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I'll draw a mallet hitting my frontal lobes (complete with "KABLAMM!") and I'll tackle other projects in the interim.
@ ecleinNo permit is needed. As said there is no structural change, indeed there is not a single nail placed into a wall of the apartment. Imagine a large piece of furniture: this piece covers an entire room, but occupies it in exactly the same fashion...it just sits there. There will be no damage to the apartment. I speak from experience. I once rented an apartment converted from an old factory. It had 22' ceilings, but no closets. I built what I called a "treehouse" smack in the center of the unit. It was 22' high, 20' long and 12' wide. It was two levels. The bottom level was an enclosed bedroom and separate office. The top level was a walk-in closet. Along the walls of this apartment I also built a shelving unit for my book collection (now destroyed by Hurricane Ike). This unit ran the full length of the open-space apartment (35' long) and was 12' high. No damage was done to the apartment. No permit was needed. The landlord was impressed but didn't care. Who would? At the end of the day it was just a large sculpture hurting nothing and no-one. I never had a guest (and I through many parties) including those of the female persuasion, that was ever anything but admiring of what I wrought right smack in the center of that apartment (wish I had pictures!). Now that apartment was void of dividing walls, personal spaces, storage spaces. So I built them. This apartment (and every one I've ever lived in but one) has terrible soundproofing. I can't afford a house, but I can afford this project, which as describes, considered seriously, is not expensive for the personal return-on-investment*, is not difficult to build (the treehouse was much more involved--here I'm just building a big, boring box), is not unsafe (as I've laboriously investigated to be firmly certain on this mark), is...simply a solution to a problem where I took the blinders off. I'd urge you to do the same. *There have been two, powerful suggestions against this project. The first I named: codes and possible conflicting. I've looked into many aspects of this, and it looks to be in the hands of the inspector and their personal judgement. Technically, it does not seem to break and of the rules the way that I have conceived it. The second I expected, and feedback on this issue is amongst the primary reasons for my posting: will the room even sound good? This I am still looking into...
- extremely satisfying results can be had with either nearfield or headphone systems. A limited-bass nearfield system may well be within the bounds of what your apartment can support. If not, $5k will get you an absolutely stellar headphone system - Stax and tubes are within reach at that price point.
Question for homeowners: DOES owning a home truly solve your acoustic privacy problems? Have you had problems with OTHER homeowners?
My neighbors are 100+feet from my house, but I wondered how loud it sounded outside. So I blasted some dance music to the loudest realistic level on my Legacy Focus 2020 speakers and headed outside to find that 10 feet away from the house it was nothing but a gentle thump, everything else had dissipated or blended into ambient noise.