How much would it cost to soundproof a 10 by 15 foot room?

  • Thread starter Thread starter RockNSoul
  • Start date Start date
R

RockNSoul

New member

Cost to Soundproof a 10x15 Foot Room?​

Hey just wondering a rough estimate to soundproofing a 10 by 15 ft room with 9ft ceilings. Also is it possible to make it completely soundproof? I know a lot about construction so assuming I do all the work......anyone got any numbers? I'd like to be able to record the basics in there if needed....Drums, Guitars, Keys, Vocals......I'm not looking to make a studio where I record others or even has the best recording "sound".....just something that lets me crank it without disturbing my girl and neighbors.

Thanks for your help!
-Chase

Also if anyone has any tips on doing this cheap but effective please let me know your ideas.
 
depending on existing construction, neighbors, legal situation, existing noise levels, etc its hard to say but good isolation (no such thing as sound proof) can be costly. some folks have managed to get high isolation and good acoustics in their small garage for around $25-$35K but every case is different.
 
Agreed. Unfortunately, cheap and sound control don't really go together. In a pre-existing space, you've already got 1/2 of the problems that you can't deal with - isolation of the structure.

You can do some things to help like adding a layer of drywall with Green Glue between, rerouting HVAC in an isolated fashion, floating a floor, etc. But, it's never going to be soundproof.

If you want to go a bit farther, you can build a room in a room and that will perform better. Just be realistic.

Bryan
 
Well maybe I'd be better off moving and getting some land....hahaha distance may be the cheapest thing.....thanks for your replys!

-Chase
 
If you build a room in a room, decouple the walls, and build a new ceiling, I don't see why it has to cost more than 4-5K. That's including 5/8 sheet rock, lumber, insulation, paint, doors, everything. I just did that, but I only built single studded walls, not a double wall. I was on a budget and was able to achieve an enormous amount of sound control compared with "doing nothing" for $2000. Plus I built an 11X11 office, I installed lighting, tripled the electrical outlets, and used solid core doors. All for about $1800.
 
It sounds like he just wants to work with a space that already exists. You are building a structure in your backyard. Big difference. 2X4's are under $2.50 right now, 5/8th sheet rock is under $7.50. Materials are cheap right now. He won't need a foundation, siding, shingles, plywood, or anything else very costly like you need.

I just put my doors up last night. I didn't seal them and trim them yet, but the difference in sound is amazing even with those open spaces. I won't really know how much sound I contained until I build a plug to fit in the basement window area.
 
interesting... here's some costs for recent clients:

high isolation (~50db) - 600sqft, 3 rooms - $40K in materials (double wall, existing home structure), <$10K labor + DIY

very high isolation (~60db) - 420sqft, 2 room - $30K in materials (double wall, existing home structure) + <$30K labor

medium isolation (~40db) - 850sqft, 5 rooms - $30K materials (single wall, warehouse), <$10K labor + DIY

expect decent isolation to be $30/sqft and high isolation to be $100/sqft for regular construction w/o floating floors etc which would be even more money. so for 150sqft (10x15) expect it to cost you $25K-$30K.
 
interesting... here's some costs for recent clients:

high isolation (~50db) - 600sqft, 3 rooms - $40K in materials (double wall, existing home structure), <$10K labor + DIY

very high isolation (~60db) - 420sqft, 2 room - $30K in materials (double wall, existing home structure) + <$30K labor

medium isolation (~40db) - 850sqft, 5 rooms - $30K materials (single wall, warehouse), <$10K labor + DIY

expect decent isolation to be $30/sqft and high isolation to be $100/sqft for regular construction w/o floating floors etc which would be even more money. so for 150sqft (10x15) expect it to cost you $25K-$30K.

Do you honestly think some guy recording his buddies is going to spend 25-30K on sound isolation? OR that this person would NEED that level of isolation? I think for the most part people on here want as much isolation as possible that can be built on their own, for as little money as possible.

That means forget about labor costs, and forget about high end acoustics engineering materials. I think the real question here is, how much can I do myself on a small budget and what can I expect from it. If this person really had 30K to spend on 150 square feet he would call an architect.
 
interesting... here's some costs for recent clients:

high isolation (~50db) - 600sqft, 3 rooms - $40K in materials (double wall, existing home structure), <$10K labor + DIY

very high isolation (~60db) - 420sqft, 2 room - $30K in materials (double wall, existing home structure) + <$30K labor

medium isolation (~40db) - 850sqft, 5 rooms - $30K materials (single wall, warehouse), <$10K labor + DIY

expect decent isolation to be $30/sqft and high isolation to be $100/sqft for regular construction w/o floating floors etc which would be even more money. so for 150sqft (10x15) expect it to cost you $25K-$30K.
For decent isolation, at 150sqft, it'd be $4,500, and high'd be $15K by your pricing.

I think a floating room within a room could be done for $2K and acheive a decent amount of isolation (STC of 40-50). But that is without permits etc. But if you want it all done properly, and to a high standard, then at least $10K.
 
Ummm.. Yes?

Maybe you would. I don't know what you do for a living or how much you earn, but my guess is that on average 9 out of 10 people here would not be willing to spend that kind of money on a project like this. As a matter of fact, the median HOUSEHOLD income in the US is 48K. So when taking that into account, a typical poster here would need to spend over 2/3rds of his entire families income on this one project. Does that sound reasonable? No it sounds ridiculous. I guarantee this guy and most others who ask questions like this are not looking for a professional to tell him he needs a 30K budget to be able to jam with his buddies without the cops being called. And to be honest, for a few thousand dollars he could accomplish what he's after if he does all the work himself.

"In 2006, the median annual household income according to the US Census Bureau was determined to be $48,201.00.[3] The median income per household member (including all working and non-working members above the age of 14) in the year 2006 was $26,036"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States
 
For decent isolation, at 150sqft, it'd be $4,500, and high'd be $15K by your pricing.

I think a floating room within a room could be done for $2K and acheive a decent amount of isolation (STC of 40-50). But that is without permits etc. But if you want it all done properly, and to a high standard, then at least $10K.

I concur Dr.
 
except noise violations can be $1000 per incident so yea, you might consider your options regarding noise isolation...

i'm just guessing $25K-30K based on how much it really costs to ultimately build a room which can house a 120db band and sound relatively OK... the materials for such as room will be $11K (I just did a room like this last night - 13x17) and if you do all your own labor, then you could probably do it for 10-12K. my cost as the designer on the project last night was about $3K including all docs needed to go to an architect for sign off and permits.

as far as permits, you could lose you home insurance coverage, your certificate of occupancy, get fined, and built improperly, your life or worse, someone else's life. so depending on what its worth, yea, costs can be high all round.
 
I think Glenn was simply trying to give hard figures based on actual projects and actual isolation levels. I didn't see him say that everyone had to do that. You do what you can and what your budget will allow - just be realistic.

And yes, if you really want good recordings, you need a very well isolated, very low noise floor space.

Bryan
 
I know, I'm just saying the reality is that most folks just want to construct something in their attic, basement, garage, or spare room that will help as much as reasonably possible to reduce sound transmission to their neighbors, or wife.

There isn't much anyone can do on a typical low budget to allow a full rock band to play at midnight without pissing someone off. You may be able to multi-track track at midnight though. I'm sure on a shoestring budget you can get away with playing a single guitar, vocals, and maybe even drums with brushes.

But playing a Pantera tune with full stacks at midnight isn't going to happen.
 
Dont forget about treatment, furniture, lighting, and all the stuff that means the difference between a recording space and a spare room.
 
except noise violations can be $1000 per incident so yea, you might consider your options regarding noise isolation...

i'm just guessing $25K-30K based on how much it really costs to ultimately build a room which can house a 120db band and sound relatively OK... the materials for such as room will be $11K (I just did a room like this last night - 13x17) and if you do all your own labor, then you could probably do it for 10-12K. my cost as the designer on the project last night was about $3K including all docs needed to go to an architect for sign off and permits.

as far as permits, you could lose you home insurance coverage, your certificate of occupancy, get fined, and built improperly, your life or worse, someone else's life. so depending on what its worth, yea, costs can be high all round.
I agree. I was giving my guess at costs doing all the labour yourself, and maybe a guy you know in to help occasionally. But if you want a company in to do it all done properly, then your prices seem pretty decent.
 
Back
Top