Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Does anyone on the forum have any knowledge of this? I want to investigate the possibility of sound proofing and then discuss with our upstairs neighbours.

Through no fault of their own, I expect it's the age of the house what with it being a Victorian terrace, when they walk around, the noise is extremely loud.

It has to be one of the hardest things to discuss with a neighbour, especially as we are very good friends with them, and we've bottled out of it to date!!


Are there any specialists out there? Has anyone used one before?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/7796-sound-proofing-ceilingfloors/
Share on other sites

In my last flat the neighbours downstairs lowered their ceilings and installed soundproofing above the new ceiling to fix the problem, sounds expensive to me but apparently it worked.

The issue sounds the same though, it was a Victorian terrace not designed to be split into flats, we could hear the people above us, and the people below could hears us walk around, despite our best efforts to keep the noise down (we even took our shoes off at the door).

I'd screw down the floorboards, twice, at each point they cross the joists. Use a thick underlay on top (something like Tredaire softwalk). Maybe offer to do the work / pay for it yourself. Based on the room in question being 16 by 12 foot that should all come in (labour and materials) to less than ?100.

Sound travels through air vibration, so you need to make the ceiling voids air tight first. This can be done by ripping down the existing ceiling and battening the joists along their length. You then cut plaster board to fit each space, screw and then mastic the edges & joints twice to make sure its sealed. Then over board the joists with foam backed plaster board and skim with new plaster. (It also ups the fire rating between the flats too.)


I did a top floor flat for a DJ in Notting hill, he had regular late parties after he'd played a club. This really cut the sound down to a minimum.


Costly though.



W**F


Also John Lewis rubber heavy underlay is the best sound proofer from the upstairs floor side, thin plyboard & fix down the floor first , lay the underlay then hard tuck the new carpet edges.

I helped a buddy do this on his first floor flat,

We took up 1 board in five and slid 100mm rockwool between the joists

relaid the boards,

then layed some soft 10 or 12mm fibre board on top

and we placed tongue and groove chip board on top of the fibre board

finally we mitred quadrant to fit all around the edges between the floor and skirting.


So not a 5 minute job then.


Ps The materials were cheap, but it took a few week-ends to complete.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Just for information: I see that the Licensing Sub-committee has the Tesco application as item 1 on their 24 July meeting agenda.  https://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?CId=172&MId=8329. The officer's report to the committtee provides a good succinct summary.  I see, from (original) p.31 of the full public pack, (or more conveniently the supporting documents) that Tesco Legal Dept on 12 June reported that they'd agreed with the police's suggested conditions to be attached to the licence, and the police accordingly withdrew their own representation.  That leaves just one representation, from a member of the public, to be dealt with on the day. I still think it's not necessarily to be presumed that Tesco will definitely be taking over the premises.  I see that Poundland themselves were granted an off-sales licence on 21 Feb 2023, and surrendered it on 3 July 2025.  I'm not sure they actually ever used it themselves.  Did they? https://www.southwark.gov.uk/sites/default/files/2024-09/Statement of Licensing Policy 2021-2026.pdf is a full statement of the policy and its application, for thems as is interested.
    • I'm now just following David Peckham around, posting laughing emojis on all his comments.   
    • Well, quite. Do you know where your lad's going tonight?
    • I'd get rid of duty free shopping.  Nothing to do with tourist tax but something I hate.  All that glitz as you try to get through to Wetherspoons in the departure lounge.  No great savings over on line or even at times supermarkets, and the hypocrisy of selling cheap cancer sticks. Ok back to tourist tax  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...