My long, one-car garage studio, construction phase
Posted: Tue Dec 28, 2010 10:31 am
Well, I've been pulled away from this project for several months, now (I hate how work and family etc, etc tend to do that). However, I'm getting to the point where I want to start chipping away at the construction of my studio again. If you're curious, here's the thread to my design phase: http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... =1&t=13938
After several iterations, my final design shows up near the end of that thread, but I'm sure I should probably put quotation marks around the word "final." Thanks to some prodding from Lilith_envy, I decided to vault the ceilings, giving me quite a bit more volume in the space. This was done after consulting with a structural engineer and having him draw up plans for converting my roof framing to scissors trusses. While this will affect my room ratio calculations, I've decided I'd rather treat the rooms as necessary, rather than forgo the additional room volume that vaulting the ceiling provides. The space is definitely far less claustrophobic now.
I suppose a quick summary is in order for those of you who don't want to slog through my previous thread:
My name is Mark, I live in Seattle, WA, and I'm wanting to be able to record and play music (3-4 musicians, including myself) with live drums. I'm hoping to attain enough TL to make this possible. If this proves unrealistic, I might have to settle for electronic drums. My nearest neighbors are only about 12' away from this building, so isolation is important. The current shell of the garage is as follows: 2x4 framed walls with scissors trusses. The first layer of the exterior leaf is comprised of a variety of materials (the original building is 100 years old): there are 1x4's, 1x6's, 1x8's, and 1x10's as well as 1/2" CDX on the new addition. Over this layer I added a layer of 5/8" Densglas (that yellow sheathing that's common around here, at least, on commercial buildings), caulking the seams as I went. Then, over this layer, there is siding felt and cedar siding.
The floor in the live room is new concrete with expansion joints all around, a thickenend slab on the perimeter, and sand underneath.
This is probably going to be a slow process, but I decided that since I have some questions that have popped up, I should go ahead and start this build thread and chip away as time (and money) allows. My budget at this point is sort of vague: I hope in the neighborhood of 15K. I will be doing all the work myself. I don't forsee this studio being a source of income for me, so the lower I can keep costs, the better. Having said that, I do want something that I'm happy with.
My question at this point involves a third layer to my outer leaf. As I mentioned above, the 100 year old layer of sheathing is comprised of various widths of 1x material. I decided that I would try to make this part of my mass, so I took the time to fill knotholes with Fix-All and all the joints with acoustic caulk. My hope that treated this way, the old sheathing will add to my mass rather than just leaking sound through its various holes. I now plan to add a layer of drywall between the studs, which will be my third layer of mass to this leaf (outer layer= 5/8" Densglas, middle layer= old 1x sheathing with filled holes and caulked seams, inner layer= 5/8" drywall between studs, with backer rod and acoustic caulk around perimeter).
So here's my question: I've been thinking that I will spring for green glue at some point in this project. My plan was for my inner leaf to be two sheets of 5/8" drywall with GG in between. However, I've been thinking that, with all the irregularities of the 1x material, perhaps it makes sense to use the GG during this "beef-up" stage of construction. My thought is that the GG could help dampen between the irregular siding layer and the "beef-up" drywall layer between the studs. But I don't think I can afford to use GG both during this phase and the inner leaf phase, and I want the most bang for my buck. Do any of you experts out there have an opinion on this?
Thank You!!
Here are some pictures of where I'm at.....
After several iterations, my final design shows up near the end of that thread, but I'm sure I should probably put quotation marks around the word "final." Thanks to some prodding from Lilith_envy, I decided to vault the ceilings, giving me quite a bit more volume in the space. This was done after consulting with a structural engineer and having him draw up plans for converting my roof framing to scissors trusses. While this will affect my room ratio calculations, I've decided I'd rather treat the rooms as necessary, rather than forgo the additional room volume that vaulting the ceiling provides. The space is definitely far less claustrophobic now.
I suppose a quick summary is in order for those of you who don't want to slog through my previous thread:
My name is Mark, I live in Seattle, WA, and I'm wanting to be able to record and play music (3-4 musicians, including myself) with live drums. I'm hoping to attain enough TL to make this possible. If this proves unrealistic, I might have to settle for electronic drums. My nearest neighbors are only about 12' away from this building, so isolation is important. The current shell of the garage is as follows: 2x4 framed walls with scissors trusses. The first layer of the exterior leaf is comprised of a variety of materials (the original building is 100 years old): there are 1x4's, 1x6's, 1x8's, and 1x10's as well as 1/2" CDX on the new addition. Over this layer I added a layer of 5/8" Densglas (that yellow sheathing that's common around here, at least, on commercial buildings), caulking the seams as I went. Then, over this layer, there is siding felt and cedar siding.
The floor in the live room is new concrete with expansion joints all around, a thickenend slab on the perimeter, and sand underneath.
This is probably going to be a slow process, but I decided that since I have some questions that have popped up, I should go ahead and start this build thread and chip away as time (and money) allows. My budget at this point is sort of vague: I hope in the neighborhood of 15K. I will be doing all the work myself. I don't forsee this studio being a source of income for me, so the lower I can keep costs, the better. Having said that, I do want something that I'm happy with.
My question at this point involves a third layer to my outer leaf. As I mentioned above, the 100 year old layer of sheathing is comprised of various widths of 1x material. I decided that I would try to make this part of my mass, so I took the time to fill knotholes with Fix-All and all the joints with acoustic caulk. My hope that treated this way, the old sheathing will add to my mass rather than just leaking sound through its various holes. I now plan to add a layer of drywall between the studs, which will be my third layer of mass to this leaf (outer layer= 5/8" Densglas, middle layer= old 1x sheathing with filled holes and caulked seams, inner layer= 5/8" drywall between studs, with backer rod and acoustic caulk around perimeter).
So here's my question: I've been thinking that I will spring for green glue at some point in this project. My plan was for my inner leaf to be two sheets of 5/8" drywall with GG in between. However, I've been thinking that, with all the irregularities of the 1x material, perhaps it makes sense to use the GG during this "beef-up" stage of construction. My thought is that the GG could help dampen between the irregular siding layer and the "beef-up" drywall layer between the studs. But I don't think I can afford to use GG both during this phase and the inner leaf phase, and I want the most bang for my buck. Do any of you experts out there have an opinion on this?
Thank You!!
Here are some pictures of where I'm at.....