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Bedroom and Noise
It seems most homes in TV have the master bedroom right off of the living area. We are finding that sound travels through from the living area to the bedroom quite easily. If someone is up early or late it is very hard not to disturb person in other room.
Does anyone else notice this? Anyone found a solution? |
As you get older various things seem to noticed that you may not have noticed when you were younger. If you are Implying that the houses here aren't as insulated as those up north then you are correct as there is no need. Run a fan.
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I have this issue also. One side of our house has a pocket door to close off that wing of bedrooms and this really helps. Not sure if you can add a pocket door after the fact or if this has to be done during initial construction. While I agree that we get more sensitive to noise as we get older I think the open concept of today's houses adds to the noise.
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We have a pocket door at the entrance of the 2 front bedrooms. The problem is the main bedroom opens right into the living room with a double, hollow door.
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Make more noise in the bedroom than what you hear coming from outside the bedroom.
:MOJE_whot: |
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We have a set of headphones that we use if one of us goes to bed early and the other stays up to watch TV. Since there are only two of us that handles our only noise issue.
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Close the door ?
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I have to agree. Less of a problem with the 3 bedrooms on the
other side with the sliding door. My Husband swears he cannot hear the t.v. but I hear it and it bothers me. Luckily he usually goes in before me. And when he goes in the t.v. goes off and I read. |
I use a sound machine and have been using them for 30 years or more. They are sold at JC Penney and only makes one sound, the wind. It is relaxing as well as drowns out all noises except loud bangs and the garbage truck. My kids use them and some of my grandkids use them also. I would not know if we were burglarized while sleeping.
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We have a pocket door at the entrance of the 2 front bedrooms. The problem is the main bedroom opens right into the living room with a double, hollow door.
Same issue with us! Our house in Ohio had the bedroom separated from the living/TV room and thus was quiet! Quote:
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Years ago when we had a house built we knew there would be a problem with noise from the TV/entertainment center, that backed up to our bedroom wall.
We added insulation to that common wall and it worked, however, in TV you won't find any additional kind of noise barrier unless you paid extra for it pre-construction. Even more annoying that that, if you are in a guest bedroom, you can hear the toilet flush from the master bath! Ugh. |
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I often wondered if a floor plan such as a Gardenia, for example, would be best for the various issues that are being discussed here. Guest wing on the opposite side behind pocket door, and master suite somewhat bufffered by the dining room area being situated between the master bedroom and living room. Also the master bedroom has the extra little hallway so it doesn't open up directly into living area.
Anyone have a Gardenia that could verify that? |
I went to an open house for a $1.6 million new house in Pine Hills. The master bedroom windows were within 12 feet of the pool equipment next door, and I could hear the humming noise with the windows closed. Be careful what you buy.
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The peeps across the street have their home on the market. They want a Begonia or Gardenia ~ Don't want a house with the bedroom in front, which they currently have. For the OP, I'd suggest what others have mentioned: replacing the hollow-core door with a solid core door. Adding rugs if possible. Hanging a tapestry or fabric pictures to stop the sound from bouncing around. Soft surfaces to stop the sound from bouncing around. We added pleated shades on our patio doors. Imagine a pleated shade turned sideways, so you draw both sides to the center. It helped a lot. |
The Gardenia is my favorite plan.
It offers perfect privacy for guests or for working in the office/den. The placement of the television, in the living room area, can be on an outside wall, as far from the master bedroom as it can get, with the dining room area in between. When we replaced the carpet in the living area and all bedrooms, we replaced it with carpet — not laminate or wood or tile. As much as I like open concept design and high ceilings, carpeting and upholstered furniture help with the noise level, especially when entertaining a somewhat large group. — (Wine Away can be ordered on Amazon. I have not had to use it yet, but I have heard it works really well. :) ) Carpeting does help some with sound, but a lot of people prefer hard surface flooring in their TV houses. I think there are other easier solutions offered in this thread. I just stopped in when the Gardenia came up. I think the vinyl-sided model is called the Camelia — same floor plan. (Please correct me if I am wrong about that name.) |
How about street noise? Our mbr is pretty close to the road. Has anybody soundproofed for street noise?
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You need to determine the real cause
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Noise, if it can't be stopped can be controlled. There are companies that do this. You can make that bedroom as quiet as a recording studio. It is not cheap. The person reporting that they can't sleep might then say it is too quiet. Exercise during the day can help. Eating earlier can help. Perhaps, there is something bothering the person having trouble sleeping. You mention sound from the living area. The obvious question is what is the sound. Think backwards-when did it start? |
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I would not ever consider this home if I could afford it. The noise in the master bedroom from the pool equipment from the home next door was deafening (with the windows closed). The pool machinery lined nearly the side of the home next door. |
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We have an expanded begonia with the same layout as the gardenia. The master has it's own entry hall and the dining room buffers any noise from the living room. The TV wall is at the opposite end of the home and the master bath is separated and on the other side of the laundry. It is a very well thought out design.
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The Gardenia floor plan feels like 3 separate and distinct living spaces. The Master ensuite, Living-Dining-Eat in kitchen and the Guest suite. It also has a distinct entry foyer/hallway that allows passage through the entire house without having to walk through any rooms.It is more of a square design rather than rectangular and will need a wide lot if a golf cart garage is desired. Best overall design that has remained relativity unchanged for 20 years. It was called the Magnolia in older designs. I’ve been in 3 of these houses from new to 14 to 20 years old. They have refined it along the way and is very much in demand with the golf car garage. It can also accommodate many stretches that will give it the feel of a premiere house without that
price tag. The only negative is the 9’ width lanai which needs at least a 5’ stretch to make it totally functional if you want full seating and/or a full size outdoor dining set. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Another plan similar to the Gardenia/Begonia is the Citrus for those looking for a smaller, less pricey home. It is considered a hybrid - an upscale cottage placed in designer neighborhoods. But if you look at the floor plan, you will see it has some of the same benefits we have been discussing. You can purchase one with a golf cart garage, but even the standard size garage is very spacious. Definitely need an enlarged lanai on this model though as width is only 8 feet. Otherwise, a lot of good features in a small home.
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The Williamsburg model is a totally bumped out Gardenia. Still the 9' lanai though.
Sent from my VS995 using Tapatalk |
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We've never had a noise problem, and there is the added benefit of not being able to see into the bedroom from the living room like you can in the models where the three bedrooms are all on one side. Further, we put the bed on the far, end wall rather than between the two windows on the back wall. There's plenty of room for a king and two night tables, with room for two dressers (or three if you wish) and a chair in the corner. The bed being on the far, end wall puts it even farther away from the living room. |
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