Hi Forum, newbie here.
I want to be able to play piano and sing from home, but live in an appartment. The neighbours are a bit fussy. I made a start on building a quiet room and am going to go back to it now that summer is over.
I have quite a bit of space. I have started with a frame built out of fence posts. My next step is to build a sound resistant floor to put the piano on. I'm thinking of using conical metal spikes onto rubber tiles. Then around the frame I would put an inner and outer layer.
The goal isn't to silence the room for recording, but just to allow me to make noise without bothering the neighbours too much. I have an upright piano and would be singing with maybe some backing tracks (drums, bass - but they can play into headphones). I realise total sound capture isn't realistic, but I can't be belting out tunes without getting a knock at the door
I studied some acoustics at uni so have some understanding of the principles involved.
If anyone has advice on building a standalone unit such as this (rather than converting a pre-existing room), I would really welcome advice on materials or theory to do a good job first time. The budget isn't limitless but I don't mind paying a few hundred. It will be about 2x3x3 metres.
Thanks in advance - and photos to follow once it's complete!
Best wishes
James
I want to be able to play piano and sing from home, but live in an appartment. The neighbours are a bit fussy. I made a start on building a quiet room and am going to go back to it now that summer is over.
I have quite a bit of space. I have started with a frame built out of fence posts. My next step is to build a sound resistant floor to put the piano on. I'm thinking of using conical metal spikes onto rubber tiles. Then around the frame I would put an inner and outer layer.
The goal isn't to silence the room for recording, but just to allow me to make noise without bothering the neighbours too much. I have an upright piano and would be singing with maybe some backing tracks (drums, bass - but they can play into headphones). I realise total sound capture isn't realistic, but I can't be belting out tunes without getting a knock at the door

If anyone has advice on building a standalone unit such as this (rather than converting a pre-existing room), I would really welcome advice on materials or theory to do a good job first time. The budget isn't limitless but I don't mind paying a few hundred. It will be about 2x3x3 metres.
Thanks in advance - and photos to follow once it's complete!
Best wishes
James