
Home / Insights / Thought Leadership
What You Don’t Hear in the Built Environment
From the hush of a library to the echoing grandeur of a cathedral, acoustics quietly shape how we experience the built environment. Sound does more than fill a space; it defines it. It can often be an invisible layer of design, but its effects are tangible. The way voices carry in an open-plan office, how traffic noise filters into a classroom, or how music resonates in a concert hall, all influence our comfort, behavior, and emotional response to the built environment. Acoustics affects speech intelligibility, privacy, productivity, and even well-being, yet it often goes unnoticed until something feels “off.” As an increased priority is put on human-centered spaces, understanding the science of sound, how it reflects, absorbs, diffuses, and travels, is essential to creating environments that not only look good, but truly support the way we live, work, and connect.
At Henderson, we see our work as a translation between physics and feeling; between how a space is built and how it’s heard and experienced. For clients and partners, we aim to embrace this dialogue early, so it opens the door to buildings that communicate more clearly, comfort more deeply, and perform more beautifully.
