C
conan
New member
Hi guys, I've been away for a while during my move to sunny Taiwan. Miss me? *shakes fists* MISS ME??
Anyhow, you might remember that with the help of you guys I put this together a couple of months back.
I would now like to do something similar.. in a high-rise office block. Yes, bear with me. I happened on a great bargain office in a great area on the 5th floor of a pretty modern commercial high-rise. It seems well built and there is very little noise coming from the concrete outer walls and no traffic noise whatsoever. The office is partitioned into two rooms with a material that seems only slightly more effective at sound isolation than rice paper, but I can deal with this.
Now, get your thinking caps on and help me figure out a way of isolating the smaller partition (about 3 ping / 10 sqm - not a huge job here) with the following caveats:
1) no damage can be done to the existing structure (easy - the whole thing will be floating)
2) minimal traffic through the building's common areas (the disturbance created by 150 8' 2x4s and a few hundredweight of plasterboards in the last project was something else)
3) wood framed structure is a last resort.. technically not allowed, but building regulations mean squat here
So.. any ideas for a way of achieving reasonable isolation other than building a wood frame or pouring in concrete? Some way perhaps of using a lightweight frame then adding mass with the plasterboard? Defining 'reasonable', I was more than happy with the results of floating wood frame construction, single layer plywood floor, 2 layers plasterboard, 100mm fibreglass insulation in a terraced house. Perhaps some thoughts on making prefab panels in an outside workshop then putting the whole thing together in the office?
Cheers guys
Anyhow, you might remember that with the help of you guys I put this together a couple of months back.
I would now like to do something similar.. in a high-rise office block. Yes, bear with me. I happened on a great bargain office in a great area on the 5th floor of a pretty modern commercial high-rise. It seems well built and there is very little noise coming from the concrete outer walls and no traffic noise whatsoever. The office is partitioned into two rooms with a material that seems only slightly more effective at sound isolation than rice paper, but I can deal with this.
Now, get your thinking caps on and help me figure out a way of isolating the smaller partition (about 3 ping / 10 sqm - not a huge job here) with the following caveats:
1) no damage can be done to the existing structure (easy - the whole thing will be floating)
2) minimal traffic through the building's common areas (the disturbance created by 150 8' 2x4s and a few hundredweight of plasterboards in the last project was something else)
3) wood framed structure is a last resort.. technically not allowed, but building regulations mean squat here
So.. any ideas for a way of achieving reasonable isolation other than building a wood frame or pouring in concrete? Some way perhaps of using a lightweight frame then adding mass with the plasterboard? Defining 'reasonable', I was more than happy with the results of floating wood frame construction, single layer plywood floor, 2 layers plasterboard, 100mm fibreglass insulation in a terraced house. Perhaps some thoughts on making prefab panels in an outside workshop then putting the whole thing together in the office?
Cheers guys
