I think floor mats help plus stack sanitary products vizuri will help IMO.
Afro:
Mimi ile shida ninayo ni ati i forgot to consider something i hate while moving to the house i currently live in. What i hate ni kelele and the house being located just next to the stair case its usually annoying getting distructed by footsteps every now and then as people walk up and down. Then you have uncivilised meffis who dont know how to share space they shout their conversations as if they are the only ones living in the building irregardless of the possible fact that wanaeza kua wanapigia tenants wengine kelele. Hii inafikanga hadi bedroom and falling asleep can be a prob. I got to ask,is there a way one can sound proof a house and block all noise from outside??
I can relate…kuna watu wanapenda kupigia watu kelele kwa apartments ni kama they own the place na kucheza ngoma with their doors open. Pisses the hell out of me.
jaribu kuweka wall paper
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NB: Plagiarized Picture
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I was just about to congratulate you on that beautifully kept hauz
hehe I don’t plagiarize my fren. wapi cheki maneno bana? ama ulipata bibi sasa weekend ni indoors buda
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Siwesmind:
Hallo talkers.
I have a problem that’s both irritating and annoying.
I moved houses recently and moved into my dream type of apartment.
It’s warm, pleasing to the eye and very conveniently located.
My only problem is the house is like an echo chamber. Any slight sound comes out amplified and loud. Flicking on or off a light switch in the quiet of night is heard all over the house.
All that is OK and easy to live with.
The loo is the subject of this thread.
It has practically zero privacy.
Urinating in the toilet bowl sounds like it’s a cow urinating outside.
A slight ‘duh’ fart comes out like a loud boom.
What can I do to reduce or minimize the sounds in this house.
Over to you technology buffs.
@Siwesmind ,
Furniture, heavy drapes floor to ceiling, carpeting. Position the furniture so that it breaks the waves bouncing from wall to wall (standing waves). Even inside the loo, you can hang a few framed batiks and put mats on the floor to absorb the high frequencies.