New project studio construction in Greece
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gavramid
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2019 5:08 pm
- Location: Greece
New project studio construction in Greece
Hello everyone,I’m Giorgos from Greece, and I’m about to make a project studio on the basement of my house. Unfortunately, I’m on a tight budget and I was thinking to do it DIY. You can see the basement in the follwing drawing. I 'm posting for the 1st time in the forum, so forgive any mistakes on my behalf.
The idea is to make a control room and a play room with drums, amplifiers etc. I was thinking something like the 2nd drawing.
The play room will be used for rehearsing and for recording music and voice dubbing. The 1st thing that concerns me is the soundproofing of the play room, so as not to disturb the neighbors and also to be quite enough to record vocals and low-volume instruments like classical guitars etc.
I would be grateful if you could give me advice on the construction, regarding sound insulation, and maybe some things that I missed. I’ve read the thread of Drum Room Construction by beeros05 and the guidance you provide him (especially Soundman2020) and hope you enlighten me with your experience.
I‘m currently on the planning process.
Info about the building
The height of the ceiling is 2.85m and it as all made of concrete except the 2 walls from the 2 sides of the stairs which are red brick. Above the basement there is a ground-floor parking area between pilotis, and on the 1st and 2nd floor family house. The house is in front of a rather traffic road.
Thoughts on design - Walls
As you can see on the drawing, the 3 walls of the space that will be the play room is made of concrete and the 4th on does not already exist. I consider the concrete as the 1st leaf and I was thinking of using a 2-layer of 12,5mm gypsym boards on a 5 cm stud filled with low density rockwool(50kg/m3) as the 2nd leaf and 5cm of gap between the leafs. On the wall that does not exist, I ‘ll build as a second leaf a 3-layer of 12,5mm gypsym boards on a 5cm stud filled with low density rockwool and 10 cm of gap. I used Greg’s MSM TL calculator and got the TL results shown on the following pics.
Results for concretre-gypsym walls Results for gypsym -gypsym walls Did I use the calculator correctly? If yes I think that the results are very encouraging.
Thoughts on design – Floor
After some reading in the forum and considering the basement floor is concrete, I think of just make a decoupling floor, in the following manner. Use 2 layers of 18mm OSB3 using underneath 6cmX6cm (and 2,5cm height) neoprene pads. These pads have max static load 35kg per piece and they work correctly if they are loaded at 70% of maximum load. The gap will be filled with low density rockwool.
Thoughts on design - Ceiling
I was thinking of hanging the ceiling frames on something like this, in order to decouple it from the concrete ceiling. https://antivibration-systems.com/produ ... o-qh-mini/
The ceiling will be 2 layers of 12,5mm gypsym board mounted on the above system, and the gap will be filled with low density rockwool. Using the MSM TL calculator gave, me the following results.
To summarise
So, are my initial thoughts ok? Please let me now if you need me to provide any additional info regarding the project.
Thank you in advance, Giorgos
I would be grateful if you could give me advice on the construction, regarding sound insulation, and maybe some things that I missed. I’ve read the thread of Drum Room Construction by beeros05 and the guidance you provide him (especially Soundman2020) and hope you enlighten me with your experience.
I‘m currently on the planning process.
Info about the building
The height of the ceiling is 2.85m and it as all made of concrete except the 2 walls from the 2 sides of the stairs which are red brick. Above the basement there is a ground-floor parking area between pilotis, and on the 1st and 2nd floor family house. The house is in front of a rather traffic road.
Thoughts on design - Walls
As you can see on the drawing, the 3 walls of the space that will be the play room is made of concrete and the 4th on does not already exist. I consider the concrete as the 1st leaf and I was thinking of using a 2-layer of 12,5mm gypsym boards on a 5 cm stud filled with low density rockwool(50kg/m3) as the 2nd leaf and 5cm of gap between the leafs. On the wall that does not exist, I ‘ll build as a second leaf a 3-layer of 12,5mm gypsym boards on a 5cm stud filled with low density rockwool and 10 cm of gap. I used Greg’s MSM TL calculator and got the TL results shown on the following pics.
Results for concretre-gypsym walls Results for gypsym -gypsym walls Did I use the calculator correctly? If yes I think that the results are very encouraging.
Thoughts on design – Floor
After some reading in the forum and considering the basement floor is concrete, I think of just make a decoupling floor, in the following manner. Use 2 layers of 18mm OSB3 using underneath 6cmX6cm (and 2,5cm height) neoprene pads. These pads have max static load 35kg per piece and they work correctly if they are loaded at 70% of maximum load. The gap will be filled with low density rockwool.
Thoughts on design - Ceiling
I was thinking of hanging the ceiling frames on something like this, in order to decouple it from the concrete ceiling. https://antivibration-systems.com/produ ... o-qh-mini/
The ceiling will be 2 layers of 12,5mm gypsym board mounted on the above system, and the gap will be filled with low density rockwool. Using the MSM TL calculator gave, me the following results.
To summarise
So, are my initial thoughts ok? Please let me now if you need me to provide any additional info regarding the project.
Thank you in advance, Giorgos
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Gregwor
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- Location: St. Albert, Alberta, Canada
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Welcome!
What is the big grey square in the middle of your basement? A pillar?
- It sounds like you have a lot of external noise that could hinder your recordings and mixing. Would isolation of your control room be something you're interested in having?
- Why are your walls framed using 2x2 dimensional lumber? That isn't very strong and probably wouldn't pass framing inspection.
- For isolated rooms (like your live room) you MUST consider/design HVAC.
Greg
What is the big grey square in the middle of your basement? A pillar?
I wouldn't put your control room near that pillar as it will screw up your stereo image. I would put your live room around that pillar as your live room is allowed to have things like that in the way.The idea is to make a control room and a play room with drums, amplifiers etc. I was thinking something like the 2nd drawing.
I would just leave the floor as is (concrete). Save yourself money and just paint it or put some cheap flooring down (like laminate or something).After some reading in the forum and considering the basement floor is concrete, I think of just make a decoupling floor, in the following manner. Use 2 layers of 18mm OSB3 using underneath 6cmX6cm (and 2,5cm height) neoprene pads. These pads have max static load 35kg per piece and they work correctly if they are loaded at 70% of maximum load. The gap will be filled with low density rockwool.
Is there a reason you aren't wanting to FULLY decouple your ceiling like most other people on the forum? I'd suggest building an inside out ceiling that sits on your walls.I was thinking of hanging the ceiling frames on something like this, in order to decouple it from the concrete ceiling.
Since your ceiling wouldn't be fully decoupled, my calculator cannot be used for your current ceiling plan.The ceiling will be 2 layers of 12,5mm gypsym board mounted on the above system, and the gap will be filled with low density rockwool. Using the MSM TL calculator gave, me the following results.
A few things:So, are my initial thoughts ok?
- It sounds like you have a lot of external noise that could hinder your recordings and mixing. Would isolation of your control room be something you're interested in having?
- Why are your walls framed using 2x2 dimensional lumber? That isn't very strong and probably wouldn't pass framing inspection.
- For isolated rooms (like your live room) you MUST consider/design HVAC.
Greg
It appears that you've made the mistake most people do. You started building without consulting this forum.
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gavramid
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2019 5:08 pm
- Location: Greece
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Thank you Greg for the responce. I'm glad you guys help me with this.
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... =2&t=17363
Meaning that the frame of the second leaf will rest/touch the concrete floor and the concrete ceiling. The standard gypsym studs are much more cheaper than big wooden studs. But the gypsym studs can not support the ceiling, so I thought to hang it from the concrete ceiling withe decouplers.
Yes, I think this is how its called. It's a concrete column which supports the structure, and ofcourse there is no way to alter it.Gregwor wrote:What is the big grey square in the middle of your basement? A pillar?
I was thinking the layout show in the following pic. I got a large format inline board (about 2,3m) And some outboard equipment. Do you think that this kind of gear placement is bad?Gregwor wrote:I wouldn't put your control room near that pillar as it will screw up your stereo image. I would put your live room around that pillar as your live room is allowed to have things like that in the way.
Nice to hear that. I ll start leaving the floor as is, and maybe add a drum riser.Gregwor wrote:I would just leave the floor as is (concrete). Save yourself money and just paint it or put some cheap flooring down (like laminate or something).
The noise comes from the front side where the play room will be. The control is on the backside, and I think it will be quiet enough. Adding the fact that there will be the insulated play room between the road and the control, I think that there might not be a problem.gavramid wrote:- It sounds like you have a lot of external noise that could hinder your recordings and mixing. Would isolation of your control room be something you're interested in having?
As a matter of fact I will use standard gypsum studs thah are 5Χ5cm but I used the 2X2 wood stud in the calculator because the closest much in the dimensions. The studs in Greece is like this. Does this alter the results? Regarding the construction process I was thinking the beeros thread aproach in building the walls.gavramid wrote:Why are your walls framed using 2x2 dimensional lumber? That isn't very strong and probably wouldn't pass framing inspection.
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... =2&t=17363
Meaning that the frame of the second leaf will rest/touch the concrete floor and the concrete ceiling. The standard gypsym studs are much more cheaper than big wooden studs. But the gypsym studs can not support the ceiling, so I thought to hang it from the concrete ceiling withe decouplers.
Ofcourse if my thoughts are ok up to here, I will draw a more detailed schem with hvacs and such.gavramid wrote:For isolated rooms (like your live room) you MUST consider/design HVAC.
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gavramid
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2019 5:08 pm
- Location: Greece
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Hello!
Redesign of the room
So I redesigned the room and draw a frame using 4,5 X 9.5 cm wood studs spaced 60cm, in a typical room in a room construction.So the inner leaf wont touch the outer except the floor, and the ceiling will rest on the inner leaf wall frame. I ll use 2 layer of 12,5mm gypsym board as the 2nd leaf as, and 3 cm insulated gag to the outer concrete leaf. The boards will be oriented as shown below. The inner layer of gypsym boards will be vertical and the outer will be horizontal in parallel with the wood studs. I considered using 4,5X9,5 studs for the ceiling, spaced at 60cm. The length of these studs is 4,88meters and they ll hold 2 layer of 12,5mm gypsym board and the insulation.
Are the studs ok for supporting this weight?
I think the two layer boards plus the 30-50kgr/m3 insulation will weight roughly 25 kg per m2.
Should I align and screw the ceiling studs, where the horizontal studs are?
Redesign of the room
So I redesigned the room and draw a frame using 4,5 X 9.5 cm wood studs spaced 60cm, in a typical room in a room construction.So the inner leaf wont touch the outer except the floor, and the ceiling will rest on the inner leaf wall frame. I ll use 2 layer of 12,5mm gypsym board as the 2nd leaf as, and 3 cm insulated gag to the outer concrete leaf. The boards will be oriented as shown below. The inner layer of gypsym boards will be vertical and the outer will be horizontal in parallel with the wood studs. I considered using 4,5X9,5 studs for the ceiling, spaced at 60cm. The length of these studs is 4,88meters and they ll hold 2 layer of 12,5mm gypsym board and the insulation.
Are the studs ok for supporting this weight?
I think the two layer boards plus the 30-50kgr/m3 insulation will weight roughly 25 kg per m2.
Should I align and screw the ceiling studs, where the horizontal studs are?
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gavramid
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2019 5:08 pm
- Location: Greece
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Good morning from sunny Greece!
So I have almost finshed emptying the basement and (I think!) I made progress reading about framing and learning sketchup. As you can see in the previous post I've designed the inner leaf of the play room. My question is regarding the studs that will support the ceiling. Are 4,5X9,5 cm studs ok to support the ceiling that will weight about 25kg/m2 ? The length of the studs will be 4,9 meters spaced every 60cm. Is the mounting shown in the following picture ok? The ceiling studs will be screwed with 3 or 4 screws. Thank you so much guys for helping out.
Cheers, Giorgos
So I have almost finshed emptying the basement and (I think!) I made progress reading about framing and learning sketchup. As you can see in the previous post I've designed the inner leaf of the play room. My question is regarding the studs that will support the ceiling. Are 4,5X9,5 cm studs ok to support the ceiling that will weight about 25kg/m2 ? The length of the studs will be 4,9 meters spaced every 60cm. Is the mounting shown in the following picture ok? The ceiling studs will be screwed with 3 or 4 screws. Thank you so much guys for helping out.
Cheers, Giorgos
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vdegou
- Posts: 21
- Joined: Fri May 10, 2019 5:29 pm
- Location: Madrid, Spain
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Hey Giorgos!
Unfortunately I don't have enough experience to help you out, just wanting to wish you luck on your project and to let you know I will be watching this closely! I am in a similar situation wanting to build a studio in a basement, and currently in the research phase
Hope everything goes well!
Cheers from Madrid.
Unfortunately I don't have enough experience to help you out, just wanting to wish you luck on your project and to let you know I will be watching this closely! I am in a similar situation wanting to build a studio in a basement, and currently in the research phase
Hope everything goes well!
Cheers from Madrid.
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gavramid
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2019 5:08 pm
- Location: Greece
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Hey guys!!! I would really appreciate if you could share any thoughts about my questions,so as to continue with the design and make a bill of materials and costs.
So does the 4,5X9,5 studs are ok to bear the 25kg/m2 (or maybe 30kg) ceiling?
Is the way shown in the previous post ok for joining the ceiling studs to the wall frames?
Should all stud joins be screwed or nailed?
I can upload my sketchup file if it is easier for you to check out. Thank you so much in advance.
So does the 4,5X9,5 studs are ok to bear the 25kg/m2 (or maybe 30kg) ceiling?
Is the way shown in the previous post ok for joining the ceiling studs to the wall frames?
Should all stud joins be screwed or nailed?
I can upload my sketchup file if it is easier for you to check out. Thank you so much in advance.
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Gregwor
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- Location: St. Albert, Alberta, Canada
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Again, I don't think it's wise to have your control room where it is as you have the pillar there.
Regarding ceiling joists, you need to get an engineer to approve the design. It's really not worth putting anyone in danger without an engineers stamp.
Greg
Regarding ceiling joists, you need to get an engineer to approve the design. It's really not worth putting anyone in danger without an engineers stamp.
Greg
It appears that you've made the mistake most people do. You started building without consulting this forum.
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gavramid
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2019 5:08 pm
- Location: Greece
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Hello guys.
I 've almost got rid of the stuff stored at the basement and I'm re considering the design.
Regarding the control room and the pilar; will the following layout work with some treatment? Maybe install a bass trap or other treatment to the pillar? Will soffit mounting my monitors give better results? If you think that is not gonna work, do you have an alternative layout to propose?
Regarding the playroom insulation, I think the 4,5X9,5cm wall framing is ok. I m exploring some options for the ceiling.
I contacted a constructor and he proposed two options for the ceiling. Either 50X50X5mm steel studs attached to the wood framing spaced at 50cm from each other, not touching the outer leaf. And the 2nd option is some spring mount systems attached the concrete ceiling (outer leaf) in the following manner. The thingy has the following specs
Maximum Load: 25 Κp*
Deflection: 25 mm at maximum load
Natural Frequency: 3 Hz at maximum load
I understand that the spring won't add to the insulation, but will act as a decoupler for the two leafs?
Will this work in the manner like mass-air-mass model? How would affect the equation of the msm resonace?
In my situation the springs are much easier to install, and cost about the same money as the steel studs.
I would appreciate any creative feedback. Thanks guys!
I 've almost got rid of the stuff stored at the basement and I'm re considering the design.
Regarding the control room and the pilar; will the following layout work with some treatment? Maybe install a bass trap or other treatment to the pillar? Will soffit mounting my monitors give better results? If you think that is not gonna work, do you have an alternative layout to propose?
Regarding the playroom insulation, I think the 4,5X9,5cm wall framing is ok. I m exploring some options for the ceiling.
I contacted a constructor and he proposed two options for the ceiling. Either 50X50X5mm steel studs attached to the wood framing spaced at 50cm from each other, not touching the outer leaf. And the 2nd option is some spring mount systems attached the concrete ceiling (outer leaf) in the following manner. The thingy has the following specs
Maximum Load: 25 Κp*
Deflection: 25 mm at maximum load
Natural Frequency: 3 Hz at maximum load
I understand that the spring won't add to the insulation, but will act as a decoupler for the two leafs?
Will this work in the manner like mass-air-mass model? How would affect the equation of the msm resonace?
In my situation the springs are much easier to install, and cost about the same money as the steel studs.
I would appreciate any creative feedback. Thanks guys!
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Soundman2020
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Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Hi there Giorgos, and Welcome to the forum!
Just adding to what Greg has said...:
I would suggest changing your layout around, and putting the control room at the other end of the area, then have the live room in the rest of the space. I'm wondering if a "corner control room" would work for you: I think it might be a good option. Especially considering your large format console: since a corner control room is set up on the diagonal, the console would have plenty of space.
That's fine. Build each of the two rooms like that, and close of the actual studio area with an additional isolation wall, where needed.
Also, I would consider doing your ceiling "inside-out", like this:
- Stuart -
Just adding to what Greg has said...:
I would suggest changing your layout around, and putting the control room at the other end of the area, then have the live room in the rest of the space. I'm wondering if a "corner control room" would work for you: I think it might be a good option. Especially considering your large format console: since a corner control room is set up on the diagonal, the console would have plenty of space.
I consider the concrete as the 1st leaf and I was thinking of using a 2-layer of 12,5mm gypsym boards on a 5 cm stud filled with low density rockwool(50kg/m3) as the 2nd leaf and 5cm of gap between the leafs.
Not a good idea. Here's why: http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... f=2&t=8173 You already have an excellent floor: Concrete! It's hard to beat that. Keep that like it is. Maybe polish it and/or stain it, if you don't like the way it looks, or lay laminate flooring on it with a suitable underlay.After some reading in the forum and considering the basement floor is concrete, I think of just make a decoupling floor, in the following manner. Use 2 layers of 18mm OSB3 using underneath 6cmX6cm (and 2,5cm height) neoprene pads. These pads have max static load 35kg per piece and they work correctly if they are loaded at 70% of maximum load. The gap will be filled with low density rockwool.
It's far better (and easier) to just put a normal "inside out" ceiling on top of each of the two rooms.I was thinking of hanging the ceiling frames on something like this, in order to decouple it from the concrete ceiling.
I redesigned the room and draw a frame using 4,5 X 9.5 cm wood studs spaced 60cm,
The boards will be oriented as shown below. The inner layer of gypsym boards will be vertical and the outer will be horizontal in parallel with the wood studs.
No. You would need larger joists for the ceiling. you can't span that distance with that load using those small joists. You will have to get a structural engineer to tell you what size joists you need.I considered using 4,5X9,5 studs for the ceiling, spaced at 60cm. The length of these studs is 4,88meters and they ll hold 2 layer of 12,5mm gypsym board and the insulation. Are the studs ok for supporting this weight?
Plus the joists themselves... plus the nails, lights, wiring, caulk, paint, mud, tape, and all the acoustic treatment that you need to put on the ceiling ... You should include all of that in your calculations of the dead load. The total is probably going to be around twice what you are estimating. It might be even more if you have your HVAC silencer boxes resting on the ceiling.I think the two layer boards plus the 30-50kgr/m3 insulation will weight roughly 25 kg per m2.
No. The joists must rest on top of the top plates, not butt up next to them.Is the mounting shown in the following picture ok?
Also, I would consider doing your ceiling "inside-out", like this:
- Stuart -
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gavramid
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed May 08, 2019 5:08 pm
- Location: Greece
Re: New project studio construction in Greece
Thank you so much for the feedback! I ll come back shortly with photos of the basement and see how to work around the pillar.
I have another question regarding insulation. Here in Greece I can not find this pink insulation that many people use in the forum. I can find knauf mineral wool like "Ultracoustic" (low density 16kg/m3, R-value: 1.51m²K/W) and rockwools (mostly Fibran brand) at various densities like
30 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 10 kPa s/m2, thermal R 1,15 m2K/W
40 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 15 kPa s/m2, thermal R 1,15 m2K/W
50 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 30 kPa-s/m2 thermal R 1,15 m2K/W
75 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 50 kPa-s/m2 thermal R 1,20 m2K/W
What product, or which tech values should I check in order to have a proper MSM system? Is the density critical, or some other value?
I also noticed that the density for the R13 pink insulation is nto documented any where, only R28 and higher density products have a dinsity indication.
I have another question regarding insulation. Here in Greece I can not find this pink insulation that many people use in the forum. I can find knauf mineral wool like "Ultracoustic" (low density 16kg/m3, R-value: 1.51m²K/W) and rockwools (mostly Fibran brand) at various densities like
30 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 10 kPa s/m2, thermal R 1,15 m2K/W
40 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 15 kPa s/m2, thermal R 1,15 m2K/W
50 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 30 kPa-s/m2 thermal R 1,15 m2K/W
75 kg/m3 air flow resistivity 50 kPa-s/m2 thermal R 1,20 m2K/W
What product, or which tech values should I check in order to have a proper MSM system? Is the density critical, or some other value?
I also noticed that the density for the R13 pink insulation is nto documented any where, only R28 and higher density products have a dinsity indication.