Separate, Dampen, Seal
Effective sound control uses three levers: decoupling (resilient channel or clips + hat channel), mass (double 5/8″ drywall, optional constrained-layer damping such as CLD compounds), and airtightness (acoustic sealant at perimeters, putty pads on boxes, gasketed doors). Build the ceiling as the primary barrier: isolate framing with clips, add dense insulation (mineral wool), then double-layer drywall with CLD for theater-grade performance.
Walls, Doors, and Ducts
On partition walls, staggered studs or double walls deliver excellent STC with predictable cost. Use solid-core doors with automatic door bottoms and continuous seals. For HVAC, avoid flanking paths: line returns with duct liner, add duct silencers where needed, and use flexible connectors to mechanicals. Don’t forget floor-borne vibration—resilient underlayments beneath tile or LVP reduce footfall noise into adjacent spaces.
Room Tuning vs. Isolation
Isolation stops sound from escaping; acoustical treatment (fabric-wrapped panels, bass traps, diffusion) makes the room sound great. Plan wiring & blocking for panels before drywall to avoid later anchors, and hide absorption behind slatted wood for a premium look.
Get a spec that balances budget with STC/NC targets in our NYC basement remodeling materials and finishes.
