Full AVL refit for US church
Published: WORSHIP
US: Located on the outskirts of Columbus, Ohio, Cypress Wesleyan Church (CWC) has a congregation which now stands in excess of 2,000 members, a very accomplished contemporary orchestra and a thirty-voice choir. However, for years the church limped along with an imperfectly implemented DIY sound system in a room that was far from ideal. CWC recently constructed a new 1,200-seat sanctuary adjacent to its existing facilities that is ideal in every respect. The church hired Curt Taipale of Taipale Media Systems to design its A/V/L system, and he relied on Danley Sound Labs loudspeakers and subwoofers.
The aged sound system in the old sanctuary was cobbled together over the years and its well-meaning creators paid no heed to properly aligning the loudspeakers, resulting in peaks and vales of volume and frequency response throughout the seating area. When the moment arrived to start anew, CWC hired an all-star crew to make the new sanctuary beautiful and functional. The McKnight Group built the sanctuary, and Summit Integrated worked closely with Taipale to turn the A/V/L system into an ideal reality. ‘It was an excellent team,’ said Mr Taipale. ‘We were all very flexible and accommodating so that every aspect of the new sanctuary, including its visual aesthetic and its sonic aesthetic, came together perfectly.’
For example, Mr Taipale requested that the side walls and back wall be tipped downward to minimise room modes and echoes, and the builders obliged. A modest assortment of absorptive and diffusive wall panels complement the structural modifications to deliver an even reverb. Mr Taipale’s principle challenge was the sheer width of the room. ‘We originally considered an LCR system, but the budget wouldn’t allow for it,’ he explained. ‘Instead, I designed a mono system arranged in an exploded arc with a delay ring and flown subwoofers.’
Five spaced Danley SH-50s cover the main seating area, with a Renkus-Heinz TRX81/9 under each for down fill. Four more Danley SH-50s form a delay ring. Although he considered distributing subwoofers on the floor, his Bose Modeler analysis program suggested a better solution. ‘I flew four Danley TH-115 subwoofers as a cardioid dipole array,’ he said. ‘It would have been hard to offer proof of concept to the church had it not been for the Bose Modeler software, and it would have been impossible to deliver such an impressive amount of clean, undistorted bass had it not been for Danleys. The bass really kicks at Cypress!’ Lab.gruppen C68:4 amplifiers provide power and two Biamp Nexia DSPs provide input conditioning and a modest amount of loudspeaker conditioning.
The Yamaha M7CL was the first choice for the FOH console, but tech director Nathan Wurschmidt was drawn to incorporating the Roland M48 personal onstage mixers for the worship team. A brief introduction to the Roland M400 digital console convinced Mr Wurschmidt that it would be both volunteer-friendly and easy on the budget. So the installation includes the Roland M400 along with the REAC digital snake system and just one M48 mixer to start, with the intent to add more mixers as budget allows.
'I’m a huge fan of the Danley sound,’ said Mr Taipale. ‘It is remarkably honest, delivering spoken word that is perfectly intelligible and music that is full of definition and life. As a systems designer, I appreciate that the full-frequency Danley SH-series boxes have very well-defined pattern control, down to 300Hz. Within that pattern, the frequency response is smooth and not at all ‘beam-y.’ A walk across Cypress Wesleyan’s new sanctuary is incomparably more even with Danley than it would be with any other manufacturer.’
Supporting the audio solution is a visual system also installed by Mr Taipale. ‘The technical director, who I worked most closely with, has a theatre background,’ said Mr Taipale. ‘As such, he was very interested in the lighting.’ Mr Taipale gave him an 8x8 lighting grid above the stage from which to hang fixtures. All lighting is by ETC and includes a number of moving-head lights. Three Sanyo 10,000-lumen projectors complement three screens placed nearly edge-to-edge along the back curtain. Summit Integrated designed and installed a video capture system as well.