Acoustically Treating a Bomb Shelter


Seriously.  My house came with a 1960s era bomb shelter.  It's a total of 2,200 square feet of Cold War Era awesomeness, basically divided into two 51X21 long rectangular rooms.

It's under a pool and pool house, easily 15 feet down. Hard concrete walls. Huge metal out swing doors that could keep out Bob Dylan looking for a string bean. 

We turned one big room into a giant pantry, wine cellar, and storage room.

The other I softened with hardwood floors, sheet rock (with foam insulation) on walls and ceiling, in that it could make an excellent apartment, being 1000 sf by itself, not counting the kitchen and bath.  And has two entrances, one at each end.  Very airy with good ventilation (and expensive filters).

It's this (now) 50 X 20 room iswhere my listening area is.  Ceilings are 14 foot sloping down (the short way on the rectangle) to 12 feet.

I've divided it into three areas of roughly equal area.  One end has a power rack and tons of free weights and whatnot.  On top of the hardwood is a protective layer, hardwood, and then rubber horse stall mats.  Kitchen and bath beyond that.

The other end is an emergency bedroom, with flip down Murphy beds, etc.  Area rug where the wife does yoga.  At its end are double metal doors, then stairs, then another metal door.

The middle third is my listening area.  Speakers and subs on the higher-ceiling side, although I could flip it.  Set up in the classic 60 degree triangle with a leather couch facing the speakers.  Chairs to the side, and a table I use as a desk behind the couch.  Area rug.  Decor: think Andy Warhol meets Austin Powers.

My thought is I don't get a lot of reflection from either the right or left side, due to the width of the room, and the stuff in each room.  I suspect I mainly get reverb off the back wall.  And perhaps the ceiling, although it is sloped up to the speakers.

I'm thinking all I need is some absorption on the back wall, immediately behind the couch/table (so facing the speakers), as I sit closer to the back wall than the speakers.   Perhaps something on the ceiling about 2/3 of the way across the room.

Thoughts?  I'd like to be informed a tad before I get involved with GIK or one of those groups.

davetheoilguy

It’s the SVS PB16 ultras. It’s a big room and they move a lot of air and just add the required depth to the bottom end.  Very noticeable without overpowering.  Takes some of the burden off the monoblocks.

Set crossover (coming out of the preamp) at 50ish and slope at 24 by ear, which, turns out is exactly what SVS recommends for the 800.

Well, according to the two detectors, no radon!

Re: the poster freaked out about this being a cave.  My wife is, too.

The second owner added a Huvco fibreoptic daylighting system to this, but didn't finish.  He put in the collectors and bought fake windows, but didn't finish the system.  I'm going to run the cables down through the internal wall and stick in the "windows" to decrease the cave effect.

@davetheoilguy 

Thank you for the support and unity.  Fortunately, geographically I live in a very safe part of Israel.  I’m in the North, but as they say here in Caesarea, we are South of the North and North of the South.  Too far from the rockets of both Gaza and Lebanon.  All we hear here are fighter jets overhead all times of the day and night, although it’s been a lot more quiet the last few days.  My phone hasn’t stopped blowing up with rocket alerts and real time updates since the war began.  I have a friend in Ashkelon who I check in with all the time.  She tells me she has 2 sons with her, 2 in the IDF, and plenty of food, water, and weed to get her through.  
 

I’ve posted some pictures on my profile in ‘My Systems’ so you can see what I’m dealing with here on an audio level.  Am Yisroel Chai 🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱 🦾🦾🦾.

Thread title reminded me of a song on Donald Fagen’s album The Nightfly.

If anyone has this album check out the lyrics to the song "New Frontier".

Romance in a fallout shelter plus Spandex jackets for everyone.