I’m building a music room!
I'm a bass player and designer of bass cabinets living in Mexico City. The purpose of this space is to have a somewhat "neutral playground" for trying and testing new bass cabinets designs and also to rehearse with my rock band. Eventually it could serve as a one room studio to record song mockups and demos. Soundproofing will be a top priority because this is a very quiet residential area. However, I will allocate most of the resources (money, time etc.) to make this room a great sounding bass room.
Available space.
I am buying house refurbished from a 10 years old one. The general lay out of first and second floors won’t change so I have no other choice than the third floor to build my music room. In fact the room’s “shell” is already built. It was a better deal to just build a few more walls and a roof adding to the price of the house and pay for everything with the mortgage. I asked the constructor to just raise the walls with red (solid) brick as the rest of the house. No electrical wiring, no lightning just walls (Q1). The roof is light poured concrete (10 cms. approx. with 2 concrete and steel Beams running across) and the floor is the roof of the master bedroom below.
The entire house is in no physical contact with the neighbor’s at the right (the side the music room will be) but it touches the house at the left. Every building having their own wall obviously but they are adjacent.
Due to the old shape of the house and a large dome that gives natural light to the main stairs. I'm limited to a quasi-rectangular shape of about 40m2 (430 ft2). Height goes from 2.8 m to 3m (see attached images).
Soundproofing requirements.
How loud it is going to be inside? Well, for band practicing we have measured (sound meter with C weighting and slow reading) levels of about 100dB with drums, bass, two guitars and vocals. We are not teenagers anymore so we really fight ourselves to turn down the knobs. For bass cabinets testing, levels could go up to 120 dB. Maybe more for a few seconds. Everything from sweeps, bursts and pink noise to hard playing bass at top volume and speakers driven to blow up.
Outside the room in the open space things are very quiet, occasional dog barking but no trains or factories. The loudest noises I can expect will come from my daughters playing inside the house or in the garden. Sound coming in is not an issue. Real problem is the sound I’m going to be doing inside. Noise floor can go as low as 35 dB outside averaging 40 dB so that gives a huge gap of 80 dB to tame. For what I read in this forum that level of sound reduction would not be practically attainable. Regulations in México set the maximum noise emission from a fixed source to 68 dB from 6 AM to 10 PM and 65 dB from 10PM to 6 AM. So I will have to make the loudest noises at decent hours.
As I mentioned before, the walls are standard red brick rendered on the outside. (Q1
Let’s set a target of 60dB of sound reduction for now. That would take long band rehearsals down to tolerable levels for neighbors and wife. Also loudest bass cabinet testing would comply with local regulations.
Design / Construction stage:
Design is in a very early stage. We are planning to move in late October, then I will be able to actually measure things properly (if Q2 has a practical answer). First move will be the window and doors for the outer shell.
The hole for the Window is 1.1m x 1.65m. I’m considering an off the shell German style window with PVC frame. They come with single or double glass from 3 up to 35mm. I have used them in an apartment in a very noisy environment with great results. They are residential products, not designed for studios but at least you have the possibility to customize them. Manufacturer uses a sort of TL figure called “Indice de reducción Sonora” Rw showing a value of -33dB for a single glass 12mm (Q3
Door will be double also, 2 high mass solid door and frames, one directly against the existing vain (not sure that is the right word) and the other built in to the interior wall. I will provide more details on this later.
BUDGET: USD $15,000 for window, doors and interior floor walls and ceiling. My contractor gave me a number of about $5,000 for the walls and ceiling for a normal (with no acoustic knowledge or special care) construction. I will allocate more money as the project develops (according to my ability to raise more founds obviously).
Next to design/think about/ask/buy/build:
- Flooring- Only thing decided by now is that a floated floor is out. May be just regular laminated floor of any kind over a layer of 19mm plywood or Particle board, resting on this 6mm acoustic foam http://www.aislantesmexico.com.mx/piso-acustico.html
- Interior Walls- Inside the room I will raise another leaf (15 cm apart from the outer wall) consisting of: wood or steel framing (undecided yet), insulation, ½” drywall, green glue, ¾” drywall. (Q4/Q5
- Electric installation and lightning
- Room Lay-out: drums, amps, Mini PA position for best possible sound inside the room
- Bass clarity focused Acoustic conditioning (Bass traps, Absorbers, etc) (Q6
I understand there is a huge amount of work ahead. By now I would like to receive your kind comments and suggestions about all above and the following (very basic) questions.
QUESTIONS
Q1.- Painting the interior of the brick walls is of any benefit? They will end hidden anyway but, Do you think the sealant effect of the paint could give any gain in STC? Almost 90m2 to cover. Worth the effort?
Q2.- How do you measure how much sound you are blocking with every step? I have an SPL meter, REW software, calibrated measurement mic etc. Should I just play loud pink noise inside, close the door and measure outside with an SPL meter? Any standard for this?
Q3.- So we don’t want to create a sound leaking window right? How do I calculate the minimum thickness of the glass to compare with the 15 cms solid brick wall?
Q4.- Are 15cm of air between leafs enough?
Q5 Should I rest the interior wall on the floor? Or directly against the concrete below? Which way is easier to build / Seal.
Q6.- What do you think about the shape of the room? There is no much to do in that regard because of the loading points distributed around the plants below. Is it better or worse than a rectangular room? Is it going to be a nightmare of acoustics? I have Everest’s “Master Handbook of Acoustics” and Gervais’s “Build it like the pros“ Waiting for some free time to be read. As of now, my limited knowledge on the subject only let me see more corners to put bass traps.
I really look forward to read your comments. I'm very excited and willing to go the extra mile with this project!
Ray