Renamed from "Rehearsal Studio Plan - Partial Garage Conversion - Advice??"...
Renamed again from "Sharward's Rehearsal Studio Plan - Partial Garage Conversion" on 27 November 2005...
Hoping for some advice. Bought (kind of) new home last Spring w/ very spacious 3-car (tandem) garage, with intent to build a rehearsal studio in rear left corner. I plan to play my drums loud and eventually have band rehearsals/writing sessions in this space. Some amateur recording may occur in the future.
Left half of garage is about 38' deep -- about 8' deeper than right side. Width of left side is about 10'. Perimeter of build space is about 10' x 17.5' with no vents, windows, doors, or access panels on the existing walls of that space. When the studio is built, there will still be 20' of clearance on left side to acommodate a vehicle on that side -- two cars will fit side-by-side towards the front of the garage.




Goal:
Expecting to generate 110dBA and hope to achieve outside levels of 40dBA, requiring STC of 70. Local noise ordinance requires no greater than 50dBA. Definitely need to stay under legal limit and not disturb neighbors. Nearest neighbor is 10 feet away (their garage is inverse configuration as mine -- about 38' feet deep on right side). We're the "new guys on the block."
Challenges:
High STC rating required. Limited overall width of space. Very cost conscious (but not "cheap"). Garage door remains intact so cars can come and go (considering replacing door with one of better quality).
Existing Construction:
Left wall is uninsulated 4" with 5/8" unfinished gypsum on garage side and stucco on exterior side. Existing rear wall is insulated 4" with 5/8 unfinished gypsum on garage side and finished 1/2" or 5/8" textured gypsum on interior side (office). Existing 8' long wall on right is same as rear wall (laundry room). Ceiling is just over 10' high, 5/8 unfinished gypsum on garage side, no insulation -- attic space above. Floor is concrete with expansion joint around entire perimeter of garage.
Preliminary Plan (High Level):
"Room within a room" w/ 2 doors (one swings out on outer wall, other swings in on inner wall). HVAC: Planning to use ductless system, such as Mitsubishi's Mr. Slim line, exterior unit at back of house, about 30 feet and 3 rooms away from garage.
Questions I have
Should I plan to rip off the existing gypsum, then insulate those walls, and leave them uncovered (since there will be another set of walls erected alongside of them? (I'm thinking probably so, since I assume I don't want three wall "skins" so relatively close together, due to risk of resonance.)
Should I / will I need to invest in an insulated garage door and/or a better quality side access door? These doors are not actually connected to the studio space, but they're might be the last chance to catch sound leakage. Existing doors are cheap quality but servicable.
Studio doors -- what should I use? 36" wide preferred. Location of door marked in photos with the fire extinguishers. Anything I can/should do to reinforce the doors (i.e., sand, extra layer of material added to one side, such as plywood, etc.)?
I'm really unclear on how to go about ceiling... Should I (a) Partition the "inner" walls all the way to existing ceiling, then string new ceiling joists across the new "inner" walls; or (b) string new ceiling joists across the existing "outer" walls and the newly constructed "outer" walls, then partition the "inner" walls up to the new ceiling; or (c) something else entirely?
Whatever the answer to the above question, how do I hang the ceiling and anchor the walls in a decoupled manner?
Is the "expansion joint" around the perimeter of the garage sufficient "decoupling" of the floor? Or should I do some kind of floating or raised floor?
Sorry I don't have any fancy CAD drawings. I have hand-drafted some designs, but they're no longer valid after all my research. I've learned so much -- lots of it right here too!
Looking forward to your comments, questions, and input... Thanks so much!