Blog

Fellert blog header

We think a lot. We have opinions. About architecture. About acoustics. And why a really good album hasn’t been released since December 1, 1973 – in other words, Black Sabbath’s fifth studio album. Sometimes it happens. The magic. Protests, songs of praise? Speak now or forever hold your peace.

Fellert Even Better at restaurant Kadeau in Copenhagen

8 November 2012 | Category: Restaurants, lounges & clubs, Great Sound, Good Looks

Some very nice pictures taken of the very trendy restaurant Kadeau by the photographer Marie Louise Munkegaard of Marie Louise Munkegaard Studie, Berhard bang Allé 25 , st, th, 2000 Frederiksberg.

Of course there is Fellert Even Better in the ceiling. With an NRC of 0,85-0,95 and the endless possibilities of variation, creating a seamless monolithic look, it plays in the background and enhances the total experience of the dinner both design wise and sound wise.

Excellent work by our Danish representative Mute.

 

Leave a reply

Reverberation time and room acoustics

30 October 2012 | Category: Interesting facts, How does it really work, Great Sound

You can very easily understand what reverberation time is by clapping your hands and listen to the echo and how it fades. The time it takes for it to go away is the reverberation time.

When we talk about reverberation time we often mean the T60, which is the time, in seconds, it takes for the sound to be attenuated 60 dB.

In practical terms it is the time it takes for the sound to fade completely.

 

The expression for reverberation time was defined by the American physician  W.C. Sabine, as:

 

 

Where 0.161 is a defined constant. V is the volume of the room in m3 and A is the total absorbing area in m2.

The total absorbing area is calculated as the absorption factor mulitplied with the area of the absorbents.

This will tell you that the ceiling height of the room is directly affecting the reverberation time. The higher the ceiling height, the longer reverberation time.

it also tells you that the absorbing capacity of the absorbents matters. If you double the absorption factor you can have the same reverberation time with half the area of absorbents.

In theory, that is…

First of all, every single frequency has its own reverberation time depending on the absorbing materials ability to absorb the sound waves of that specific frequency. it is as a rule of thumb easier to absorb medium and high frequencies compared to low frequencies. These low frequency reverberations can blend in and interfere with the higher frequencies in a way that the listener interpretates as a noisy environment, even if the reverberation for the mid and high frequencies are relatively short.

what does that mean?

Well, take for example noise from HVAC, fans, electrical equipment etc. Even though most of that noise are low frequent, it will be affecting conversations taking place in the room.

In addition to this:

Most rooms are not shaped in a way that makes this simple formula accurate.

Hard reflective materials in walls and floors can cause phenomena where the sound waves bounces back and forth between for example two parallel walls. You will then experience a much longer reverberation time compared to what the calculation shows.

The type of furniture used and how it is placed, together with how the absorbing material is placed will affect the reverberation time quite a lot and that is not at all taken into consideration in the simple formula above.

Therefore reverberation time is a nice way of explaining roughly how you are going to experience the sound environment of a room, but not good enough to be used to create excellent room acoustics.

An experienced acoustic engineer can get closer by  adding his/her knowledge about how the placement of the absorbers and the decoration of the room would affect the reverberation and use that to place the absorbers on the right places, but to get a better understanding they should do a simulation and look at the Speech Transmission Index, STI or more commonly used the Rapid Speech Transmission Index, RASTI.

By using software, as for example EASE by Renkus Heintz, you can make graphic maps of the STI as well as other important parameters, to show very visually how you would experience the acoustics in the different parts of the room. In fact you can even make what is called an auralization and create a sound file that illustrates how it would sound in a room with the chosen design.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What we say is, that using computer software, together with absorbing products that can deliver specific absorption at a given range of frequencies, can create excellent room acoustics with optimal use of the absorbing products, while relying on rules of thumbs and absorption classes or NRC only, can be a serious mistake.

Leave a reply

Fellert Ultra installation at Saint Dominique in Paris, France

3 October 2012 | Category: Spiritual places, churches & temples, Great Sound, Good Looks

Our French representative Dacoustie has just finished a nice Fellert Ultra installation at Saint Dominique in Paris, France. Here are some pictures of the ongoing installation.

 

Leave a reply

Fellert Even Better Silk at Msheireb Downtown Doha, Qatar

28 September 2012 | Category: Things happens, Government, city & town halls, Great Sound, Good Looks

Fellert has just made an agreement with the Korean contractor Hyundai and its subcontractor InterID for the supply of approximately 15 000 m2 of Fellert Even Better Silk for the first phase of the 31 hectare spread Msheireb Downtown Doha, Qatar, also known as Heart of Doha.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read more about the project here:

http://www.msheireb.com/projects-downtown.html

There are, as of this moment, full activity going on in Fellert warehouses all over the world as over 100 000 Kgs of material is lined up to be shipped in a very short period of time.

Look out for new post on this subject soon!

 

 

 

 

Leave a reply

Life goes on in the echo street

20 September 2012 | Category: The incomparable Fellert humor, Great Sound

What do you do once you get fed up with all the noise and traffic that goes on and on, night and day.

Someone in Finland with the slightly amusing  street name Kaikukatu (echo-street in English) came up with quite a brilliant solution.

just watch this:

 

 

 

Leave a reply

Fellert at the State Mosque in Doha

13 September 2012 | Category: Spiritual places, churches & temples, How does it really work, Great Sound, Good Looks

The acoustical consultant Soliflex recently published this Youtube clip regarding their work, including Fellert at the State Mosque in Doha.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

click here 

 

Previous post on the State Mosque:

http://www.fellert.com/blog/2012/03/09/the-state-mosque-in-doha-qatar/

 

 

 

Leave a reply

Fellert at restaurang Vapiano in Oslo

7 September 2012 | Category: Restaurants, lounges & clubs, Great Sound, Good Looks

Look at this nice Even Better Sahara installation of Fellert at restaurang Vapiano in Oslo.

The installation is just about to be handed over, but when the photos were taken, the contractor Bygg & Akustikmontage were just doing the final adjustments.

 

Leave a reply

Fellert Even Better Secern at ABN Kvartalet in Oslo

3 September 2012 | Category: Residences, houses & apartments, Great Sound, Good Looks

Here are some pictures from the recently finished installation of Fellert Even Better Secern at ABN Kvartalet in Oslo.

An Even Better Secern installation like this will give you a Noise Reduction Coefficient (NRC) of 0,9, which means that the ceiling will absorb in average 90% of all the sound energy that hits its surface. You will hear the difference, and it looks astonishing good!

The pictures are from the first phase of three.

Leave a reply

Bite me, it must be Fellert

30 August 2012 | Category: Things happens, The incomparable Fellert humor

As a sales representative you need to be prepared for anything.

Architects that turns and twists, press and scratch etc. are everyday business for our sales representative, but one of these people took it to a completely new dimension. Just look!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here’s the bite in a close up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

mmmm, yummy!

Leave a reply

Fellert at the Highfield Humanities College in Blackpool

28 August 2012 | Category: Offices, schools & libraries, Great Sound, Good Looks

WRR UK just handed over the Alpha installation of Fellert at the Highfield Humanities College in Blackpool.

This college has several glass roof atriums and the solution was therefore to treat the vertical wall sections with Fellert Alpha, creating a monolitic look, or as we say:

“to act without being seen”

 

Leave a reply