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Acoustic ceilings for open-plan offices: cutting noise without lowering the ceiling

Open-plan offices look great on plans but sound terrible without acoustic design. Suspended ceilings are often the most cost-effective place to absorb reverberation — if you select the right tiles and layout.

Understanding NRC

Noise Reduction Coefficient (NRC) indicates how much sound a tile absorbs. Higher NRC values reduce echo and improve speech clarity. For call-heavy teams, aim higher than the minimum “office standard” tile.

Rafts and baffles

Where full grids are undesirable — exposed services, heritage conversions, industrial aesthetics — acoustic rafts and baffles target reflection points while keeping volume and character.

Practical tips

  • Pair ceiling absorption with absorbent wall panels in meeting pods
  • Do not rely on carpet alone in high-ceiling spaces
  • Test tile layouts against your lighting design before ordering

We provide acoustic guidance as part of our ceiling surveys — not as a separate upsell.