ArtUSA Noise and
Sound Control for Religious and Worship Facilities
Bringing harmony into worship areas is a balancing act. Making
the spoken word crisp, clear and void of reverb ( or echo) in
the same areas that burst into loud songs in spaces that are
often high volume and filled with hard spaces is no easy feat.
We have a proven track record of providing the right products
for churches and houses of worship noise problems and acoustic
improvement.
In churches, synagogues and worship centers large or
small, words and music can sound incomprehensible to the
congregation if sound is not properly controlled. Poor
sound quality is common in churches because of an
abundance of hard surface materials. Brick, marble,
stone, tile, glass, wood and sheetrock are all
acoustically reflective. Sound waves bounce back and
forth between parallel surfaces, creating a confusion of
noise until they finally decay. Even the most
strategically-placed speakers and microphones will not
compensate for poor acoustics. Every room needs some
absorptive materials and some reflective materials to
get the right acoustic mix for the room’s intended
purpose. The challenge is to find that balance.
Art-Fab and Art-Sorb panels from
ArtUSA Noise Control Products Inc. are designed to
absorb airborne sound energy and reduce a room’s
overall noise, reverberation and standing
waves—creating interiors that reduce the din without
sacrificing the divine. The right balance between
absorption and reflection using strategically placed
acoustic wall panels and baffles, create a more
enjoyable worship and listening experience. ArtUSA
Industries affordable acoustic and sound control
solutions are the proven answers to help the message
and experience Lightweight and easy to install wall
and ceiling treatments reduce reverberation and
absorb sound from all directions. Traditional and or
innovative solutions noise control and sound quality
issues are our mission.
Acoustical
Curtain Enclosures
Acoustical
Foams & Barriers
Wall
& Ceiling Products
RFQ's and sales request
sales@noisecontrolproducts.com
Send Drawings and Photos
engineering@noisecontrolproducts.com
Public meeting
places such as Churches and Places of Worship
can present interesting acoustic challenges.
Creating high quality sound environments that
offer excellent speech clarity throughout
require proper placement of acoustic panels to
control the dissipation of sound energy. There
are several items to consider when evaluating
materials for public speaking and live music
environments. Noise Reduction Coefficient (NRC)
ratings, finished appearance and building code
requirements are key performance features to
consider when choosing acoustic materials for
public meeting places.
ArtUSA
Noise Control Products, Inc. can provide
acoustical analysis
and guidance on the choice of materials
and installation methods for your public
meeting place. We have extensive
experience working with architects,
engineers and acoustical contractors on
projects of all sizes. Contact our
ArtUSA Noise Control Inc. Acoustical Consultants for assistance on
your project. We ship our products
factory direct.
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We manufacture and , package, sell, install -
Sound Enclosures - Equipment Enclosures - Personnel
Enclosure - Barrier Walls -Thermal Enclosures -
Audiometric Testing Rooms - Punch Press Enclosure -
Test Cells - Clean Rooms - Diesel Generator &
Positive Displacement Enclosures - Fiberglass
Enclosure - In-plant Space - Curtain Enclosures -
Acoustical Pipe and Duct Lagging - Sanitary Panels
and Baffles - Portable Screens - Damping Compound -
Industrial Ceiling Baffles - Class 1 Fire Rated
Foams - Polyurethane Foams - Fiber-Free - Adhesive
Backed - Facings and Barriers - SONEX - Sound Seal -
Acoustical Curtains - Acoustical Foam - Rectangular
Silencers - Round Silencers - Elbow Silencers - Dust
Collectors - Fume Oxidizers - Oil Mist Collectors -
Smoke Capture - Work Stations - Isolation Mounts -
Pads - Levelers Architectural Noise Control / Noise
Abatement - Fabric and decorative foam panels -
Baffles - Deflectors - Curtains - Banners Dosimeters
- Calibrators - real Time Analyzers - Software -
Active Noise Canceling Muffs - Noiseless
Metals
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Treating Reverberation or Echo Problems
in Your House of Worship
Sound control
in a house of worship is required for understanding the spoken
word and full enjoyment of the church sound system. Typically,
the large volume and hard surfaces in the newer architectural
designs create excessive reverb, slap and flutter echo problems
for the church sound system. This reverberation problem reduces
the speech the and creates problems for the church sound system.
Acoustical Solutions offers various ways of treating these
problems while maintaining the aesthetic look that a church
desires.
Noise Control in a nutshell (for existing buildings)
Some spaces are not primarily designed with an acoustical
function, but acoustics impedes other functions: these spaces
are just too loud. The acoustical requirement for noisy spaces,
such as cafeterias, work spaces, gymnasiums, and pools is
straightforward: make them less noisy. There are two ways to
accomplish this goal:
1.
isolate the space from noise sources;
2. reduce reverberation.
It
is always better, if possible, to control noise by removing a
noise source. In the case of a cafeteria or gymnasium, however,
the largest source of noise, people in the space, can’t be
removed. However, there may be other sources of noise that can
be removed to make these spaces quieter, such as
air-conditioning units and – very common – drink vending
machines with loud, built-in refrigerators.
Changing room surfaces to reduce reverberation is often the only
practical solution for quieting a noisy space. The basic problem
is to determine how to get in as much sound-absorbing material
as possible at a reasonable cost while preserving aesthetics.
Churches & Synagogues
Churches
offer an extreme example of the multipurpose space. Churches
have several conflicting acoustical requirements during the same
event. The acoustics during the service can’t be altered to meet
the acoustical requirements both for organ and choir on one
hand, and speech intelligibility, on the other. The differences
are huge. Though these differences vary widely in their
acoustical requirements, they share one fundamental acoustical
requirement:
silence, the
elimination of background noise.
Furthermore,
there are severe aesthetic constraints on church design.
Architectural acoustics has to integrate into architecture. For
example, hanging baffles and flying panels are an excellent tool
for reconciling reverberation and clarity, yet church committees
may be reluctant to consider such visible measures. These
baffles and panels serve not only their acoustical function of
providing clarity within a reverberant sanctuary, but also
enhance the visual sense of space in the sanctuary: architecture
plus acoustics equals architectural acoustics.
Some early
traditional church design is well planned. These churches are
modest in size, narrow, quiet, with side balconies. They work
well for both speech and church music. Contemporary church
design would benefit a great deal from careful study of these
paradigms. Most churches require a sound system that is really
integrated into the acoustics of the sanctuary.
Performance Spaces
There are
three basic types of performance spaces:
-
Single purpose rooms
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Multipurpose rooms
-
Rehearsal rooms
Though these
spaces vary widely, they share one fundamental acoustical
requirement: silence, the elimination of background noise.
Single-purpose rooms
The
single-purpose performance space is a delight. Spaces with a
focused acoustical function, such as concert halls, recital
halls, and dedicated lecture rooms, offer a real opportunity for
a client with a limited budget to achieve acoustical excellence.
Limit the size, exclude background noise, focus the design
around acoustical function, and excellent acoustics comes well
within reach.
In real life,
the true single-purpose performance space is rare. Nearly all
performance spaces are multi use in practice, if not by design.
Even dedicated concert halls are used for a variety of purposes.
Multipurpose
rooms
Multipurpose
performance spaces are often built to save the money it would
entail to build several dedicated spaces. A school, for
instance, that might be better served by a music recital hall
and a speech theatre, builds one large, multipurpose auditorium
because of cost. Since they are built for reasons of economy,
multipurpose spaces are often too large, with budgets too small
to provide what is necessary to make them work. The large,
multipurpose performance space is one of the most difficult
acoustical challenges, even under the best of circumstances.
The most common
multipurpose spaces are churches and synagogues.
Rehearsal
rooms
Rehearsal
rooms, unlike most performance spaces, are usually too small.
Sometimes, a music group that is too large or too loud will
simply overwhelm the space. For these rooms, one needs a
combination of sound absorption and sound-diffusing geometry
that makes the room act like a larger room. Sufficient height is
critical. A rehearsal room that has sound-absorbing surfaces,
but lacks sound-diffusing surfaces will sound dead and
unresponsive and will pose difficulties for hearing amongst
members of an ensemble.
Sound Isolation
Rehearsal
rooms are often located near performance spaces or other
rehearsal rooms, and so require good sound isolation from these
other spaces.
Background
noise
Although
background noise may not be as critical in a rehearsal space as
in a performance space, breakthrough from other practice rooms,
choir, gym or mechanical (HVAC) noise can make all the
difference in the acoustics.
Adjustable
acoustics
Relatively
uncommon but very helpful is the use of adjustable acoustics for
a rehearsal room utilized by different types of ensembles. A
small vocal ensemble needs a room with some reverberation in
order to blend its sound. A band, at the other extreme, requires
maximum sound absorption. If both groups must share the same
room, adjustable sound absorption is the means for satisfying
both requirements.
A Primer On Material Used For Acoustical Treatment
by Nick Colleran
CHURCH
PRODUCTION MAGAZINE MAR/APR 2004 Page 82
(www.churchproduction.com)
Recent times have seen dramatic changes in the quality and
quantity of church sound. Much like live Gospel recording, the
sound control of a professional studio is now needed in the
church with a praise band. Scanning the radio dial. and not
listening closely to the words, it is difficult to hear the
difference between Contemporary Christian music and [secular
Pop]. The message may be quite different but the sound and
acoustical requirements are the same.
The sanctuary sounds "heavenly" for choir and pipe organ may be
completely unsuitable for the higher sound levels of a modern
worship service. At low levels, the sound of an acoustic guitar
and voice will fade before it reaches the walls. Drums and
amplified instruments will reach the room boundaries and what
comes back from those surfaces can create problems. Such
problems can only be solved with proper acoustical materials and
design.
What are acoustical materials?
In the broadest sense, acoustical materials are anything and
everything that affect sound or noise (unwanted sound) in
quality and intensity. (My definition. These are sweeping
generalizations that will hopefully make the subject easier to
understand.)
Acoustical materials used for sound control generally fall into
a few broad categories: absorbers, barriers, diffusers, and
isolation devices. Not much has changed since sound was
invented, except possibly that a few of us spell diffuser with
"-or" these days.
Absorbers are sometimes called "fuzz" by acousticians since
things that are soft and porous ("fuzzy") tend to muffle or
absorb sound. The more porous pathways there are in a material.
the better the absorption. The sound gets trapped and loses
energy trying to find its way out and bounces back with much
less intensity.
In commercial acoustics, the most prevalent absorbers for public
spaces are compressed fiberglass (glass wool), often incorrectly
called "70}" and rock wool (mineral fiber). Fiberglass is more
prevalent in the United States while rock wool finds wider use
in Europe. Both of these materials meet Class A (or Class 1)
fire safety standards. These are most often found as the core
material (substrate) in fabric covered panels.
For lighter absorption there are wall car- pets made of
synthetic fiber. Floor carpet, although possibly a
good
absorber. does not always meet fire code for wall mounting where
there is increased oxygen flow.
The most "bang for the buck" (or maybe it's reduced "bang" for
less bucks), is poly- urethane acoustical foam. This is easily
formed into wedge shapes by convoluting. The foam blocks are
compressed by mating rollers and sliced by a straight blade. The
resulting pattern is a three-dimensional surface with increased
surface area. Some- one once told me that the surface area of
one square foot of a four-inch anechoic wedge foam has a surface
area of four and one half square feet. It is easy to see why
absorption numbers exceed the 1.00 limit of a square foot of
open window.
Unfortunately, foam has several drawbacks: flame, fume and
fragility. While the acoustical foam used by the established
brands should not be confused with the "foam used for acoustics"
in the recent nightclub fire.
it will not pass code for public spaces, high rise buildings and
most other applications. A foam substitute, cellular Melamine
(white foam) will. This material developed by BASF and sold
under several different trade names, is now being used in
fabric- covered panels that have the added benefit of being able
to be bent to conform to curves It has found wide use in ceiling
tile configurations requiring Class 1 materials. Applied to the
surface of the tile, it provides very high sound absorption and
allows a variety of designs.
The next category, barriers, provides mass to block
sound. The fuzzy stuff (absorbers) will prevent sound bouncing
back to create flutters, echo, and sustained reverberation but
it won't soundproof. It requires something heavy. dense and
massive, with no openings to stop transmission.
In the early days recording studios used double layers of
5/8-inch "green board", a dense gypsum product to block sound.
Lead foil was often included as a layer. When it came time to
"get the lead out", mass loaded vinyl came into use. This is
another product sold under many different trade names from
several sources. Buyers are cautioned to check freight
cost since it is as "heavy as lead". That's why it works.
One-eighth inch of barrier blocks more sound than a two-inch,
solid core oak door. It is popular both for its effectiveness
and the fact that is more forgiving to install than lead foil.
Diffusers (or diffusors)
,
are
sound-scattering devices. They lower the intensity of sound by
spreading it around rather than eliminating it altogether as an
absorber would. I often refer to this as acoustical crowd
control. breaking up or dispersing the sound that is "milling
around" and causing trouble. There are several commercial units
each with a different mathematical basis often determining its
operating range. With properly designed diffusion a room will
feel bigger and more open
and
it will be more difficult to determine where the walls are
located since reflections return to the listener's ear at many
different time intervals rather than one big" slap back", A
church praise band will no longer be forced to play within the
two tempos (one fast. one slow) corresponding to the timing of
the bounce back from the rear wall.
Some more traditional diffusers, polycylindrical barrel shapes,
are actually used more for bass trapping. Bass trapping is a
counter-intuitive term. A bass trap actually prevents the lower
frequencies from reflecting back out-of-phase and canceling.
Bass build-up heard in the corners may actually be a perception
due to absence of bass in the middle of the room. Properly sized
traps can tune a room's response, something that cannot be
accomplished electronically. (A frequency boost with an
equalizer will also boost the out-of-phase cancellation at the
same frequency, unless the room is correct.)
Although there are more variations, the last element we will
discuss is isolation devices. Sound travels through structures.
For this reason. recording studios use a separate foundation
slab for control room and studio, The ability to isolate sound
gets worse as frequencies get lower. In fact. the bass can often
be louder down the hall than near the source.
To avoid this problem, speakers may be hung with isolation
hangers which are basically acoustical shock absorbers. Drywall
may be hung on resilient channel with recently developed
isolation clips (another product sold under several names as a
distributor house brand). Floors may be floated on neoprene or
other resilient pads. Where the floor cannot be floated. heavy
platforms on isolation pads for drums and electric instruments,
will prevent transmission at the source. (The author once built
a sand-filled platform for a drum booth and floated it on nine
truck tires to prevent the bass "kick" drum vibration from
traveling through the floor and exciting the acoustic piano.)
All of these topics require much more space for an in-depth
discussion than this article allows. I could say that a book
could be written on this, but many already have. Hopefully,
there is enough here to encourage your reading.
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Religious Facilities
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Religious Facilities
Across the country,
religious services of all kinds are increasingly
including vocal and instrumental performances.
Whether a church or worship center is large or
small, reverberation is often a problem in these
spaces because there are so many hard surfaces
for sound to bounce off of. Good acoustical
control is vital to ensuring that sermons and
music are heard and enjoyed by everyone.
pinta offers a variety of products to solve the
acoustical problems of religious facilities. All
of our products are made from Class 1 fire-rated
willtec® foam and are available in an array of
colors, textures, and styles to fit any interior
setting.
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Entertainment and Sport
Facilities
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Entertainment and
Sport Facilities
Because they are often
very large and include several hard surfaces,
entertainment facilities and sports complexes
often suffer from acoustical issues like
reverberation and echo. Noise problems like
these interfere with communication, make it
impossible to understand a voice on a loud
speaker, and make even the most pleasingly
designed space an uncomfortable place to be.
ArtUSA offers a variety
of wall panels and ceiling tiles to absorb echo
and reduce reverberation. All of our products
are made from Class 1 fire-rated willtec® foam
and are available in an array of colors,
textures, and styles, making them a stylish
choice for any interior setting.
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