Last updated: 4 Jun 2026 | 11 Views |
Ton, 35, is a guitarist and freelance music producer well known in Thailand's indie scene. He converted the third-floor bedroom of his townhouse in Muang Thong Thani, Nonthaburi, into a fully equipped home studio. He invested in acoustic foam panels covering all four walls and the ceiling, laid thick carpet wall to wall, and permanently sealed the window behind two layers of gypsum board to keep the neighbors happy. The 4x5-meter room became a completely sealed box — no natural light, and not a whisper of fresh air exchange.
At first, everything seemed perfect. Guitar tracks came out crisp and clean, vocals had zero room echo, and Ton's four-piece band rehearsed there three days a week, four to five hours per session. Some weeks, outside clients booked the room for recording sessions too. What Ton never stopped to consider was this: when four grown men play music for hours in a sealed, unventilated room, where exactly do all that sweat, breath, and humidity go?
The answer: straight into the millions of open cells inside the acoustic foam lining the entire room. Every session, liter after liter of moisture from breath and sweat evaporated into the air, found nowhere to escape, and quietly soaked into the one material in the room specifically designed to absorb everything it touches.
Around month eight, Ton started noticing that every time he opened the studio door, a wave of damp mustiness mixed with stale sweat hit him in the face — the same smell as gym socks forgotten in a duffel bag for a week. He pressed his hand against the foam panel behind the drummer's spot and found it slightly damp. When he pried one panel off the wall to inspect the back, what he saw nearly made him drop his guitar: the wall behind the foam was speckled with black mold spots spreading in patches like a map of a country nobody wants to visit.
Acoustic foam is an open-cell material containing millions of tiny air pockets per panel. It is engineered to absorb sound waves — but it absorbs moisture, sweat vapor, exhaled humidity, and odor molecules just as readily, trapping them deep inside cells that no cleaning method can ever reach. In a sealed room with no windows, relative humidity after every rehearsal spiked past 75-80% and stayed there overnight, creating a dream habitat for mold and odor-producing bacteria.
And it was not just the walls. Every piece of gear in the room began carrying the smell. The pop filter in front of the microphone smelled so musty that visiting vocalists wrinkled their noses every time they stepped up to record. The three shared monitor headphones had sweat odor baked into their ear cushions. The velvet-lined guitar cases turned into another odor reservoir. Even the wall-to-wall carpet developed a sour tang on hot days.
At first, Ton treated the smell as a mere annoyance. Then one day, his biggest client — an independent record label that hired him for two to three advertising music jobs a month, worth roughly 35,000-45,000 baht in monthly income — sent a vocalist over for a recording session. Within an hour, the singer was sneezing with watery eyes from an allergic reaction and the session had to be cancelled midway. The following week, the label sent a short message: "We will be recording at another studio for now." They never came back.
Here is the damage Ton tallied up that night:
The World Health Organization (WHO) clearly states that living or working in spaces with accumulated dampness and mold significantly raises the risk of respiratory illness, allergic reactions, and asthma. In a sealed, unventilated room like a rehearsal studio, airborne mold spores get inhaled over and over for hours at a stretch — and the vocalist is the person breathing deepest and most frequently in the entire room.
Ton is not the type to give up easily. Before reaching his final solution, he spent months and nearly 21,000 baht trying virtually every fix the internet recommends. If you own a sealed rehearsal room or home recording studio with a musty smell, you have probably tried — or are about to try — the same things. Here is why each one fell short:
Moving air only skims the surface of acoustic foam. The odor and mold are embedded deep inside the cells and in the gap behind panels glued to the wall — places airflow simply cannot reach. Worse, running a powerful extraction fan defeats the soundproofing entirely, because you have to cut openings for air to flow in and out.
An air purifier only filters particles that are floating in the air and pass through the unit. But the source of the smell is mold and bacteria living inside the materials themselves — in the foam cells, the carpet fibers, the headphone cushions. Running a purifier is like bailing water out of a boat without ever plugging the leak.
Charcoal and baking soda absorb odors only within a narrow radius and saturate very quickly when the odor source is four entire walls. Sprays merely mask the smell temporarily, blending with the mustiness into a new odor that is somehow worse. One client actually asked Ton, "Are you spraying perfume over something in here?"
This is the true dead end — acoustic foam cannot be washed. It is glued firmly to the wall, and even if you could remove it, its open-cell structure soaks up water, deforms, and permanently loses its sound-absorbing properties. Replacing all the foam in the room, including installation labor, would cost another 60,000-80,000 baht — and if the room is used the same way, the problem returns within a year.
Cleaners can only wipe surfaces a hand can reach. The mold behind the foam panels, in the seams between panels, under the carpet, and on electronics that must never get wet is beyond any cleaning crew. And using wet cleaning solutions in a room packed with hundreds of thousands of baht worth of audio equipment was a risk Ton refused to take.
The turning point came when a sound-engineer friend who had worked in a five-star hotel mentioned that luxury hotels use "ozone treatment" to deal with guest rooms plagued by cigarette smoke, mustiness, and deeply embedded mold — because it is the only method where a gas penetrates every crevice and cavity that liquids and cloths can never reach. Ton dug deeper and found the Residential Ozone Disinfection service by World Health Disinfection (WHD) — a company with more than 300 corporate clients, including world-class hotels such as The Ritz-Carlton, Fraser Suites, Dusit International, and Andaz Hotels & Resorts.
The principle is simple but powerful: the team releases concentrated ozone gas (O₃) into the sealed room. Ozone is a strong oxidizer that directly destroys the structure of viruses, bacteria, and mold while breaking down odor molecules embedded deep in materials. Because it is a gas, it infiltrates the millions of open cells in acoustic foam, the gaps behind sound-absorbing panels, carpet fibers, headphone cushions, guitar cases, and every corner that is physically impossible for any other method. When the process is complete, the ozone naturally decomposes back into 100% oxygen (O₂), leaving zero chemical residue.
And most importantly for any home studio owner — this is a completely dry process. No water, no steam, not a single drop of added moisture. Audio interfaces, condenser microphones, mixers, computers, and every guitar can remain safely in the room throughout the treatment. The US EPA emphasizes that moisture control is the heart of mold prevention indoors — and the dry nature of ozone treatment answers that directly, unlike wet spray disinfection that adds even more humidity to an already sealed room.
"I have built my entire career around ears — yet the thing that almost killed my studio was my clients' noses. When the WHD team told me ozone gas would penetrate every cell of the acoustic foam, I was only half convinced, because I had already tried everything. But walking back into the room after the treatment — it was the air of day one, when the studio was brand new. The smell was completely gone. Headphones, guitar cases, the pop filter — not a trace of mustiness on any of them. And the thing I worried about most, my equipment — the condenser mics, the interface, the computer — everything is 100% fine, because it really is a dry process. I messaged my old label with photos of the room, told them the air issue was fully resolved, and they have already booked a recording session for next month."
— Ton, 35, guitarist/freelance producer, home studio owner, Muang Thong Thani
No. It is a completely dry process — no moisture and no chemical mist whatsoever. The WHD team has more than 10 years of experience serving luxury hotels whose rooms are full of electronics. Every piece of equipment can remain safely in the room.
Yes. Ozone is a gas that fills the entire room volume and migrates through the foam's open-cell structure into the void behind each panel — the exact spot that liquids, cloths, and spray droplets can never reach without tearing the panels off.
No — in fact, you should leave them in. The ozone disinfects and deodorizes all of that equipment in the same session. We recommend leaving guitar cases and any lids or covers open so the gas can reach the interiors.
After the process ends, the team ventilates the room and waits for the ozone to naturally decompose into oxygen down to a safe level. In most cases, you can return to using the room the same day. The team verifies and confirms safety before every handover, so you never have to guess whether the air is ready for a long vocal session.
Ozone destroys all the accumulated mold and odor molecules. But if the room continues to be used intensively — a multi-member band, several days a week, in a sealed space — new humidity will naturally build up again over time. For heavily used rehearsal and recording rooms, we recommend preventive ozone treatment every 3-6 months, combined with running a dehumidifier after each session, consistent with guidance from Thailand's Department of Disease Control (ddc.moph.go.th) on humidity control to prevent mold-related illness indoors.
A sealed rehearsal room, home studio, or recording booth lined with acoustic foam is an odor and mold trap that no conventional method can fix at the source — except professional ozone treatment, delivered to the same standard trusted by world-class hotels.
See Full Details of Our Residential Ozone Disinfection Service — Click HereCall now: 065-556-6294
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