The costs to build a studio....

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Recon101

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Im startin to get more serious with music in general instead of just messing with my Hip Hop/Rap genre and now am seriously thinking on takin a jab at producing, mixing and mastering for other people work of all genres. I know this is an investment and what not, and was wondering what you all spent in total with equipment included, construction and set up and all that, how much in total was spent. And if there are any links or anything else that would provide more information on building a studio.

Thanks

~Recon
 
I guess my genre is more so the Underground Conscious Rap, but I have a lot of boys that do the West Coast Gangsta rap which I get down in from time to time. But for the most part the music I make I keep an old school feel to, and have a lot on my mind. But like I said Conscious and Gansta Rap with some horror rap in it.
 
You can easily drop 100k on a home studio. Much, much more if you are creating a facility with multiple isolated rooms.

You'll need to be much more specific about your needs and your budget.
 
Yeah, the question usually goes like: I want to record XXX and YYY and maybe ZZZ, and I have X bugdet. What is the best setup I can get?
 
you could do it for maybe $500 if you already have an ok computer and an old mattress, and a closet you dont use...

or you could do it a lot better for $5,000

or you could do a fairly professional job for $50,000....
 
many project studios cost $20K-$30K for a few rooms with reasonable isolation and good acoustics. a pro recording studio in your home is likely to be $75K-$100K before you even start buying equipment. a serious pro (but small) studio of say 2500sqft is likely to be $500K-$1M in building.
 
Well first off thank you for those with there input now I know what I am looking to spend now, but in accordance to Vagodeoz reply, its basically like this I am looking to do Vocals for both rap and R&B and have a live room to record bands in, so most music genres with a mixing room, and the budget I am currently lookin out soon is about 50k. What would be the beginning steps to take in that direction?

Thanks again

~Recon
 
Own property or start negotiating a lease. If you already own, consult with a contractor and start having plans made to submit to the city for a permit.
 
Ahh thanks I figured thats was where in essense it would start, so what about after like as far as the material needed to start buidling it, such as padding, tile, carpet, dry wall, plexi glass, insolation that is needed for it, and the wires needed to help make the studio. Tearing it all down is the easy part its the building up to it that I get lost in.
 
i would take a jump over to this forum and submit plans for the room(s) you're planning to convert, and your intended goal...

in terms of gear, major factors include how many simultaneous channels of i/o you want, whether you'll be mostly mixing ITB or with outboard...

in terms of studio construction i think the big factor determining how much you'll end up spending is how much isolation you require. taming acoustics is fairly easy and cheap to achieve, but isolation is the big bastard IMHO.
 
Own property or start negotiating a lease. If you already own, consult with a contractor and start having plans made to submit to the city for a permit.

I would recommend against this approach - contractors are NOT the people you want designing your studios.

Check out some of the studio specialty design professionals and decide who you would like to work with - and then get some quotes from them for their services.

Once you have plans - that would be the time to bring a contractor on the scene (assuming you don't want to DIY) and get a quote on what they will provide (in accordance with the plans and specifications).

But everything begins with a realistic budget and a design to work with that fits within that same budget.

Rod

Rod
 
I would recommend against this approach - contractors are NOT the people you want designing your studios.

Check out some of the studio specialty design professionals and decide who you would like to work with - and then get some quotes from them for their services.

Once you have plans - that would be the time to bring a contractor on the scene (assuming you don't want to DIY) and get a quote on what they will provide (in accordance with the plans and specifications).

But everything begins with a realistic budget and a design to work with that fits within that same budget.


Rod

/nods enthusiastically/
 
i would take a jump over to this forum and submit plans for the room(s) you're planning to convert, and your intended goal...

in terms of gear, major factors include how many simultaneous channels of i/o you want, whether you'll be mostly mixing ITB or with outboard...

in terms of studio construction i think the big factor determining how much you'll end up spending is how much isolation you require. taming acoustics is fairly easy and cheap to achieve, but isolation is the big bastard IMHO.

Thank your for the advice, but I think at this point I would be using a little more ITB than analog/outboard methods at the moment, but would hope to convert when the money decides to come that way lol.

And Rod Gervais would using DYI would be more effective cost wise as well as efficient, as stated I have about $50k devoted to the construction of this project, so I would like to get as much bang for the buck as possible make everything as efficient as possible. And as for the ISO room I would like it as isolated as possible, being rap oriented I want to try to make sure the voice is captured as clear as I can possibly catch will little to no outside inteference. What would be some steps to adjust for this? Sorry if I am bugging, really trying to splurge and absorb as much information and knowledge as possible at this moment :D

Thanks again MessianicDreams for the link I will surely post as much info there as possible as the information comes. That site is real helpful.
 
Well, I have a pretty badass home studio. On par with a pro studio gearwise, just not as much gear. SInce it's in my home, I don't count the cost of the building, or the mortgage. Excluding that, I am in a bit over $100k, but I did the construction myself (not very much), and bought 90% of my stuff used. Then, factor in the fact that GC has everyone convinced they can make a hit record with an Mbox, "ProTools", and a couple mics, and you are looking at a near impossibility that you'll ever see a return on your investment, let alone make a living at it.
 
Then, factor in the fact that GC has everyone convinced they can make a hit record with an Mbox, "ProTools", and a couple mics, and you are looking at a near impossibility that you'll ever see a return on your investment, let alone make a living at it.

Agreed not sure what GC means lol but agreed. But I do have a decent amount of knowledge in mixing and recording, maybe not as much as most the people on here :p But that M audio set surely wont be it. I currently still go to a studio for my own recording purposes and been learning first hand how everything is done from my producer whos been teaching me for some time now. So I am confident in what I am able to do at the skill level currently handed to me and being a person currently going to school for it :cool: But I do take my financial steps carefully and do intense research along the way, thats why I turn to the people who are far more knowledgable and are in the position I hope to one day be in :)
 
Agreed not sure what GC means lol but agreed. But I do have a decent amount of knowledge in mixing and recording, maybe not as much as most the people on here :p But that M audio set surely wont be it. I currently still go to a studio for my own recording purposes and been learning first hand how everything is done from my producer whos been teaching me for some time now. So I am confident in what I am able to do at the skill level currently handed to me and being a person currently going to school for it :cool: But I do take my financial steps carefully and do intense research along the way, thats why I turn to the people who are far more knowledgable and are in the position I hope to one day be in :)

GC = Guitar Center

Big Studios are closing every day. The business is getting tougher and tougher. I'd freelance at a few high-end studios, get a couple hits under your belt, and then think about building a studio. Studio owners are in a world of hurt right now. Go over to GS and see Michael Wagners thread about building his studio. Dude has a ton of platinum records to his credit, and he can't justify building a studio anymore.........
 
Oh, and 50k wouldn't make the down payment on a "real" studio. We have a studio here in town that was designed by Russ Berger. 5 million just for the building......just to give you an idea. The guy running it now, leases it for almost nothing, and he is still struggling.......
 
Well like all business's its suppose to be tough, and ya need that ambition for it of course. And aint sure what GS is, Im pretty horrible with abbreviations. But I wouldn't mind looking at that thread and reading it thats for sure. But I live in a pretty large community her in california with little studios under its belt for it being a well populated area, and I know a few artists who'd like to leave their home recording center to record professionally but aint got the knowledge or connections to accomplish this. But with a lot of thinking you are right about that it would prolly be wiser to build it in my home in my garage than paying for another location thats for sure. I would at least have the studio and only worry about mortgage instead of a mortgage and rent lol.
 
Well like all business's its suppose to be tough, and ya need that ambition for it of course. And aint sure what GS is, Im pretty horrible with abbreviations. But I wouldn't mind looking at that thread and reading it thats for sure. But I live in a pretty large community her in california with little studios under its belt for it being a well populated area, and I know a few artists who'd like to leave their home recording center to record professionally but aint got the knowledge or connections to accomplish this. But with a lot of thinking you are right about that it would prolly be wiser to build it in my home in my garage than paying for another location thats for sure. I would at least have the studio and only worry about mortgage instead of a mortgage and rent lol.

GS - Gearslutz

Why not Freelance? Seems the obvious choice to me. No risk on your part, but all the same reward.........Just a thought. You'd get way better results, and you can keep $50k in your bank account.


Best of luck to you. :)
 
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