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Having the speakers in little 'cubbies' like that is going to cause all kinds of problems in the bottom end. At a minimum, you'll want some 4" material covering the side walls, side of the cabinet, wall behind the speakers, and ceiling of the cubby or you'll have more resonances and boom than you know what to do with.If it was me, I'd put the equipment somewhere else, ditch the cabinet, and mount the 40" flat on the wall. Then at least, all you'd likely have to do is kill the corners behind the speakers. You'd also get a MUCH better 2 channel image.Bryan
What are the dimensions of the room? How far is the listening position? What's going on with the rear wall?
Is that really a window on the right wall? What is your plan for dealing with that? Otherwise, your imaging will be seriously problematic.Since the left wall is farther from the listening position than the left wall, would you consider making that one less, rather than more, absorbent? Outside of the nearfield, some degree of acoustic symmetry is typically beneficial with stereo. If that's a window on the right wall, you'd better have a damned good plan.
Are you thinking about diffusion at all, particularly towards the sides of the back of the room? The room looks pretty stark in the rendering.
Any thoughts about the ceiling? Cloud? What's on the floor?
Is the cabinet already built? Could you consider pocket doors, rather than removable ones? On another note, for the main two doors between the speakers, could you consider custom fabric-wrapped acoustic panels with a metal frame so that you could put hinges on one side and the handle of the other? This would reduce the deleterious effects of effectively recessing the speakers. I'm thinking of something like Ethan's new Guilford Minitraps, but you're in the UK. The metal frame would allow for mounting of handles and hinges but keep the "door" panel from warping, the absorption would help prevent the effective flush-mounting that you've got going on, and the airspace inside the cabinet itself would only help with the bass trapping.
I assume this is a two-channel system only. No offense intended, I'm sorry, but I have to seriously question the value of putting what appear to be quite expensive speakers (They look kind of like Dynaudio Temptation or Rockport Hyperion, although I know they're not) into such a seemingly small room. Wouldn't it be worth considering high-end in-wall speakers or others like the AudioNote series designed for usage very close to walls and corners?