For 41 years, I lived in a 2000 sq ft loft in lower Manhattan. The 1200 square ft open area was the listening space, it had an irregular shape with tin ceilings, 60% of the eastern wall covered with huge windows, a brick wall behind the system, and hardwood for the floors. It was a lively listening room.
Three years ago I moved to a townhouse in Newburgh NY that we gutted and restored. My 500 sq ft office in the attic doubles as a listening area. Dormers on one side, a gable on the other. After 15” of rock wool insulation was put in the ceiling, and 6” in the walls, I covered it up with burlap instead of sheetrock.
Books and LPs line almost every wall.
The sound in my Newburgh home is dramatically improved from my NYC home. Almost like buying a new stereo. And I got this improvement without hiring professionals (although our architect did have a background in acoustical science), just by using basic common sense with regard to what most of us know about how sound works.
Is it perfect? No. But it’s way more than good enough. I’d rather listen to music than worry and tinker.
Three years ago I moved to a townhouse in Newburgh NY that we gutted and restored. My 500 sq ft office in the attic doubles as a listening area. Dormers on one side, a gable on the other. After 15” of rock wool insulation was put in the ceiling, and 6” in the walls, I covered it up with burlap instead of sheetrock.
Books and LPs line almost every wall.
The sound in my Newburgh home is dramatically improved from my NYC home. Almost like buying a new stereo. And I got this improvement without hiring professionals (although our architect did have a background in acoustical science), just by using basic common sense with regard to what most of us know about how sound works.
Is it perfect? No. But it’s way more than good enough. I’d rather listen to music than worry and tinker.