Addis Bill Layouted
Addis Bill Layouted
Addis Bill Layouted
Bill Addis
Buro Happold, London, UK
ABSTRACT: Acoustics has been important to the designers of buildings, especially theatres and concert halls,
for at least 2500 years. For most of this time, designers used empirical guidance which, while reliable within its
limitations, could not be applied successfully to rooms and auditoria which had no close precedent. The sci-
ence of acoustics developed in the 18th and 19th centuries, mainly in connection with musical instruments.
However, design methods for room acoustics in buildings become scientific and quantitative only in the 20th
century. The physicist Wallace Sabine discovered what affects the reverberation time of a room around 1895
and used this, first, to improve the acoustics of a lecture theatre and, later, in the design of new rooms – most
famously, the new Boston Music Hall in 1900. The measurement of sound and waveforms became practical
with the development of microphones, amplifiers, oscillosopes and early sound recording machines in the
1920s. From the 1930s physical scale models have been used to measure the acoustic response of auditoria.
They are still used today, together with increasingly sophisticated analysis of waveforms, to build up more and
more reliable predictions of acoustic performance. Architectural acoustic design methods are typical of other
engineering design disciplines in how they developed from being purely qualitative, then using empirical
data, then making use of physical model testing, and finally using comprehensive mathematical models.
INTRODUCTION
The historical development of architectural acoustics is similar to other fields of building design, in comprising
two parallel strands of ideas – the science and mathematics of the subject on the one hand, leading to im-
proved understanding of the phenomena, and the methods used by designers when faced with the chal-
lenge of a new building on the other, especially when the task differs markedly from precedent. The two nine-
teenth-century classic works on the physics of acoustics (Helmholz 1863; Strutt 1877-78) hardly mentioned the
acoustics of theatres or other rooms, and the science they contained only began to be used by architectural
acousticians in the mid-twentieth century. While these two branches of knowledge are closely related, it was
not a case of theory leading to practice, or vice versa: the two were symbiotic.
would prevent sound reaching the upper tiers of seats since this particularly impairs the intelligibility of word
endings which, in Greek and Latin, are vital to comprehension. Such reflected waves, he wrote, can also inter-
fere with the direct waves and distort sounds for the listener. These explanations differ remarkably little from
how we would put it today. Thirdly, Vitruvius explained that the site of a theatre itself must be carefully selected
taking account of acoustics: it must not have an echo, nor give reflections that can lead to direct (incident)
and reflected sounds interfering.
Vitruvius also discusses the use of sounding vessels – nowadays called Helmholz resonators, after the nine-
teenth-century German physicist who explained how they function – which, he says, reinforce certain fre-
quencies of the human voice and can increase intelligibility. These open-ended vessels were made of bronze
and tuned to six notes of the chromatic scale. Two sets of six were arranged beneath a tier of seats symmetri-
cally either side of the centre line of the theatre. If the theatre were particularly large, two additional sets of
vessels should be installed in higher rows, each a few semi tones lower in pitch – a total of thirty six different
notes. Vitruvius admits he knows of no theatres that had actually been built in Rome with sounding vessels. The
reason, he explains, is that “the many theatres that are constructed in Rome every year contain a good deal
of wood which does not lead to the same problems with reflections as stone”. Also, he says, the timber panels
themselves can resonate in a manner similar to the air in a sounding vessel and so improve intelligibility.
As to the effectiveness of sounding vessels, they are known today not to improve intelligibility and that is
probably why they were not used in Rome. Whether the Roman theatres were as good as the Greek ones, we
do not know, but there is no doubt that both were designed with great understanding of acoustics and exper-
tise in using this understanding to achieve demonstrably better results.
One final recommendation from Vitruvius on acoustics was for a senate house. The height of a senate house
should be half the width of the building, he says, and coronae, or cornices, made of woodwork or stucco,
should be fixed half way up the inside faces of the walls around the entire room. Without these, he says, the
voices of men engaged in discourse are lost in the high roof. With coronae, the sound of the voices is ‘de-
tained before rising’ and so is more intelligible to the ear.
This understanding of acoustics led building designers to use a number of pragmatic rules that helped them
achieve acceptable room acoustics. Three different types of surface could be used – stone or plaster would
enhance reflections, woven fabric such as tapestries and curtains would absorb sound, and timber panelling
was intermediate between the two. Based on the acoustic performance of existing rooms, a designer could
choose what he hoped would be a suitable combination of the three types of surface. The other design factor
was the distance between speaker or instrument, and the directness of the sound path. Theatre designers tried
to ensure that that the entire audience could see the actors, not only for theatrical effect, but so that at least
some of the sound could travel directly from speaker to listener. The other consideration was the distance be-
tween the stage and the listener. It was generally agreed that an actor speaking in a normal voice could be
understood clearly up to a distance of about 18 metres, and with difficulty up to about 25 metres. The result of
these basic rules was the development of the familiar raked seating and tiers of balconies in theatres and
dedicated concert halls.
The need for good acoustics was, however, not the only influence on the design of theatres. There was also a
tension between the need for actors to be understood, on the one hand, and the patron’s desire to increase
the size of audience and the income from ticket sales, on the other. Many theatres in the late eighteenth cen-
tury were built with distances between actor and listener more than thirty metres. This forced actors to change
their style of delivery and develop the skill of speaking more loudly, while sounding as if speaking in a normal
voice – a good actor could even fill an auditorium with what sounded like a whisper.
Designers of theatres intended for performances of both music and the spoken word faced a further, insuper-
able challenge since the acoustic characteristics needed for good intelligibility of speech make music sound
very dry and unpleasant to listen to. A hall well-suited to music, on the other hand, rendered the spoken word
almost unintelligible in all but the seats nearest the stage. The most practical solution to this dilemma was to
have different buildings dedicated to each form of entertainment. Theatre, however, often relied on music to
enhance the dramatic effect and orchestra pits were incorporated in most large theatres between the front
seats and the stage. The acoustics of such theatres was inevitably a matter of compromise, favouring the intel-
ligibility of the spoken word.
Design rules for theatre acoustics were not very reliable in the eighteenth century and there were many acous-
tic disasters. In his autobiography of 1740, the actor and playwright Colley Cibber wrote of Vanbrugh’s
Queen’s Theatre in London, built in 1704-05, that all its architectural elegance was of no avail:
. . . when scarce one word in ten could be distinctly heard . . . The extraordinary and superfluous space oc-
casioned such an undulation from the voice of every actor that generally what they said sounded like the
gabbling of so many people in the lofty aisles in a cathedral … [and] the articulate[d] sounds of a speaking
voice were drowned by the hollow reverberations of one word upon another. (Leacroft 1984, p.103)
Throughout Europe the second half of the eighteenth century saw a boom in theatre building in the major cit-
ies, and designers generally learned from the acoustic disasters of the early century. By the late eighteenth
century it was common practice to use the ceiling or soffit above the front of the stage as a ‘sounding board’
(actually a reflector) and the ceiling over the orchestra pit to ‘throw the voice forward’ from the stage to the
back of the stalls and to the galleries. The first design guides for theatres discussed acoustics alongside the
equally important issue of line-of-sight (Patte 1782, Saunders 1790, Rhode 1800, Langhans 1810). These and
others followed Patte’s example in showing ray diagrams to visualise sound paths (Fig. 1).
Figure 1: Ray diagrams for different theatre plans; (Patte 1782, Plate 1)
Of these authors it was the architect George Saunders (c.1762-1839) who was the first to publish results of tests
he had undertaken on theatre acoustics. He was familiar with Patte’s guide and also with the first modern sci-
entific work on acoustics by the French mathematician and music theorist Marin Mersenne (Mersenne 1638)
whose scientific approach he adopted:
Phonics or the doctrine of sounds is particularly distinguished from acoustics or the doctrine of hearing. In-
stead of dividing into direct, refracted and reflected, I shall, for the sake of brevity and perspicuity, divide
phonics into three distinct heads; namely formation of sound, combination of sound, and progression of
sound. . . . . But as sound is very much influenced or altered by the bodies it meets with, and the form of its
expansion depends much on the manner of its being transmitted, it is necessarily our business to enquire,
how it is affected by the different bodies it may meet with in its progress, and more particularly, of the man-
ner in which the voice expands. In examining what has already been written upon these subjects, very little
Proceedings of the Third International Congress on Construction History, May 2009
could be gained to our purpose; and this occasioned the following experiments, which may help to give
this part of science an additional degree of certainty. (Saunders 1790, pp.2-3)
Saunders goes on to describe how he tested seven “propositions” in real auditoria:
1 Of the extension of the voice on a plane;
2 Of the ascension, descension, and cubical form of sound;
3 Does the voice act upon a certain quantity of air of whatever form to which it may be confined?
4 Of screens partially placed before the voice, and opposing angles;
5 How sound operates in different airs, and how much it is affected by currents of air;
6 On the reflection of sound;
7 Of the property of different materials to alter and conduct sound. (Saunders 1790, pp.4-22)
And from the results of these experiments he concludes they lead to several “applications”:
First, that sound expands equally in every direction. Secondly, that to alter the form of its expansion, the in-
tervention of a body is necessary. Thirdly, that all bodies attract sound. Fourthly, that sound is absorbed, and
conducted by a body, more or less according to the nature of the material. Fifthly, that in proportion to the
conducting power of the material, will be the resonance it occasions. Which being admitted, it follows, that
nothing can be depended on, in a theatre, but the direct force of the voice. (Saunders 1790, p.23)
Saunders summarised his experience in a number of clear rules:
– the hearer should never be more than twenty two metres (seventy feet ) from the speaker;
– the ceiling should be used to convey sound to the upper seats of the auditorium
– the circular plan is best, and
– the entire audience should have sight of the stage.
Writing about the design of theatres Saunders uses the concept of ‘phonics’ (i.e. acoustics), for example, criti-
cising theatres that had deep boxes and galleries, as their low height ‘obstruct[ed] the sound … [and] the little
that enters is presently attracted and absorbed by the persons, clothes, etc. of the spectators in the foremost
rows’. Saunders conducted many experiments on the effect of the shape of theatre auditoria on intelligibility,
comparing the results to those obtained in the open air, and concluded that the oval or horseshoe form were
best, but that these did not allow good views of the stage. He concluded the semi-circular form was best, ‘with
its centre seventeen feet (five metres) in front of the speaker’ and the diameter of the circle should be no
greater than sixty feet (eighteen metres). Saunders was also aware that the voice did not carry well above an
angle of 45° to the horizontal, and thus the height of the auditorium should be no greater than three quarters
of the diameter of the circle. Concerning materials, he wrote that:
Wood is sonorous, conductive and produces a pleasing tone, and is therefore the very best material for lin-
ing a theatre; for not absorbing so much as some, and not conducting so much as others, this medium ren-
ders it peculiarly suitable to rooms for musical purposes; the little resonance it occasions being rather
agreeable than injurious. (Saunders 1790, p.201-2)
Saunders used his understanding of acoustics to produce designs for both an ‘Ideal Theatre’ and a similar op-
era house which also incorporated the latest ideas on protection against fire, including staircases constructed
entirely of stone and enclosed by walls.
The first modern comprehensive book on acoustics (Chladni 1802) was written by the German physicist Ernst
Chladni (1756 –1827) who studied how musical instruments create their characteristic sounds. His experiments
led him to study both the vibration of sheets of wood and metal and also how such vibrations were conveyed
through the air to the listener’s ear. He published the results of his experimental work on vibrating plates first in
“Entdeckungen über die Theorie des Klanges” (Discoveries concerning the theory of sound) in Leipzig in 1787,
and then in “Die Akustik” in 1802. Apart from the physics of sound, Chladni included some useful guidance on
designing auditoria, though drawn entirely from the practical guidance of both Saunders and Rhode (Saun-
ders 1790; Rhode 1800).
Chladni illustrates one intriguing design for a theatre in which the walls are made of panels that can be ro-
tated about their vertical axis to change their angle and, hence, the direction of reflected sound and also to
allow some sound to penetrate into the cavity behind thus reducing the intensity of reflections; he does not
say if the theatre was built.
out numerous experiments on the focusing effect of arched or domed ceilings, especially in Paris at the Halle
au blé and in the many rooms of the Louvre palace. In one room in Paris he found that the reflection from
such a ceiling had been so strong as to prevent it being used; the problem was remedied by suspending a silk
balloon in the centre of the ceiling.
Reid’s qualitative understanding of acoustics differed little from that of twentieth century acousticians. He was
prevented from taking acoustics into the realm of quantitative engineering only by the lack of equipment to
measure sound intensities and to analyse sound of different frequencies. This step awaited the invention of the
microphone, in the late nineteenth century, which converted sound waves into a varying electric current, and
the measuring of both relative and absolute sound intensities in the early twentieth century. Based on the work
of Inman and Reid, further useful design guidance began to appear (Lachéz 1848; Upham 1853; Smith 1861).
and the judgement as to when the sound was inaudible was made by the experimenter himself. An electric
chronograph recorded the times to one-hundredth of a second. By covering more and more of the audito-
rium’s wooden seats with soft cushions, he showed that the reverberation time was inversely proportional to
the number of seats covered with cushions. He repeated the experiments in eleven other rooms in the univer-
sity, with volumes ranging from a lecture theatre of 9300 cubic metres down to an office of just 35 cubic me-
tres. From the results he derived the equation for which his name is well-known giving the relationship between
the reverberation time (RT), of a room, in seconds, its volume (V), in cubic metres, and the area (A), in square
metres, of sound-absorbing surfaces in the room.
V
RT = 0.163 (1)
A
Sabine used this equation to give an objective means of comparing different auditoria and, in particular, to
compare the proposed design for the new Boston Music Hall with the Leipzig Gewandhaus, on which its overall
shape was based, and the old Music Hall in Boston. He was able to specify, for the first time, the precise de-
gree of sound absorption in the interior of the new Boston hall needed to achieve the same reverberation time
as the Leipzig Gewandhaus whose seating capacity it exceeded by 70%, and volume by 40%. Sabine’s pre-
dictions were accurate and the acoustic of the new hall was widely praised. He had fulfilled his goal of over-
coming the “unwarranted mysticism” that then surrounded the subject of architectural acoustics and, most
importantly, achieved “the calculation of reverberation in advance of construction”.
Sabine was soon being approached by the owners of various types of room to advise on how to rectify their
acoustic problems. Often this followed the failed attempts by others to deal with the problems. Sabine noted
the persistent use of a traditional but wholly ineffective remedy which involved stretching a grid of steel wires
in the top of a church, theatre or court room which suffered too much reverberation on the mistaken believe
that the wires would resonate and absorb sound. In New York and Boston he had seen theatres and churches
with just four or five wires stretched across the room while in other auditoria several miles of wire had been
used, all without the slightest effect.
As part of his diagnosis of acoustic problems he would sometimes plot a contour map showing the distribution
of the sound intensity. This helped him identify the source of the worst sound reflections from the walls and ceil-
ing and hence reduce them by using sound-absorbing panels or adding decorations that would break up
strong reflections from large plane surfaces.
Sabine also turned his attention to the design of new theatres and how best to create a near-uniform acoustic
experience for every member of the audience. To help him in these studies he used the newly-perfected
schlieren method of photography to show sound waves passing through air in two-dimensional models of au-
ditoria (Fig.2). He was thus able to show in plan and section, how sound waves were reflected and broken up
as they emanated from the stage into the auditorium. Outside the field of building structures this was probably
the first use of a scale model to investigate the engineering behaviour of a building.
Figure 2: Photographs showing the progress of sound waves through a model of a theatre; (Sabine 1922)
considered Lyon’s purely scientific approach paid insufficient attention to how music actually sounded in
concert halls. Horta visited a great many halls in Europe and the USA.
Figure 3: Ray diagrams for Salle Henri-le-Boeuf, Brussels, by Victor Horta, 1928; (Archives of Horta Museum)
In the early 1930s some German acousticians used rays of light in three-dimensional models of theatres to
study the path taken by sound waves, but such models gave no help in investigating different frequencies of
sound, the reverberation time or the different times that sound would take to reach a listener by different
sound paths. Acoustic design was still largely a subjective art at this time.
semi-circular wall behind the stage (worse). Using a microphone he displayed the decay of sound in the
model auditorium on the screen of an oscilloscope, and recorded the results in a photograph. Although similar
studies were undertaken in the late 1930s in a number of other university physics departments, which all dem-
onstrated the possibility of using models during the design of an auditorium, the technique did not gain wide-
spread use by building designers until after the war.
The Danish acoustician Vilhelm Jordan had been one of the pioneers in using scale models in acoustic design
In the 1930s using a wire recorder to store the results and allow them to be analysed. He was selected in the
mid-1960s to advise the designers of the Sydney Opera House on how to achieve a satisfactory acoustic for
the many different uses – including concerts, opera and speech – that were proposed for the auditoria. Since
these different uses require different acoustic characteristics, especially reverberation time, one early plan was
to provide a large moveable ceiling that could be adjusted to create a reverberation time to suit each need.
So different from established practice were the proposals for the auditoria that Jordan advised undertaking
acoustic tests using scale models. Over five or six years models of several different proposals for the two audi-
toria were made at 1-to-10 scale. Made of wood, they included models of the audience with bodies made
from neoprene and heads of cardboard. The tests soon established that it would not be possible to create an
acoustic that could serve the original idea of multi-purpose auditoria. The curved form of the walls also caused
problems in achieving a satisfactory distribution of reflected sound in all parts of the auditoria.
Figure 4: 1/10 scale wooden models for studying the acoustic performance of (a) early, (b) intermediate, and
(c) late interior designs for the Sydney Opera House. The figure in (c) is V.L. Jordan; (V.L. Jordan)
The model tests demonstrated the benefits of introducing flat side walls to the auditoria to provide lateral re-
flections and reflective interiors to the boxes. They also showed that the original ceiling of the auditorium, con-
sisting of large catenaries hung longitudinally from the external shell, left the orchestra area suffering from a
deficiency of early reflected sound. Adding suspended reflectors over the stage did not substantially change
this situation and it was decided to reduce the distance between the side walls and raise the auditorium ceil-
ing substantially. Many different shapes and positions of reflectors suspended above the orchestra were stud-
ied and the final arrangement used small toroidal discs (slightly convex on the underside) suspended from the
ceiling by adjustable cables.
The acoustics of the finished auditoria were finally assessed in a number of test performances with real orches-
tras and audiences. Magnetic-tape recorders were used to record the decay of sound both after firing a gun
on stage (with a blank cartridge), and by getting the conductor to halt the orchestra abruptly while playing
Beethoven at full power. The results of these tests were used to recalibrate the model tests and to identify a
number of adjustments that could be made to the various moveable reflectors to achieve the best acoustic.
Jordan’s work on the Sydney Opera House was a milestone in the development of acoustics (Jordan 1973,
1980). His particular goal was to seek suitable criteria or parameters that could be used to define the acoustic
of a room. Since Wallace Sabine’s work in the early 1900s, it had become accepted that the key parameter
was the reverberation time. However, more and more auditorium designers and musicians were coming to re-
alise that this was not the only factor that made some halls good for concerts, and others bad. The question
was, what other parameters should be considered and, if they were to help designers, it had to be possible to
measure them. From the 1950s, developments in electronics and tape records gradually opened up the possi-
bility of measuring the acoustic behaviour of auditoria. Gradually qualitative terms often used by musicians,
such as ‘warmth’, ‘intimacy’, resonance’ and ‘fullness of tone’ came to be replaced by terms with precise
scientific definitions. One criterion for speech, proposed by a German acoustician in 1953, was named ‘Deut-
lichkeit’ (intelligibility) translated into the English of acoustics as ‘definition’. This was the proportion of the total
sound energy that had arrived at the listener within the first 50 milliseconds. For music one criterion was the ‘rise
time’ – the time it takes for the sound intensity to reach half its steady-state value. Another was ‘steepness’ –
the rate at which the energy arrived at the listener. For the Sydney Opera House, Jordan was one of the first
acousticians to use the ‘Early Decay Time’ (EDT) – the rate at which the sound intensity decays during the first
few milliseconds, rather than later when the sound has reached every part of the auditorium – as a measure
that gave a better correspondence between measurable quantities and listeners’ subjective judgements of
quality. During the final decades of the twentieth century many other acoustic parameters, often with curious
names, have been proposed as scientific measure of acoustic quality – terms such as the ‘inversion index’, the
Proceedings of the Third International Congress on Construction History, May 2009
ratio of the rise time measured in the auditorium to the rise time measured on the stage, which reflects the
need for the performers on stage to hear sounds before the audience, and others such as ‘hall-mass’, ‘point of
gravity time’, ‘clarity’ and ‘index of room impression’. Even today, however, different acousticians prefer their
own approach to defining acoustic performance and hence to designing auditoria to achieve the right con-
ditions for different uses (Barron 1997). Perhaps the very fact that acoustic quality is finally judged by people
rather than measuring instruments means that some subjectivity is likely to remain.
CONCLUSIONS
The development of design methods for the acoustics of auditoria has followed the same pattern observed in
other branches of building engineering design. Initially designers used their own experience to observe and
improve their art and collected their experience in the form of simple design rules which could be passed on
to other designers. In acoustics this approach was known in ancient times and has continued even into the
twentieth century. The technical difficulty of measuring acoustic phenomena delayed a truly scientific ap-
proach to understanding acoustics until the late eighteenth century (over a century later than for structural
engineering). The first scientific concept in acoustics, defined in quantitative terms by Sabine in the 1890s, was
the reverberation time whose relationship to the dimensions of a room was expressed as an empirical quantity
known as the absorptivity of the surfaces of the room. This approach remains the most important in acoustic
design today. The testing of scale models together with the use of non-dimensional constants was developed
in acoustics simultaneously with their use in the design of building structures, first in the 1930s and more widely
in the 1960s. Their use consolidated the understanding of acoustic phenomena and laid the foundation for
creating mathematical models using computers.
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