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Soundscapes in Public Libraries - A case study

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 21:10 authored by Jin Rose WooJin Rose Woo, Priyadarsini RajagopalanPriyadarsini Rajagopalan
This study investigates the acoustic conditions of reading spaces in a public library in Melbourne. An acoustics performance survey for library users was developed to evaluate library use, sound environment and noise, and a face-to-face survey was conducted in the library. The library users described their sound environment as 'pleasant', 'appropriate' and 'calm'. The respondents of two reading rooms expressed a high level of satisfaction with sound environment and a neutral perception of noise, neither noisy nor quiet. Three main sources of noise, namely, 'footsteps', 'people' and 'chair dragging' were also found in the reading spaces. Interestingly, it was found that noise from lift, windows and doors opening, traffic and construction noise and noise from birds outside the building, resulted in the difference between user perception of noise between two reading rooms. It could be interpreted that this result was related to the library space layout, building design and building services. It is recommended that the link between architectural characteristics and space use pattern and acoustic performance be examined in public library buildings.

History

Start page

685

End page

694

Total pages

10

Outlet

Back to the future: The next 50 years

Editors

M. A. Schnabel

Name of conference

51st International Conference of the Architectural Science Association 2017

Publisher

The Architectural Science Association and Victoria University of Wellington

Place published

New Zealand

Start date

2017-11-29

End date

2017-12-02

Language

English

Copyright

©2017, Architectural Science Association (ANZAScA)

Former Identifier

2006082794

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-09-19

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