I have finally made some significant progress on my new dedicated home theater, and snapped a few pictures before I finally close up the walls.
This past weekend I finished installing two layers of sound blocking insulation in the ceiling and am ready to start the drywalling. Getting so close now I can taste it.
I have received much help over the last while from various members here, too many to name so in short, thank you all. Couldn't have done it without you.
Just a bit of background on the room... it is roughly 19 x 12 feet with unfortunately low ceilings of about 6'8". The low ceilings are due to a poorly thought out HVAC duct that runs from the front of the house to the back and splits into a "Y" two thirds of the way down the room. I considered boxing it in but in the end I decided it would look like hell and be a nightmare to drywall in, so I framed the ceiling in flat across the entire room.
I effectively created a "room within a room" kind of idea where no perimeter wall contacts any of the foundation and partly due to the ducting overhead I dropped down the ceiling framing so no drywall will be fastened to the floor joists overhead.
The left hand wall and the ceiling will have a double thickness of drywall, because the neighbor attached to the left side of my townhouse hates my face and I wanted to block as much sound transfer as possible. The ceiling will have two layers of drywall as it is in my basement and I wanted to cut down on the rest of the house being disturbed from any movies playing.
I used 2" PVC for wiring conduit throughout the room. All speaker wires, HDMI and sub cables will be ran in wall.
In some pictures you can see some chunks of blocking, the biggest one to anchor my flat panel TV mount to the wall securely. I'm not taking any chances LOL.
Any comments, suggestions or criticisms are welcome. Let's get on to the pics!!
To start, here we have a picture of the basement just after I bought the house and before I started tearing all the old framing and insulation out... the original builders did a piss poor job on the framing and insulating, I had no choice but to tear it all out. Note the duct work I mentioned above with the split in it.
Here is a picture of the same far wall you saw in the first picture, but after I reworked it. It is the wall where the TV will be. You can see the section of blocking I mentioned above, with a conduit into the middle of it for the HDMI cable.
This is the left half of the right hand 19' wall. At the very top of the picture you can see the HVAC vent I plumbed in. Works well, keeps my room nice and cool, almost too cold some days!
This is right half of the right hand 19' wall. On the very end is the basement's only cold air return back to the furnace that I installed. I hope the 2" conduit doesn't restrict the return flow too much!
Here is the wall that has the entrance to the room. You can see through the door, that is the set of stairs that comes down into my basement. One mistake that I made here is that I planned for a 36" wide door, and framed in a 12" section of wall on the right side of the door. That whole wall is only about 11' 8" so it seriously impacted the placement of my two rear centers for my 7.2 setup... you guys said it won't be a huge deal. I hope not. You can see the conduit lead to two wiring boxes for the two rear centers. Not very much room to play with! The section of conduit heading straight down is for the rear sub.
Here is the left side of the left hand 19' wall (this is the wall that is a shared foundation wall with my neighbor.) The entry door frame is slightly visible on the left edge of this picture. In the middle under the blocking is the conduit and wiring box for the left surround.
Here is the right half of the left hand 19' wall (the shared foundation wall.) Nothing too fancy to see here, but throughout the series of pictures you will see 6 octagonal wiring boxes, each of those are wired for a wall sconce... 3 sconces per each side wall. The double box to the right of the door frame in a previous picture will house 2 independent dimmer switches... dimmer 1 will control sconce 1 and 2 and 5 and 6. Dimmer 2 will control the two sconces (3 and 4) in the middle of each side wall.
This is a close up picture of the input / output wiring boxes that feed the rest of the room and you can also see the zone 2 speaker wires I have already fished in to put music throughout the house. You can also see an unterminated drop of RG6 coax for the digital cable. The blocking you see is for a large power bar / surge protection unit. Below it is the 14/2 dedicated circuit to power the HT. My audio rack will sit directly in front of this and all the wires out of the back of the receiver will go straight into the wall behind it.
This is a closeup of the TV wall mount blocking and the in wall HDMI cable drop. Below it you can see the wiring box for the center channel.
Shot from the doorway looking in...
Things I wish I would have done and will do differently in my next house:
- Full height ceiling. I have the feeling I will feel like I am in a cave after I am done. I really, really wish the previous owner of this house sprung for the bigger foundation.
- The next house I will buy will have a wider and bigger basement. Granted this is only one wing of my current basement and it was the only logical place to build the room, I'd like a longer room so I can build a false wall at the far end which will serve as a climate controlled closet for all my amps / receiver / players etc. This current room is also going to be a tight squeeze to get around my 4 seater reclining couch. The couch was designed for home theater use, as it has built in wedges with drink holders and a storage cubby but unfortunately I had to remove those sections to be able to fit it in the room. At that, I will only have 18" of space between either end of the couch and the wall. Hopefully I don't enjoy too many a waistline-expanding beer after the room is done or I won't be able to get to my couch any more...
Long story short, The next house I buy will have the space allowances for at least a room that is 18' wide and 25' long.
- Choose a better location for the entry door. Unfortunately I really didn't have much of a choice in this house for the door because of the desired speaker layout and the laundry room conflicting with other possible doorways, but I really should have thought more before I started the rough framing.
- Last but certainly not least, buy a single home, not a town house so I can crank my system and not worry!
Thanks for looking guys. Cheers.
Rob