I'm looking for layout ideas. I understand the limitations of the space and my expectations are realistic but I just want to maximize the usage and make it sound as good as it can.
That support pole frustrates me to no end.

Moderators: Aaronw, kendale, John Sayers
And what about height?The gym side is 11' wide.
That's good news! Are you okay with sound going out of and into your mixing room? What I'm getting at is, are you cool to just build a normal type room with poor isolation and treat it acoustically so it sounds great? Or are you wanting to build a very isolated room?There's ducts in the joists on the bedroom side.
I think it's fairly clear on the gym side.
By looking at where your jack post is, the wood that beam is made out of, and the layout of your basement, I'd put money on it that that is the main support beam for your home. It's not going anywhere unless your replace that entire beam with a steel I beam that will hang just as low. The advantage to the I beam is that you will get rid of the jack post. This will cost thousands of dollars though.I don't think that's an actual beam.
I think they built a box to drop the ceiling to the duct level on the bedroom side.
I'm starting to get the picture regarding how important this mixing room is to you.I'm thinking I could remove the laundry room walls altogether.
Exciting!I close on Sep 20 so I'll have more details then.
You really need to assess how great you want the room to sound while realizing how an 8 ft ceiling (if that's how high it is) will limit you both visually and acoustically. If you want an amazing control room, you'll want amazing HVAC and isolation. With that comes a lot of space. As much as you'd love that big control room that you drew over your basement layout, you'd have to check the actual room dimensions on the room mode calculator websites to see if the L W H measurements will land you in a good spot acoustically speaking. As much as room dimensions aren't the MOST important aspect to a great sounding room, it is pretty important. It must pass the 3 tests (you can check those on Bob Gold's site). If you are building from scratch, you should try to get evenly spaced modal distribution.That pole though...
I think with the architectural limitations I'll realistically be limited to acoustic treatment only. I don't expect isolation but I'll need to do something to contain the hvac. I'll definitely do soffit monitor mounts with trapping.That's good news! Are you okay with sound going out of and into your mixing room? What I'm getting at is, are you cool to just build a normal type room with poor isolation and treat it acoustically so it sounds great? Or are you wanting to build a very isolated room?
Totally. This will alleviate the headaches caused by the HVAC trunk and trying to support ceiling joists.I think with the architectural limitations I'll realistically be limited to acoustic treatment only.
Do you mean you want to visually hide the HVAC trunk? Or do you want to obtain some sort of isolation by boxing them in?I don't expect isolation but I'll need to do something to contain the hvac.
Good idea!I'll definitely do soffit monitor mounts with trapping.