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By all means avoid square, 1:2 ratio dimensions, or worse yet cubic rooms.
A huge factor is any room is provisions for sound isolation. Keeping noise out of the room allows you to listen at lower levels, which in turn keeps less of your sound from leaking into the rest of the house. Isolating framing, use of insulation, and attention to detail are key.
Agreed. A room with a room design is not a bad way to go:http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?vopin&1130221775
I've never seen a basement with 12 foot headroom
Most basements we've seen have those support poles scattered about.Do they in any way impact the sound?Regardless of their location with respects to my gear or listening area interference?
I know, right? But this one is crazy:When I walked downstairs I was like WTF!? So glad that taller is better in this case.Thank you all thus far for the great ideas. Once we settle on a place I'll definitely do research as suggested, and take your suggestions under consideration.You guys rock!
2. Unfinished, cavernous basement (concrete walls and floors, often with funky steel support poles scattered about). I will likely not have a budget to finish nicely, but shold be able to do some work on the flooring and walls, and perhaps ceilings. But nothing fancy, and doubt even very nice like you would expect a finished basement to be. Some of these basements have ceilings 12 feet high. Like I said, cavernous.
I found the ceiling (open joists) beneficial.