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anechoic chamber architecture

In this kind of space, no one can hear you scream. Anechoic chambers use spiked walls to eliminate echoes, the end result might literally sound dull but the visual effect can be stunning, such as at the enormous anechoic hangar. Vote for your faves.

 
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This bizarre fashion project attempted to record incredibly accurate sounds produced by clothing as people move in an anechoic chamber.<p /><p />The fact that there is a picture of a semi naked female obviously increases the chance of this getting votes. Sigh!
This is the anechoic chamber at the Radar Reflectivity Lab,
Naval Air Warfare Center, Point Mugu in California. This chamber is spectacularly large, with 60 ft high ceilings.
Hemispherical loudspeaker array used for auralization in an anechoic chamber.
In the middle of the Mojave desert, the Benefield Anechoic Facility is the worlds largest, hands down.

The anechoic chamber supports testing of electronic systems on full-scale aircraft and is a massive 250 x 264 x 70 foot steel plate box enclosed in a hangar. The walls, ceiling, and floor are covered in almost a million cones.

The person in the center of this chamber appears to be floating on air, since the mesh floor sits far above the anechoic one.
This small anechoic chamber isn’t necessarily that impressive, but the conical shape creates a forced perspective that creates a really unusual space, which would make a great architectural design.
TDKs beautifully minimalist semi anechoic chamber, with flat tiles, and altar like center piece, is reminiscent of the final scenes of 2001.
FRANKONIA manufactures anechoic chambers for radiated emissions and immunity for Military Tests. The tank looks very incongruous, like an art gallery exhibit.
ALF is a 4.26-meter-diameter geodesic sphere inside an anechoic chamber. The sphere contains 277 loudspeakers and can present 16 sounds simultaneously from selected or all locations, simulating complex real-world auditory environments. In other words it is an auditory version of a VR CAVE.
At first glance, this does not look that impressive, until you realize that the human scale door appears to be the tiny mouse hole in the bottom right corner of the back wall.
Given that space is a vacuum, and that, unlike in movies, you cant here anything anyway, I wonder why acoustic tests are being performed on a satellite.<p /><p />Answers in the comments, if you know.