Page 1 of 1
Is decoupling nescessary for REHEARSAL rooms?
Posted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 8:00 am
by crowbar0
Hi, i'm considering (planning) starting a rehearsal rooms business, and I'm basically wondering if full studio standard isloation is nescessary, as no recording will be taking place in the rooms.
I was planning on contructing the rooms with the 'room within a room' design, apart from the floor, as floating the floors would be too expensive.
But then I was thinking that I could just beef up any existing rooms, and/or build new rooms that would be in contact with the existing structure.
I would be using timber partitions with double layers of plasterboard, and rockwool etc. But would you think that total isolation is needed or not?
Thanks a million, Barry.
Posted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 9:02 am
by sharward
Back in February 2005, knightfly wrote:. . . one reason for better low frequency isolation . . . is CONFUSION . . . have you ever tried to play in tempo with a group when ANOTHER room had a boom-box or stereo going, and gotten confused when you tried to stay on the beat? This can be a real downer with adjacent practice rooms . . .
(source)
Funny how I was able to quickly locate this particular needle in the haystack of this forum -- I happened to remember the word "confusion" that Steve emphasized in his response, so I just searched for all posts by "knightfly" including the word "confusion."
Anyway, there's your answer: investing in room-to-room isolation is good, even if only for rehearsal purposes.
Posted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 7:20 pm
by knightfly
Thanks Keith, couldna sed it betur meself...

Posted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 8:56 pm
by crowbar0
The rooms themselves would be decoupled from each other, thats a given.
What i'm wondering about is decoupling from the actual shell structure of the building.
i.e. if I build a fully decoupled room (room within a room), would that be hugely more effective than if I used an existing wall or two and then just section it off with framing, insulation and plasterboard?
Posted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 10:49 pm
by crowbar0
I've attached a VERY basic drawing to try and illustrate what I mean! I've never used Smartdraw before!
Which of the two shown would be better, bearing in mind that the second would cost roughly half as much as the first!
Posted: Sat Sep 24, 2005 9:35 am
by knightfly
Barry, this
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=3231
Is there for a good reason; following ALL the
bold points will answer most of your questions... Steve