A Neighbour Complains About Your Piano Playing

I recently received a call from a client looking for a solution to her problem. She lives in a condo apartment, and her neighbour is complaining about piano playing in her apartment. She already did some soundproofing, but the complaints continue.

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This situation with piano-playing complaints is common but not easy to solve. The problem is that the client’s neighbour is complaining, and the Condo Board of Directors is obligated to deal with her complaints.

How is objectionable noise defined:

As per the City of Toronto bylaw,  different types of noises are defined in a new Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 591 enacted in September 2019. The defined noise types have specific maximum levels permitted under the bylaw. Piano playing is not one of the defined noise types; it may, therefore, fall under the "unreasonable and persistent noise" paragraph. This paragraph of the bylaw states, "No person shall make, cause or permit noise, at any time, that is unreasonable noise and persistent noise."   

As you can see, the bylaw covers any noise at any time (not only after 11 pm as some tenants assume). Furthermore, “shall make, cause or permit noise” is a very wide statement that covers almost anything a neighbour can hear.  The onus is on the person that generates the noise to satisfy the complainant.  No wonder there is a lot of litigation about noise between neighbours.

If you play the piano, additional soundproofing in your apartment would be expensive and may not resolve the problem with piano-playing complaints. Perfect soundproofing in a typical apartment is virtually impossible, and the complaints may continue.

The piano-playing condo owner asked me to test the soundproofing to see if it was adequate. However, testing is fairly expensive and not always useful.  The test will probably find the transmission loss value in the STC 45 to 55 range. In buildings built before 2012, there is no requirement for STC level. In newer buildings, there is a minimum STC of 50. However, STC 50 does not guarantee that there will be no complaints. You may want to talk to a Toronto bylaw officer about your situation or get legal advice before spending money on testing.

So if you play piano, what can you do?  

You may experience small improvement in noise transfer to adjacent apartments, if you place vibration absorbing pads under your piano legs. You can get the pads for example in Home Depot. There are also specialized pads for piano available.  However, it is unlikely to be sufficient to stop the complaints.

To eliminate the noise complaints, I suggest purchasing an electronic piano and using headphones for practice. For teacher and student situations, two headphones can be used. This will be significantly cheaper than soundproofing and guaranteed to be effective. Here is an example of a digital piano, but other piano models are available:

If testing of sound transmission loss on your party wall would be helpful, contact the author of this article.

Note: You may find the following article relevant to your situation and also this blog article.

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About the Author Ivan Koval

The author is the publisher of the Soundproofing.Expert website. He is a soundproofing and building acoustics consultant working in Toronto and GTA, Ontario, Canada. Telephone (416) 471-2130

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