Office + Hotel + Hospital Acoustics — NBC 2016 + IS 10399 + ANSI S12.2

Office + Hotel + Hospital Acoustics — NBC 2016 + IS 10399 + ANSI S12.2

By MEPVAULT Editorial Team · MEP Consultant · HVAC / Acoustics · 11 May 2026

Reading time ~ 9 min · Originally published: 05 May 2026 · Last revised: 11 May 2026

Building acoustics splits between three trades — partitions (STC), slab (IIC), and MEP services (background NC). The MEP design is typically the loudest reason occupants complain. NBC 2016 Pt 8 §3.7 sets background NC 40; Class A office targets NC 35; hotel guestroom + hospital NC 30; studio NC 20. For a 200-key hotel guestroom NC 30 target: every MEP component selected against the catalogue NC rating, sound attenuator length from insertion-loss curve, 25 mm acoustic lining first 10 m downstream of AHU, spring + neoprene isolators on every pump and fan.

Why office + healthcare acoustics is an MEP problem

Building acoustics is split between three trades — architectural partitions (STC), structural slab (IIC), and MEP services (background NC). The first two are typically resolved by the architect; the MEP consultant owns the third — but in practice the MEP design is the loudest reason occupants complain about a building. Diffuser whistle, duct boom, fan-coil noise, pump pulsation, DG-room reverberation, transformer hum — every MEP system contributes 5-15 dBA to the indoor sound level.

// FIG · MEPVAULT Office acoustic targets — STC vs IIC vs background NC level 0.0 13.2 26.4 39.6 52.8 66.0 Scaled 40 45 55 55 STC partition 45 50 60 60 IIC floor/ceiling 40 35 30 25 Bg NC level 0.8 0.5 0.4 0.4 RT60 (sec) NBC 2016 base Class A office target Hotel guestroom Hospital + studio SOURCE: NBC 2016 Pt 8 §3.7; IS 10399:1982; ANSI S12.2-2019; ASHRAE Apps Ch 49 · plotted 2026-05-11

What each Indian space type actually needs

Space NBC base STC Recommended STC for Class A Recommended NC level Worst MEP noise source
Open office 40 45 35-40 Diffuser whistle, AHU vibration
Cabin office 40 50 30-35 Pump noise through structure
Conference room 40 55 30 Diffuser whistle, FCU bypass
Hotel guestroom 45 55 30 FCU at low fan, plumbing waterhammer
Hospital ICU/ward 45 55 30 HVAC continuous, medical equipment
Hospital OT 45 55 35-40 HEPA AHU fan, equipment compressors
Recording studio 60+ 15-20 Any HVAC; needs isolation
Classroom 40 45 35 HVAC return air, lighting hum

MEP noise control — what to specify at design

Source Typical noise (dBA) Reduction technique Cost premium
AHU at fan outlet 85-95 Sound attenuator (3-6 ft length) + acoustic lining +₹35,000-75,000 per AHU
Supply diffuser whistle > 40 NC Larger throat + multiple smaller diffusers +15-20 %
Pump pulsation 45-55 Inertia base + flexible connectors +₹15,000-30,000 per pump
DG-room reverberation 100+ Acoustic enclosure + double-leaf wall +₹3-6 lakh per set
Transformer + LT panel hum 60-75 Vibration isolation pads + separate plant room +₹50,000-1 lakh
Plumbing waterhammer spike events Pressure-balancing valves + arrestors +₹3,000-8,000 per riser
Duct vibration boom 35-45 NC Hangers with neoprene + isolators +₹500-1,500 per metre
Lift hoistway noise 55-70 Sound-isolated shaft + machine-room vibration mat +₹2-4 lakh per lift

A 200-key hotel guestroom — NC 30 design walkthrough

Component Spec Noise contribution at room (dBA)
FCU 2-pipe ducted (300 CFM) Low-speed selection at design point 24 NC at coil + 6 NC ductwork = 30 NC
Supply diffuser (2 nos round 200 mm) Throat velocity ≤ 1.8 m/s 24 NC each, combined 27 NC
Return grille Free area 50 % over face area 22 NC
Bathroom exhaust fan Inline with sound attenuator 25 NC
Plumbing risers (CW + DW + HW) Insulated + cushioned brackets < 25 NC
Combined room NC 29 NC (≤ 30 target)

Hotel guestroom NC 30 is achievable but requires every MEP component selected for the noise spec, not just the throwaway “select for performance” approach. Vendor catalogues publish NC ratings at design point — always specify against catalogue, never accept “as per OEM standard”.

Common acoustic design failures we audit

  1. Sound attenuator length under-specified — designer puts 3 ft attenuator, vendor delivers, NC measured at room jumps to 38 because attenuator at-grade insertion loss is 15 dB but 4 ft would have given 25 dB. Always design attenuator length from manufacturer insertion-loss curve.
  2. Acoustic lining missing in duct first 10 m downstream of AHU — duct boom transmits up to 12 dB beyond design. Specify 25 mm acoustic lining inside duct for first 10 m.
  3. Equipment mounted on slab without isolation — pump, AHU, chiller all need spring + neoprene isolators. Cost ₹10,000-30,000 per piece. Without isolation, 8-12 dB structure-borne noise transmission. Always include in BoQ.

References

  1. NBC 2016 Part 8 Section 3 §3.7 — Sound and Vibration Control, Bureau of Indian Standards.
  2. IS 10399:1982 (reaffirmed) — Methods for Measurement of Sound Insulation of Buildings, Bureau of Indian Standards.
  3. ANSI S12.2-2019 — Criteria for Evaluating Room Noise, Acoustical Society of America.
  4. ASHRAE Handbook — HVAC Applications 2023 Chapter 49 (Noise and Vibration Control).
  5. ISO 717-1:2020 — Rating of Sound Insulation in Buildings.
  6. ASTM E90 — Standard Test Method for Laboratory Measurement of Airborne Sound Transmission Loss.
  7. IGBC Green New Buildings v3.0 — IEQ-9 Acoustic Performance credit.
  8. LEED v4.1 BD+C EQ Acoustic Performance credit.

// About the Authors

MEPVAULT Editorial Team — A team of practising MEP consultants based in India. ISHRAE-affiliated; FSAI-aligned.

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