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Outland Studios, Ireland

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Old 2nd March 2011   #121
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congrats...great project...

wrong sub-forum though IMO (photo diaries!?)
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Old 2nd March 2011   #122
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MidasHatesGold View Post
congrats...great project...

wrong sub-forum though IMO (photo diaries!?)
A few days ago I emailed Jules the moderator of this forum and asked it to be moved to Photo Diaries.

The reason it is here, is because the thread evolved from one where I was asking for help on how to go about correctly building a studio, to a photo diary of work in progress. Sorry about that!
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Old 19th March 2011   #123
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I like ur studio design ... Great job !
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Old 19th March 2011   #124
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Jesus man, that's the biggest laugh I've had in ages on here... In a good way that is....

He needs to be made of very strong stuff to pull this off....

I reckon he's looking at what? £2M ......

Go for it buddy


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Originally Posted by therealbigd View Post
honest opinion? for the kitchen, get a sink, a kettle, a fridge / freezer and a microwave. Anything more, and a drunk bunch of idiots known as a band will likely burn the place down.



You really need to make a double door. (not double doors like you get on big buildings. Like, one leading to another). A single door will have little effect, unless it's a GBFO studio door that looks like it came off a nuclear bunker. And will eat your £3k budget by itself. If the wall size means you can only fit one door onto, you may wish to think about building a second wall over the top of it (probably in live room side). You can do this by building a wooden frame and filling the cavity with dense rock wool (will add to isolation properties). What you put over the top is basically dependent on what you want the room in question to sound like. If it's in the live room side, and you want a lively sound, you might want to consider plasterboard or laminate wood. If you want a dead sound, you might want to consider a fabric cover, to allow the rockwool to absorb sound rather than reflecting it.



Your ceiling height is mostly set by a) the sound you're looking for, and b) what you've got to work with. I like big rock n roll drums, so I like live rooms with higher ceilings and the rafters out and everything covered in wood. The guy who does my mixing likes tight, over-processed pop drums and likes low ceilings and dead rooms to reduce the character the room provides. Again, it's up to you to choose what you want, there is no 'set standard'.



It can be very expensive but it can be very cheap. It really helps to do as much of the work yourself as possible as this reduces the cost of paying tradesmen. A lot of the stuff you'd think you need to get done for you is actually quite simple to DIY. Ive seen a big shed converted into a very nice sounding drum room with Pro Tools LE for under a grand, and I've seen 10s of thousands spent on rooms that still sound awful! Key is - if you know what you want, and you know how to do it - or have the patience to find out and the nerve to try it, you can achieve a lot for a very little.


£3000 is do-able, although I'd say it equates to $3000 USD, as most material costs are cheaper there! But still, you should be able to get some good stuff together, especially if you do the great studio-owners thing and get all your friends / relatives to chip in and help you build it. I come from an area in England where everyone does trade jobs, so any work we've done on the studio has always been done at the best going price by one or other of my mates - who'll do it free for 2 days in the studio with their band!



Do it, it's the way forward! Learn to use Sketchup, it's a really great tool for 3D stuff. It took me about 15 minutes to do a full 3D model of my room, including measurements, which is posted on this forum.

By the way, I see you're in Ireland. Is that NI (based on your price being in pounds?)?? It's not a difficult journey for me to get over there, I'd happily fly over for a few days if you want a hand or just take a look at the place and come up with some ideas? Just drop me a PM.

D
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