PROFESSIONAL ALLIANCE SPOTLIGHT (cont.)
a 2003 Faith & Form Religious Architecture Honor
Award. CAG’s work for St. Paul’s Episcopal Church,
Rock Creek Parish, in Washington, D.C., was featured
in the April 2005 issue of The American Organist. Also,
as one of the few consulting firms nationwide with
experience designing Shabbat sound-amplification
systems suitable for use in Orthodox synagogues on the
Sabbath and High Holy Days, CAG has worked for four
prominent New York congregations.
With proper assessment of your space and needs,
Clayton says, “Speech intelligibility (can be) enhanced
without compromising the beauty of music.” Also,
CAG ensures that neither the visual nor aural beauty of
a worship space is compromised. “In other words,” he
adds, “you can have it all!”
Top: The ceiling of All Saints Episcopal Church in Worcester,
MA, where Clayton Acoustics Group performed an acoustic
assessment and determined that a man-made soundabsorbing material applied in 1936 was actually hindering
the acoustical responsiveness. Bottom: Detail of two ceiling
bays, showing the sound-reflective wood planking (Nave Bay
#1) and the sound-absorbing material (Nave Bay #2). Photo
credit: Clayton Acoustics Group
23 • Sacred Places • www.sacredplaces.org • Fall 2010