J
janwesterm
New member
Hi everyone and greetings from Greece!
I want to build a non professional rehearsal space for my band which will also serve as daily practice room for me as a drummer. This concerns mainly sound leaks and not sound treatment (which I will deal with later).
The space I have available for this is a double garage on the ground floor (no basement underneath), with concrete walls and floor. One wall is shared with a neighboring house. The ceiling is very tall, at almost 5 meters, above that there is an apartment, and the front, facing to the street is generally a bit leaky, as it is aluminum framed glass. (Typical garage/store in Greece). The other 2 walls are not an issue.
I want to achieve maximum isolation for the one wall with the neighboring house and the glass front as well as the apartment above. Low frequencies are expected in form of Bassdrum.
I want to build a free standing room on a floating floor within this existing space but due to the specific circumstances of the tall ceiling and the leaky original structure, I am asking for advice and hope I can get some input from you.
I am attaching a Google Street View Photo of the Garage, which is the one with the "No Parking" sign. You can see the neighboring house and the apartment on top.
My specific questions are:
1. Do you have any advice on how to construct the ceiling for the free standing room to achieve maximum isolation for the apartment above? I obviously will have the ceiling constructed floating on the studs of the new room structure, but would you consider a single leaf ceiling and count the original ceiling as second leaf? The gap between those 2 ceilings would be at almost 2 meters. Does this even count as air cavity that we talk about when discussing soundproofing, as it will be enormous and a lot bigger than the air cavity between the walls?
2. As I mentioned, the existing structure is a bit leaky by itself, especially the front. Can I even consider the existing wall structure as a leaf for creating an air cavity? Is it preferable to seal up the glass front (with a door, there is an alternate entrance in the back which I could use) with plasterboard to be airtight?
Do you have any other advice? Would any pictures help?
Thank you a lot for your help, it is greatly appreciated!
I want to build a non professional rehearsal space for my band which will also serve as daily practice room for me as a drummer. This concerns mainly sound leaks and not sound treatment (which I will deal with later).
The space I have available for this is a double garage on the ground floor (no basement underneath), with concrete walls and floor. One wall is shared with a neighboring house. The ceiling is very tall, at almost 5 meters, above that there is an apartment, and the front, facing to the street is generally a bit leaky, as it is aluminum framed glass. (Typical garage/store in Greece). The other 2 walls are not an issue.
I want to achieve maximum isolation for the one wall with the neighboring house and the glass front as well as the apartment above. Low frequencies are expected in form of Bassdrum.
I want to build a free standing room on a floating floor within this existing space but due to the specific circumstances of the tall ceiling and the leaky original structure, I am asking for advice and hope I can get some input from you.
I am attaching a Google Street View Photo of the Garage, which is the one with the "No Parking" sign. You can see the neighboring house and the apartment on top.
My specific questions are:
1. Do you have any advice on how to construct the ceiling for the free standing room to achieve maximum isolation for the apartment above? I obviously will have the ceiling constructed floating on the studs of the new room structure, but would you consider a single leaf ceiling and count the original ceiling as second leaf? The gap between those 2 ceilings would be at almost 2 meters. Does this even count as air cavity that we talk about when discussing soundproofing, as it will be enormous and a lot bigger than the air cavity between the walls?
2. As I mentioned, the existing structure is a bit leaky by itself, especially the front. Can I even consider the existing wall structure as a leaf for creating an air cavity? Is it preferable to seal up the glass front (with a door, there is an alternate entrance in the back which I could use) with plasterboard to be airtight?
Do you have any other advice? Would any pictures help?
Thank you a lot for your help, it is greatly appreciated!