The first step in this process is to understand and identify the "usual suspect" appliances. These tend to be devices that have motors, or control relays. That makes a list of several appliances already and in no particular order are furnaces, washing machines, water softeners, refrigerators, freezers, stoves/ovens, garage door openers and air conditioning units.
Now the home has two 120 volt and 1 neutral lines that comes into the panel box, and there is a ground rod that goes directly from the box to earth ground. Obviously, we can't put all of the potential "noise makers" on just one side of the box. The electricians job is to balance the load. However, there may be some benefit to using the house wiring to try and distance a dedicated audio 120 volt line.
The obvious appliances that will come on at any random time are the refrigerator, freezer, air conditioner and furnace. The furnace is the real enemy. It has a nasty motor (if it's forced air) that will put a spike into the line. I would have the electrician make sure the dedicated outlets are on the other 120 volt leg from the furnace. Now, for the thought that the further down the box you go, the quieter it gets, perhaps is a bit optimistic. One side of the breaker snaps onto the power rail and the other gets connected to the neutral, which is shared by every outlet in the house, regardless of which side of the box they are on.
Some of this noise fear also comes from past bad experiences. However, strides have been made to make modern day appliances more noise free. AVA for example uses toroidal transformers which are a natural noise filter by design. That is the reason many device manufacturers turn to them rather then the old fashioned core and coil transformers of years gone by.
I do have a dedicated service to my main room, but the electrician put it on the same side as the furnace. I never hear the on/off spike from the motor. My studio has 2 dedicated circuits that are on each side of the breaker box. That has all ov the usual noise makers all scattered about too. There are no hints of any noise of any kind. I do have a dedicated "Monster" power box in the main room, but have no filtering in the studio, which is strictly vinyl in near field.
The only suggestions that I can make is (unlike me) keep the circuit for the furnace on the other side of the breaker box. And unless you plan on having 2 or more 550 amps in bi-amp mode, a 15 amp circuit is probably enough. If you want 2, go for it.
Isolated grounding receptacles depend on local codes. Some residential codes require conduit, some are fine with romex. All the isolated ground does is remove the ground strap on the outlet from grounding to a metallic box (as in hospitals) to prevent sparks in rooms that may have oxygen tanks which may cause a fire (burnt up patient, no good).
The better ounce of prevention in my book is to buy/install name brand appliances, make sure all wire to terminal connections are tight and if you are going to have low voltage lighting or dimming, keep those wires at 90 degrees to your dedicated wires to prevent noise.
Good luck to you and congrats on the new house.
Wayner