Vaulted ceilings/restricted headroom in a studio... Bad?

Plans and things, layout, style, where do I put my near-fields etc.

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sayyousayme
Posts: 24
Joined: Mon Apr 05, 2010 5:18 pm
Location: South West Wales, Carmarthenshire

Vaulted ceilings/restricted headroom in a studio... Bad?

Post by sayyousayme »

Hi all

I'm looking to buy a new house soon, and I'll likely have one of two options for a music room: a garage/outbuilding of some sort, or a spare room. The former I have already posted about. The latter seems to quite often be a bedroom with a vaulted ceiling in the types of houses we are looking at. Well, I *think* vaulted ceiling is the right term. I mean an angled ceiling, usually with exposed beams, and usually with restricted headroom at the walls where the ceiling starts to angle. Please correct me if that's the wrong term....

Generally speaking, are such rooms good or bad for studios / listening environments? I can see a potential benefit in less reflective surfaces. But on the other hand, bass traps might have to be smaller, and reflections points might be tougher to calculate.

I'd be most interested to hear people's thoughts on this. What's the theory and does anyone have any experience from having such rooms?

Huge thanks :)
Gregwor
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Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2017 6:03 pm
Location: St. Albert, Alberta, Canada

Re: Vaulted ceilings/restricted headroom in a studio... Bad?

Post by Gregwor »

Vaulted ceilings will offer more cubic feet in your room, so that's great. It does, however, make it nearly impossible to calculate the response of the room. This isn't a big deal though. More space is more important. Regarding your bass trap concerns, don't worry. You're entire rear wall will probably be deep trapping anyway.
Just make sure that you don't orient your room such that the ceiling is angling down towards the back of your room.

PS. Keep all of your posts on your design/build in one thread so that it is easy for you and everyone else to keep track of the details. Maybe even re-name this thread and work from here.

Greg
It appears that you've made the mistake most people do. You started building without consulting this forum.
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