want to spend most of that on gear. Assuming a 50/50 split, you would have 5000 euros and a floor area of about 80 m2. That means you have about 60 euros per square floor of floor space. That's not enough. Not close. Just your HVAC system for that size studio is going to eat up about 3000 to 5000 euros, and probably more, even for a very simple system. I would suggest that you will need to greatly increase your budget, if you want to do this right. You will probably need more like 200 to 300 euros per square meter, at the very least, to do a studio that size with good acoustics.Any constructive feedback would be greatly appreciated! So please, air your thoughts
So those would be my suggestions!
But please do post the initial layout that you mentioned, as well as a few photos of the building (inside and outside), so we can better understand what you have, and what you are planning to do.
- Stuart -
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Re: A low-budget Studio build in East Iceland!
Hi Stuart,
Firstly thanks for your detailed reply and the time you put into it. I actually regret posting our plans now after getting your feedback and John H Brandt's, as it is quite clear that I am WAY out of my area here! Due to the time pressures of the project and the fact that John has offered to help us we are going to have him lead us through the design and building process now. I will of course start my studies on Acoustics straight away as I don't feel comfortable doing a project with such lack of knowledge.
As for the attachment I think I am lucky that it didn't attach, as it was such a bad floor plan that my street cred would probably be in negative equity right now (if it isn't already!). Just to clarify a few of your questions Stuart, I will try and better explain my ideas:
On your first point, I agree, we should really be putting max funds into building because the gear can come later.
When I said internal walls, I meant all the dividing walls which will divide the space into 4 rooms. There would be no issue with triple-leafing etc as there would only me one mass on each side of the walls; two layers of sheetrock on top of each other with green glue between. And regarding the green glue, I guess I had misunderstood the use of it, so we would need screws as well :-/.
I will totally take on board all your suggestions, and I see now how wrong I was with many of my ideas. I'll keep you posted on updates as we go through the design with John.
Firstly thanks for your detailed reply and the time you put into it. I actually regret posting our plans now after getting your feedback and John H Brandt's, as it is quite clear that I am WAY out of my area here! Due to the time pressures of the project and the fact that John has offered to help us we are going to have him lead us through the design and building process now. I will of course start my studies on Acoustics straight away as I don't feel comfortable doing a project with such lack of knowledge.
As for the attachment I think I am lucky that it didn't attach, as it was such a bad floor plan that my street cred would probably be in negative equity right now (if it isn't already!). Just to clarify a few of your questions Stuart, I will try and better explain my ideas:
On your first point, I agree, we should really be putting max funds into building because the gear can come later.
When I said internal walls, I meant all the dividing walls which will divide the space into 4 rooms. There would be no issue with triple-leafing etc as there would only me one mass on each side of the walls; two layers of sheetrock on top of each other with green glue between. And regarding the green glue, I guess I had misunderstood the use of it, so we would need screws as well :-/.
I will totally take on board all your suggestions, and I see now how wrong I was with many of my ideas. I'll keep you posted on updates as we go through the design with John.
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Re: A low-budget Studio build in East Iceland!
Hey Vinny, I'm glad you have an agreement with John for doing this! That will certainly solve the issues mentioned above, and get you a usable room. Smart move.
I'm also looking forward to seeing the progress with this build, and the final outcome!
- Stuart -
I'm also looking forward to seeing the progress with this build, and the final outcome!
- Stuart -