Sam here, I was a long time member of the John Sayers (RIP) forum. I received a ton of great advice and guidance from that wonderful group of people when I built my first studio over a decade ago (especially Stuart) I am hoping to get the same value and amazing advice here!
A little background on my project. I built my first studio in 2006-2008 in the basement of my town house. At the time I was young immature and impatient. My goal was to just get something up and running as quickly as possible because I was in a band and I had bands that wanted to record. Well, impatience doesn't really pay off when designing a functional studio. I was able to achieve a nice level of isolation, never had any complaints of noise from neighbors that were directly attached, so that was a success. However, HVAC was poor and people were really suffering in the very small (square) rooms I had built. The small live room was impossible to tame. I had so much reflection, flutter, and artifacting in my recordings I ended up resampling drums on almost every record I did there. Additionally, I put almost no thought into the control room area which was not treated well, and not symmetrical. All of these things were difficult to deal with, but as life caught up to me and my family started to grow, I abandoned the studio and moved into a larger house. That was 12 years ago.
About 3 years ago I setup a make shift space in the finished basement of my new house, which was ok. I got to set my console back up and get things sort of going for my own personal use but with several kids it was never easy to get clean takes on anything. My wife also didn't want my "biker friends" traipsing in and out of the house so it was a purely personal space. Sadly, last year we had a major storm here in the north east and my basement was flooded. I lost a lot of equipment and the only space I had is now ruined.
After a very honest conversation with my wife we agreed that after 12 years it was time to rebuild my studio. We really want to give the kids a place to explore their creative outlet, and I need a space to continue my passion (and maybe in a few years a nice side gig for me when I retire!). Armed with spousal approval, a healthy budget, clear goals, and patience, I am embarking on my second studio build.
What am I starting with:
Today we are in our forever home on a 1 acre lot in the suburbs. Due to township restrictions and the layout of my property, I can build an additional 500sf structure on my property in a rectangular orientation (roughly 1:2). It needs to sit on a setback line with one corner closest to the house reserved for a bathroom because of the pitch of the property and the requirement for the sewage line drop.
Based on the 500sf limitation and other factors (including spousal approval) it can be roughly 18-20 feet wide and 26-28 feet long. Longer than 28 feet will require me to do some regrading of the property which could get costly. Wider than 20 feet will start to encroach on the minimum distance it needs to be from the house to be considered an accessory structure (which is taxed differently). I think I can do 18-28 in the location and it would be just right at 504sf.
Luckily the roof can be up to 16' high at the peak, so I can reasonably get 12' vaulted ceilings throughout. Which means even rooms that are 11'x 13' could have 1500 cubic feet of space.
Requirements
- - In order to maintain spousal approval, it must have a bathroom. If I intend to ever have clients, friends, etc over to work in the studio they are forbidden from pottying in the house. Especially at night when I have kids sleeping.
- I am about 300 feet from my closest neighbor, close enough that they will hear a full band playing in their bedroom if it doesn't have a reasonable amount of sound isolation. While I don't have exact readings because there is no structure to measure, I imagine stc of 60 is going to be a minimum requirement. I plan to work more at night than any other time and I don't want to upset my neighbors. I also have a neighbor who mow's his lawn 24/7. I work from home and it is impossible for me to work some days with the sound of his mower going all the time.
- Read last requirement, As my family continues to grow I need a space that can double as my home office space with reasonable sound isolation. I am a software engineer and it is very difficult to focus when BRRRRRRVRRRMMM RMRMRMRMRMRMRRM going all day long.
- My last studio suffered from poor design, Id like to prioritize having a control room that translates well and can accomadate both my audio equipment and my regular work setup. I lost my console in the flood, but I am planning to replace it with something similarly sized. (Soundcraft Ghost 24) the custom desk I built is 5' x 7'. I use 2 KRK Rokit 8's for my near field monitors.
- The live room is very important to me, but it is also where I will have to make hard choices. This is where people will be, where we will write music and where my last studio really fell short. It was 10'x10'x7' and it sucked. I want to have a yamaha upright piano, room for a drum kit, and space for a few amps so a band of 3-4 people could reasonably rehearse inside. If forced to pick, I would absolutely prioritize the control room because I need to do my full time job in there and do my passion in there. If I have to sacrifice fitting a live band in the LR and only be able to record things in pieces when I want to isolate stuff, this is a sacrifice I am willing to make. It would be nice to find a balance between the 2 rooms.
- I need some storage. Any small closet to put a few tupperware bins of cables, microphones, computer parts, etc is necessary to fully move my office out of my house.
- If I can squeeze and iso both in my design great, but it is the lowest item on my list. I can uses gobo's and airlock, or even the bathroom for an iso booth in a pinch. (Credit to Glenn on JohnLSayers forum for this idea)
- Light. I desire natural light. I have been working in gloomy basements and corner offices with no windows for the better part of 20 years. I desire light and lots of it. That means windows. I don't care if they open, I just need to see nature and let the sun in.
Other considerations
- - HVAC, I will be using a mitsubishi ducted minisplit system to condition the air throughout the space, paired with an aprilaire 8100 ERV. The combination can achieve 500CFM of air movement. I did some rough math for the space (18x28x12) * 6 air changes per hour / 60 = 600CFM. One of my questions below will actually be about the sizing of this system.
- Again, the bathroom has to be located in the corner of the new structure closest to the house to account for pitch of the sewageline and the grade of my property.
- I will be doing most of the work myself with friends who are professional plumbers and electricians.
- I have a health build budget, I think, of $50-75k USD.
Based on all of the above, I have come up with a few floor plans I like. Some prioritize the live room, some prioritize the mixing room, and one that balances both. Id like some general feedback on how I have approached this based on the one that is currently the most attractive to me. So here is the list of questions I would ask:
- 1. Control room
a. I want a RFZ design in the control room and as close to a good ratio as I can get (i guess). If I have to heavily treat the room anyway because of its size does one of these things matter more than the other?
b. The room design I like is 16'x13'x9. This gets me into the 1:1.4:1.9 best ratio for louden territory. However, Im not really sure after reading several topics and articles how the mode relates to the RFZ design with splaying the walls etc. In my design below, I have the walls at 6 degrees for each side, totaling 12, and my listening position roughly 5 feet from wall. With these angles, do I still need sofits or will cramming the monitors against the wall on my desk be enough? Im not really sure what value sofits provide.
c. Im also not sure how to balance room mode and RFZ design. Am I doing it right? How far do the walls also need to be splayed, I have them a majority of the way back, but if I can make it less of the room I get closer to the good ratio. Which one is more important?
d. the windows at the back of the room, will they be problematic? This is the side the sun sets on, I really want the light to come in, but I also understand this will be my primary area for bass trapping.
e. Entrance, I really only have one reasonable spot to put a door in this design. Same problem as above though, am I handicapping my ability to treat the room?
f. The window to the live room, I plan to make modular diffusers/absorbers that I can strategically hang when mixing, any reason that even if this was a first reflection point I couldnt just cover it up with one of those when I go to mix mode? (I understand I still need to ray trace
g. Ceiling. Should I do a vaulted ceiling and follow the roof, or does it need to be a flat 9' height? More volume is better, but Im not sure if there is something I need to consider when detailing the rise and run of the ceiling.
2. Live room
a. Feels smaller than I'd like, but coming out of 10x10x7, especially now with 12' vaulted ceiling, I am hitting 1500 cubic feet of space and 156sqft of floor space. Is this workable for a live room? Will I hate life in there with a drummer and bass player?
b. do i need to splay the walls here? I know that any angle will help with reflection, but feels like I should prioritize square footage over angles. I want to follow the 6 degree of the control room to maximize that, but do I need to really splay the wall where the closet and bathroom would be?
c. Any other considerations I should think of that Im missing for a good live room?
3. Generally speaking, how serious is the 6 changes per hour for fresh air? I read on the EPA website that .35 changes per hour for a home is what is considered healthy. Ive read several times from various forum members that 6 changes per hour is required, this is a significantly larger system.... Im fine with spending the cash and figuring it out, I want people to breath after all... but if my general occupancy will be less than 5 people at any one time, is that 6 changes per hour still the strong recommendation? And does the ERV need to provided that or the ERV plus the minisplit? Most residential ERV's max out at 150CFM so they cant do this by themselves. Id have to buy a commercial one to even hit 300CFM. Help?
OK, so that is my first post. I hope I provided everything needed to get some meaningful feedback. My post has received little traction on johnlsayers forum, so maybe if I "follow the Stuart" I might get some love here.