Month: October 2013

World’s First Quiet House

The Ideal Home Show in London has been proudly showing visitors what is being billed as the ‘world’s first quiet house’. Featuring the quietest appliances available such as silent fans, shower pumps, hair dryers, soft close toilet seats and lots more innovative noise pollution decreasing ideas.

The house was created by a not-for-profit company Quiet Mark, to highlight the awareness of noise pollution in the UK. The project is a spin-off of the Noise Abatement Society, launched by Poppy Elliott.

“The Quiet House is like building the ultimate peace pad,” Elliott says. “When we come home, it’s supposed to be our sanctuary, our place to recharge. What’s happened is, we’ve gone on this amazing technological revolution where everything around us is technology but often the compromise in the design is that the sound hasn’t been considered, so you’ve got this massive orchestra at home.”

Major world cities have seen a significant increase in noise companies over the last five years. The soundproofing industry is therefore in a constant state of growth to keep up with demand for sound-reducing appliances and houses. An Ipsos poll in 2007 stated that the third most important factor when purchasing household appliances was noise reduction. It is therefore becoming a priority for property developers to consider acoustic design in new builds, as well as considering the aesthetics.

Posted by admin in Metropolitan Insulation

Dark side of Silence?? Don’t be daft!

A recent new article on the BBC News website disused a so called ‘Dark Side of Silence. The article goes on to explain about the history of noise through the ages, and various archaic forms of soundproofing. Taking ancient Rome and it’s hustle and bustle of everyday life, where people would simply escape to the relative calm of the hills to get away from it.

Nowadays, thankfully there are more solutions to drown out the noise of city living. In Victorian London, many street musicians and the iron wheels of carriages were most to blame for the constant din of London life. Many authors of the time such as Charles Dickens have written of their madness at such.

The article says that one writer in particular Thomas Carlyle, was ‘nearly driven out of his mind, spent a fortune building a state-of-the-art “soundproof study” in his Chelsea attic’. Unfortunately it didn’t turn out to be a great success.

These days it is possible to live in London and enjoy the peace at the same time. Modern soundproofing techniques can achieve pretty much anything. Just ask us! to prove it!

To read the full BBC News article please click here.

Posted by admin in Metropolitan Insulation