Shared Wall I can hear my neighbours talking

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Here's the updated version:




I live in a 1950s mid terraced ex-council house and can clearly hear my neighbours' TV dialogue when trying to relax in my lounge.

The party wall was already treated during a renovation — plasterboard and Rockwool was used — but it's clearly not sufficient.
The sound is predominantly airborne (I can make out speech clearly). The floor is suspended timber with a void beneath, not concrete slab.
I've watched this video which recommends a mass + sealing approach:

My question is: what's the best next step?

Option A — Strip back the existing plasterboard to bare brick and start fresh with a proper treatment

Option B — Add a second layer on top of the existing wall using MLV sandwiched between two layers of 5/8" drywall

The video recommends two layers of 5/8" drywall with MLV between them, plus putty pads on electrical outlets and acoustic sealant on all gaps.


On decoupling: The video suggests decoupling is primarily beneficial for impact noise and vibration rather than airborne sound, and that mass alone handles most airborne transmission. However I'm not sure if this applies to a party wall in a terraced house where the wall itself may be vibrating and re-radiating sound. Should I be building a decoupled stud wall with isolation clips and hat channel, or would adding sufficient mass achieve most of the benefit without the added complexity and loss of room space?


Any advice from people who have tackled similar party wall issues in older terraced houses would be much appreciated.

Photos of the wall here:

Originally when I moved in the plan was to hang my plasma TV on that wall (A picture covers it now). As it has a HDMI Cable going over the celling into an AV area under my stairs.

As you can see that there are also three twin sockets on this all all together.
 
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Resilient bars fixed to timber frame.
Pack with acoustic insulation.
Double sound block plasterboard fixed to the resilient bars.
Don't let the plasterboard touch wall or ceiling or side wall so leave gap and fill with acoustic mastic.
Skim walls.

Unfortunately sound will come through ceiling and floor still though
 
ok thanks not sure I would be confident enough to do this my self do you have to build a stud wall or does the wooden frame attach to the existing plasterboard on the existing wall? I have a friend of a friend who I am asking too who is in the building trade.
 
also this shared wall used to have a chimney on it but we removed it. I remember the plaster was talking about using "dot and dab" when he glued the plasterboard to the brick work. Which I think may cause issues.
 
If it really bothers you the best solution would be to move house.

More modern houses have a double wall with cavity on party walls, they're basically detached other than the outer skin. Older ones often have no more than a single skin of brick, or double brick if you're really lucky.

You'd need a lot of money and lose a lot of space from your room to reduce it, and then it would be less effective than just building it better in the first place.

Other adjoining rooms will be the same. I found it embarassing to go in the back bedroom of our 1920s terrace at times.
 
If it really bothers you the best solution would be to move house.

More modern houses have a double wall with cavity on party walls, they're basically detached other than the outer skin. Older ones often have no more than a single skin of brick, or double brick if you're really lucky.

You'd need a lot of money and lose a lot of space from your room to reduce it, and then it would be less effective than just building it better in the first place.

Other adjoining rooms will be the same. I found it embarassing to go in the back bedroom of our 1920s terrace at times.
Well that is the long term plan anyway!
 
In that case definitely don't waste your money and time on it.

We sold a house with problem neighbours - in our case they hung out in the back garden and made a racket. I was careful to avoid viewings when I knew they'd be there. In one case I blared out radio 3 with some monks singing from the window until they went inside while a viewer was on the way. Cook up some excuses why you can't do viewings on whatever evening they want, arrange for daytime, the weekend or whenever they're least likely to be there. Or just have your own TV on.
 
Double acoustic plasterboard but sound is really hard to stop. One of my Airbnbs is a 19c Fishermans terrace and you can hear the neighbours plug something in the socket in the main bedroom.
 
When our daughter lived in a new build flat, she could hear the neighbour throwing up, having an pìss and farting!
 
If it really bothers you the best solution would be to move house.

More modern houses have a double wall with cavity on party walls, they're basically detached other than the outer skin. Older ones often have no more than a single skin of brick, or double brick if you're really lucky.

You'd need a lot of money and lose a lot of space from your room to reduce it, and then it would be less effective than just building it better in the first place.

Other adjoining rooms will be the same. I found it embarassing to go in the back bedroom of our 1920s terrace at times.
I'd be interested to know how much this reduces sound ingress between properties. Given the quality of much of what's thrown up by house builders these days, I wouldn't be surprised if a fair amount from neighbours can still be heard?
 
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