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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
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    perpetual traveler
    Posts
    1,267
    I would talk to an engineer. My hunch is that any solution is going to be pricey and not perfect.

    You might consider lobbying on the issue with other association members to try to get your board to have some requirement for a certain amount of floor area to be covered with rugs.
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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984
    Good luck nyc in finding solutions. I live a reasonably quiet building. I don't mind noise upstairs (current residents above and around me are quiet) above me, as long it's not at night when I'm trying to sleep and not someone being violent with another person.

    I grew up in a large family and as the oldest did remember some nights of baby sibling(s, depending at what point in life) crying and during the day, children running around while I was studying or resting.

    A while ago, I lived in a building where the last 3 months before I moved (because I sold my place), someone upstairs seemed to be running some sort of exercise machine... I ended up sleeping in my living room during that time.
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Posts
    2,545
    Ny biker this is such a common problem -- I'd love to know if you find out anything that works. I don't have a problem with sound from above, but many of my friends do.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    DE
    Posts
    1,210
    The standard way to solve this problem is to "laminate" your existing drywall ceiling - that is to add another layer of drywall over top the existing drywall, and with a new layer of sound- insulation in between. This will lower your ceiling height by several inches. If you have standard 8' ceilings you probably won't want to do this, and it's probably prohibited by your local building code. Plus, unless you did it yourself, it would cost a couple thousand dollars or more, per room. This is a common method that some people like to do to cover up the old textured "popcorn" ceilings. (The popcorn starts to disintegrate after 30 years or so, and can't be cleaned, nor painted, at that point because it just falls apart, making for a very messy, messy job.) Laminating the ceiling is much cheaper, cleaner, and faster, than it is to demo the ceiling, and put up new drywall.)

    Another way to solve this might be to go upstairs and talk to your neighbors and let them know that they probably don't realize how sound carries in the building and perhaps they could put some carpeting down. Bring a batch of homemade cookies, or bread, or something nice. Invite one of them to come down to your unit while the other proceeds to move the furniture around in their usual fashion so they can hear how loud it is, even if just one at a time.

    If you sense resistance, you might even offer to buy them a thick rug that would go with their decor. That would be by far the cheapest solution.

    If it's mostly the furniture moving that's an issue, buy them a set of glides for whatever it is that they are moving. If it's loud talking, TV, music, then you need to get them to agree to be more conscientious about the noise, a rug, and/or pay for part of your ceiling renovation.

    I know how much loud neighbors can destroy your sanity. Good luck!
    Last edited by withm; 02-08-2013 at 11:15 AM.

 

 

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