Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

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colliderman
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Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by colliderman »

Hi all,

I'm sorry if this is the wrong board to ask this or if I'm not following the posting guidelines. I did read through them but I'm not asking for specific advice about a studio build yet. Although I will be and when I do I'll make sure to post all the required info! :wink:

Just a quick question..does anyone know of any studios that have been built around "The Corner Control Room" design that's on John Sayers' variplans list? I've tried to find some real life examples but haven't come up with much. I did see the 112f Studio is similar to this. Are there any others? In my very early studio planning I'm thinking this might be the best design for the space I have but would love to see some real photos of the end result. Thanks!

edit: Is Boolean search not enabled on this forum? I've been trying to search "corner control" but can't filter results to that exact phrase. If someone could let me know how to do that it'd be much appreciated!
Soundman2020
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by Soundman2020 »

Hi there "colliderman", and Welcome! :)

One of my customers in California is currently in the process of building a facility that I designed for him, that includes a small corner control room. It is not yet completed, but will be shortly. Here's a couple of photos, showing how it is progressing:

Framing up:
FRKUS-CR-Framing.png
Drywall on:
FRKUS-CR-Sheathing.png

Original design concept, from left rear of CR:
FRKUS-CR-Concept-Left-Rear-View.png

Original design concept, CR overhead view:
FRKUS-CR-Concept-Rear-3..4-OH-View.png
In my very early studio planning I'm thinking this might be the best design for the space I have
Is there a specific reason why you are considering this design for your place? It's not that easy to do, both from the design point of view, and also from the construction point of view, and getting the acoustics right is a bit of a challenge too. I don't need to do corner control rooms very often: There's usually some other way things can be laid out that would be easier, unless there's a major overriding reason to go for a corner design. That's probably why you don't see too many of them!

- Stuart -
colliderman
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by colliderman »

Thanks Stuart, very happy to be here!

Thanks for posting those pics. That looks very similar to what I'm thinking for my space. I'm in the very early planning (dreaming) stage at this point, but I've done a few different sketchup designs of my space and the corner design just seems to feel and look the best to me.

I won't go into too much detail here as I want to be mindful of the guidelines for posting questions about a build. I'm also still trying to determine whether my budget allows for a build like this. I may be forced to go a simpler route just based on that.

My main concern though is that I wouldn't want my rooms to be too small to sound good, particularly the "live room". This will be mostly for recording rock music, so drumkits and loud amps, and also for my band to rehearse in.

I'm a little hesitant to post this because I'm still working on it, but here's a couple images of where I'm at in the design now along with dimensions. Do you think those room sizes will be ok or are they too small? If you have any thoughts or comments I'd really appreciate them. Thanks!
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by Soundman2020 »

You seem to be on a good track in general, and the facility has a good amount of space. I'm assuming that you tried several other layouts before settling on this one?

Nice SketchUp skills, by the way!


- Stuart -
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by John Sayers »

John Sayers Productions

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Soundman2020
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by Soundman2020 »

That's beautiful, John! Stunning, in fact.

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colliderman
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by colliderman »

Yes, wow! Thanks for posting that John. What a space!
You seem to be on a good track in general, and the facility has a good amount of space. I'm assuming that you tried several other layouts before settling on this one?
I did try a couple others but I'm definitely struggling with how they should be laid out. I originally thought I would just go for a two room design; control room and live room. The booth wasn't really needed but the nature of the corner control room kind of automatically adds it, and I could definitely see it being useful.

With a simpler two room design, I feel the best option would be to basically split the space in half, with the live room on the side closest to the furnace room (because it has the existing double doors on the side of the building, which makes sense for load in) and the control room on the side with the front exterior door. Here's what that looks like:
Two room studio top view.JPG
two room studio overview.JPG
*note: The control room is not isolated from the exterior structure in this design as I'm still unsure if I really need the isolation for it, but that's a whole different topic!

The thing I don't like about this is the hallway I'm forced to create near the front door. It just feels a bit strange to me and wouldn't be very usable space. I do like that the live room is a bit bigger now though. But if the other live room in the corner control room design would be of sufficient size to sound good (or at least have potential) I think I'd be happier with that design.

What are your thoughts on the two room design?

Do you think the live room in the original Corner Control room design is large enough to sound good, and would comfortably accommodate a four piece band?

Could you elaborate a bit on the construction challenges you mentioned earlier with the Corner Control room design?

I've also attached another pic of the empty space as it is now, with dimensions. Also forgot to mention, the finished ceiling height will be 10 feet.

Thank you!
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by Soundman2020 »

The control room is not isolated from the exterior structure
... and neither is the live room! :)

in this design as I'm still unsure if I really need the isolation for it,
Yes, you do.
Do you think the live room in the original Corner Control room design is large enough to sound good, and would comfortably accommodate a four piece band?
It would be tight. I would flatten out the CR a bit, to give you more room in the LR.
Could you elaborate a bit on the construction challenges you mentioned earlier with the Corner Control room design?
Angles. Unusual ones. It's hard enough to get framing and drywall consistent and well sealed in a rectangular room, and it's hard enough to get a rectangular room truly symmetrical, but when you have to do that while cutting framing at 27.3° or 35.9° or whatever it turns out to be, it gets even harder still. laying out a rectangle is relatively easy by measuring across the diagonals and checking for exactly equal numbers when you snap the layout on the floor, but even then the final farming won't be exact.... that's quite a bit harder to do when the room has 5, 6, or 8 sides, and they all have to be lined up right...

It's not impossible by any means, as the above examples show, but it does make it harder, and slow you down. If you want a fast easy build, then rectangular is a good option. If you don't mind spending more time on higher precision to get a better room, then that's also fine.

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colliderman
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New plan

Post by colliderman »

So I've decided not to go with the corner design. I think it's just too ambitious for my budget and my needs. I also feel like the live room is too small. Also, as Stuart said, the construction will be quite complicated.

The new plan is a two room build, similar to what I posted earlier with a few changes. I'm trying to nail down the room layout as much as possible at this point, so before I start asking too many specific construction questions, I'd just like to get an opinion of the plan as it stands.

I think I covered this earlier in the thread, but just in case I didn't:

Main Usage: Rehearsal space for my band, and a writing, mixing, and recording space for myself (and band). I also do some recording from time to time of friends' bands as well. I don't have any aspirations of this being a full blown commercial facility, but I'd like to be able to record friends bands occasionally. Like the rest of us here, recording is my passion. :)

How loud am I?: Very loud! :jammin: My band plays aggressive music and is probably in the 110-120dB range when jamming. I'm sorry I don't have exact measurements for that yet. I know I will need them but for now, let's just say we are VERY loud. Drums, bass, guitars.

Building details: Roughly 28' x 28' stand alone building adjacent to my house. It sits on a concrete slab and is framed with 2x6's all around with cedar siding on the exterior. The existing interior walls are insulated with pink fluffy fiberglass, and hung with plywood. It has radiant heat in the slab which is heated by an oil fired boiler. There is an existing 2 piece powder room (toilet and sink). It sits on a large lot (2.2 acres) but the closest neighbor on the one side (side with drum kit in Sketchup image) is about 50 ft away. The other three sides are 150ft+ away from neighbors. There are existing windows on the live room side and the control room side that I'd like to keep if possible for natural light.

Here are some exterior pics of the building:
photo 1.JPG
photo 2.JPG
and interior:
photo 2.JPG
photo 3.JPG
Here's what I'm thinking:
Studio v2 - top view.jpg
Studio v2 - top view w dimensions.jpg
Studio v2 - perspective 1.jpg
Budget: 10k-15k . This will be a DIY build. I know the budget is small..

My questions are:

1. How does the layout look overall? (ie. Am I making the best use of space with what I have to work with and what I intend to do? )

2. Do I absolutely need to isolate the Control Room? The decision not to isolate the control room was made for the following reasons: a) I'm trying to save space and money. b) I'd like to be able to open those windows and I feel like a room within a room would make that not easily doable..maybe I'm wrong? c) I don't feel I need the isolation from or to the outside world in the control room. The live room is where all the loud stuff will happen, and my area is generally quiet enough that outside noises arent' too big of a deal. I can handle the occasional lawn mower disrupting my mixing now and then.

4. If I don't isolate the Control Room as in this design, will I still get an acceptable amount of isolation in the Control Room when tracking say, a drumkit or loud amp? The live room is fully isolated and the control room wall adjacent to the live room will be double 5/8" drywall, green glue in between layers. Is isolation of the other CR walls crucial for transmission loss in CR when tracking or will the benefits be minimal?

4. Can I build the new live room ceiling underneath the existing drywall ceiling as is? The interior ceiling is drywalled throughout at 10' 8". For the live room, my plan was to construct the new ceiling underneath it at 10', and leave the existing ceiling as is. That would leave roughly 8" between new ceiling drywall and existing ceiling drywall. Is that ok or will that be compromising my isolation? (ie. 3 leaf system)

5. Can I use the plywood that is currently hung on the walls to add existing mass to the exterior structure in between the studs? Or should I do that with drywall? I'm thinking I would take the plywood down, cut it to fit in between the existing studs, remove insulation, put up plywood in between studs, put insulation back. Then I'd frame my interior live room walls with 2x4's, fill with Roxul safe n sound, and then put 2 layers of 5/8' drywall with green glue in between layers.

Thank you in advance for any advice!!
Last edited by colliderman on Thu Dec 22, 2016 3:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Soundman2020
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by Soundman2020 »

So I've decided not to go with the corner design.
Smart move! :thu:
The new plan is a two room build, similar to what I posted earlier with a few changes. I'm trying to nail down the room layout as much as possible at this point, so before I start asking too many specific construction questions, I'd just like to get an opinion of the plan as it stands.
The basic idea is fine, but you are losing too much space on the side walls of the CR with the soffit "wings" that extend too far back. They don't need to be that big. Also, your CR is not isolated at all!
let's just say we are VERY loud. Drums, bass, guitars.
So you 'll need considerable isolation, then! But we still need to put a number to that...
It sits on a concrete slab and is framed with 2x6's
Good start! Slab on grade is excellent, and 2x6 outer-leaf gives you good options.
and hung with plywood.
If you want good isolation, that will have to come off...
Budget: 10k-15k . This will be a DIY build. I know the budget is small ....
ummmm... Yup! That's a bit of an understatement... I'd suggest rethinking that...
1. How does the layout look overall?
It looks reasonable. There might be ways of improving it, but it's not too bad. Except that the CR is not isolated! That needs to be fixed.
2. Do I absolutely need to isolate the Control Room?
If that were my place, I most definitely would.
b) I'd like to be able to open those windows
:shock: Why? A control room is also a CONTROLLED room. It is a carefully crafted acoustically neutral space... that would be totally trashed by opening a window. I'm not sure why you would want to do that!
4. If I don't isolate the Control Room as in this design, will I still get an acceptable amount of isolation in the Control Room when tracking say, a drumkit or loud amp?
Nope. It's that simple. Since the control room is part of the outer leaf, it is not isolated.
4. Can I build the new live room ceiling underneath the existing drywall ceiling as is? The interior ceiling is drywalled throughout at 10' 8". For the live room, my plan was to construct the new ceiling underneath it at 10', and leave the existing ceiling as is. That would leave roughly 8" between new ceiling drywall and existing ceiling drywall. Is that ok or will that be compromising my isolation? (ie. 3 leaf system)
You could do that. Yes, it would be a 3-leaf system, but you can compensate for that.
5. Can I use the plywood that is currently hung on the walls to add existing mass to the exterior structure in between the studs?
Depending on how thick it is, possibly yes. If it is something like 3/4" or 5/8", then you could do that. If it is more like 1/4", then not a chance. Plywood it not very heavy as it is, so thin stuff is not a lot of use for adding mass.
I'm thinking I would take the plywood down, cut it to fit in between the existing studs, remove insulation, put up plywood in between studs, put insulation back.
Correct! Assuming that the plywood is at least 5/8, preferably 3/4. If not, the use 5/8 drywall instead.
Then I'd frame my interior live room walls with 2x4's, fill with Roxul safe n sound, and then put 2 layers of 5/8' drywall with green glue in between layers.
:thu: Yup!


- Stuart -
ssl4000g
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Re: New plan

Post by ssl4000g »

colliderman wrote: Building details: ...It has radiant heat in the slab which is heated by an oil fired boiler.
colliderman,

You have radiant heat in the floor. I have radiant heat in the floor on my garage project.

Do you know where the piping system si placed in your floor? Were you there when it was laid out and poured? In my instance, I have no idea were the pipes are in my floor. That is a major challenge for me. I want to use it. A concrete contractor friend told me to be careful is I was shooting the floor, sometimes the pipes rise during the pour, I could puncture a pipe and ruin the whole system. Stuart has already expressed his dislike of platforms filled with sand as that was my proposed solution. I'm just worried about breaking a system that I cannot fix.

I was wondering if you are facing this problem too? Do you have a workaround?

W
Wayne C. Davis
colliderman
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by colliderman »

ssl4000g wrote: colliderman,

You have radiant heat in the floor. I have radiant heat in the floor on my garage project.

Do you know where the piping system si placed in your floor? Were you there when it was laid out and poured? In my instance, I have no idea were the pipes are in my floor. That is a major challenge for me. I want to use it. A concrete contractor friend told me to be careful is I was shooting the floor, sometimes the pipes rise during the pour, I could puncture a pipe and ruin the whole system. Stuart has already expressed his dislike of platforms filled with sand as that was my proposed solution. I'm just worried about breaking a system that I cannot fix.

I was wondering if you are facing this problem too? Do you have a workaround?

W
Hi Wayne,

I don't know where the piping is in my floor. But I've talked to a few people who've all said that using a construction adhesive like Liquid Nails to secure the bottom plate to the concrete will be fine, so that's my plan right now.

I also know someone who has access to a pretty high quality thermal camera so I might see if I can get that and map out the lines. I'm not sure how well that would work and how accurately it could pick up the tubing but it'd be cool to check out!
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by Soundman2020 »

I've talked to a few people who've all said that using a construction adhesive like Liquid Nails to secure the bottom plate to the concrete will be fine,
Were any of those people the actual building inspector, who will inspect your framing before you can put any drywall on it, and either allow you to go ahead, or tell you to tear it down and do it again?

Was any of those people a certified structural engineer, who would willingly put that advice in writing and sign it off?

Did you check your local building code to make sure that such "anchoring" is permitted / approved?

I would be rather careful, if I were you, about such a plan... Rather than trusting "what somebody told me", I would check the actual, real-world legal requirements, as well as the opinion of the inspector who will be visiting your place, to inspect what you did...

And to be honest, living where I do, you would never find me inside a room if I knew that the only thing that was holding the walls onto the floor, was glue...


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ssl4000g
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by ssl4000g »

Soundman2020 wrote:
I've talked to a few people who've all said that using a construction adhesive like Liquid Nails to secure the bottom plate to the concrete will be fine,
Were any of those people the actual building inspector, who will inspect your framing before you can put any drywall on it, and either allow you to go ahead, or tell you to tear it down and do it again?

Was any of those people a certified structural engineer, who would willingly put that advice in writing and sign it off?

Did you check your local building code to make sure that such "anchoring" is permitted / approved?

I would be rather careful, if I were you, about such a plan... Rather than trusting "what somebody told me", I would check the actual, real-world legal requirements, as well as the opinion of the inspector who will be visiting your place, to inspect what you did...

And to be honest, living where I do, you would never find me inside a room if I knew that the only thing that was holding the walls onto the floor, was glue...


- Stuart -
I've inquired to my local township about what is acceptable for anchoring framing. I did not get a specific answer saying this or that is acceptable, or it needs to be this or that even when I gave some specifics. I took that to mean that whatever I would submit, it would be the first thing they looked at for possible flagging. I also had someone tell me to glue a plate down. Needless to say, I've reconsidered the whole project because of the radiant heat and the possible thermal loss. If this was easy, everybody'd be doing it!

W
Wayne C. Davis
colliderman
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Re: Any real studio examples of "The Corner Control Room" ?

Post by colliderman »

Soundman2020 wrote:Was any of those people a certified structural engineer, who would willingly put that advice in writing and sign it off?

Did you check your local building code to make sure that such "anchoring" is permitted / approved?
No, none of those people were structural engineers. Two of the people who have told me this are experienced builders who have encountered this multiple times in real life, and have built structures this way. They are also the people who will be helping me build this. I was wrong about the Liquid Nails though..the adhesive they've suggested is PL adhesive.

I will certainly check with local building code and find out what is acceptable though in order to get the structure approved. If this is not acceptable to them I will find another solution. :thu:

Most likely, I'll get a thermal camera and find out where the lines are, and then do a mix of adhesive and fasteners.
ssl4000g wrote:Needless to say, I've reconsidered the whole project because of the radiant heat and the possible thermal loss. If this was easy, everybody'd be doing it!
What do you mean "possible thermal loss"? Are you referring to your radiant heat being less effective because of building over the concrete? If so, that will not be the case. Don't let this deter you! There are solutions. See if you can rent a thermal camera for an afternoon.

People do do it all the time. The radiant heat is not a big obstacle in my opinion. I'm very glad to have such efficient heating in my space. It's been awesome this winter so far, and I'm in Canada! Now figuring out all the details of this build and not screwing it up, that's a challenge! :D
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