The system features 22 Yamaha VXC4W and 18 VXC6W ceiling loudspeakers, plus a pair of VXS5W surface-mounted units |
Many House of Worship (HoW) audio installations are in existing buildings, adding sound reinforcement for the first time or replacing a life expired system. But occasionally the opportunity arises to design an audio system as an integral part of a new-build. RG Jones Sound Engineering recently did this for a brand new mosque in Leicester, choosing a complete Yamaha solution.
Baitul Ikram Mosque is the new home for the Ahmadiyya Muslim community (AMA) in the UK East Midlands. The new mosque needed a distributed audio/visual system for a complex that includes a main prayer hall, multipurpose hall, meeting room, office, crèche, library, kitchen and entrance/foyer area.
Key requirements
As well as relaying sermons from the mosque’s main prayer hall, a key requirement of the zoned system was incoming and outgoing broadcast feeds.
“We wanted to offer a one-brand installation and chose Yamaha because we knew that the Commercial Installation Solutions (CIS) range would provide the DSP and networking that we needed,” says RG Jones project engineer Jeff Woodward.
“The complex mainly required ceiling loudspeakers and the Yamaha CIS models are of excellent quality, suitable for highly intelligible speech. We knew the Yamaha DSP would be ideal for distributing local and broadcast audio around the complex and that the speakers would match the processing and amplifiers. It was a very common-sense decision.”
Yamaha CIS products
The system features 22 Yamaha VXC4W and 18 VXC6W ceiling loudspeakers, plus a pair of VXS5W surface-mounted units. Processing and amplification is taken care of by an MTX3 matrix processor with EXi8 input expander and an XMV8280 multi-channel power amplifier. The system is controlled by a DCP4V4S wall-mounted controller in the main AV rack room and six DCP1V4S in the various halls and offices.
Sound from the fixed prayer microphones and a number radio mic is distributed around the building by the Yamaha system, with control of zone output levels via the local, wall-mounted units. Meanwhile, the system also distributes audio around the complex from satellite feeds. Video is distributed to LED displays and projectors via a Wirestorm HDBaseT network.
“The incoming satellite feeds are from the AMA’s own Sky TV station, MTA International. On Fridays the main weekly sermon given by their spiritual leader, His Holiness Mirza Masroor Ahmad Khalifatul Masih V, is transmitted from their main mosque in Morden, south London,” says Jeff. “There are two audio channels, one for English and one for Urdu. The Urdu feed is played out over the PA system in the mosque, with the English feed broadcast via a wireless translation earpiece system.”
Yamaha TF1 digital console
RG Jones also provided a Yamaha TF1 digital console for the mosque’s official inauguration. The mixer took feeds from table microphones, which fed into the installed sound system via the TF1’s master outputs, with Aux feeds routed to outdoor overflow areas. An Aux output from the prayer microphones was routed via the installed system to the TF1, where it was used as a matrix to send the feed to the overflow areas which didn’t benefit from the installed loudspeakers.
“They are very happy with the audio system,” says Jeff. “The distribution and sound quality in all areas is very good, with the system providing simple control of volumes and source selection for non-technical users via the DCP series wall controllers.”