According to the group, prototype slabs of the wall were introduced to NBBJ’s office and they measured noise reductions of around 13 decibels... or the equivalent of wearing noise-canceling headphones. That’s pretty incredible and could go a long way towards helping workers who are sensitive to noise being made by people around them (read: me).
“We can’t ignore the human voice. It ties back to a survival mechanism,” says Ryan Mullenix, a partner at NBBJ, in an interview with Fast Company. “That has a big impact on our executive function, our cognitive control, our emotional self-regulation. In the basic sense, it just stresses us out.”
Many applications — The group says that this type of approach to sound reduction could be better than other methods, such as incorporating soft furniture that’s been known to absorb sound. Those objects often use synthetic materials with a high carbon footprint, and spongy material is also just difficult to keep clean. Bottles could be integrated directly into wood or concrete, which is much easier to clean. And the presence of the holes themselves would mean using less material overall.
For existing buildings, slabs of hole-ridden walls could be slung up as ceiling fixtures in places like bathrooms where, you know, it’s not pleasant to hear other people going about their business. But someday this new technique could become a part of actual walls or floors in new development projects.