Square room with vaulted ceilings


What are your feelings on a square room with vaulted ceilings? I know square rooms are bad, but does the vaulted ceiling help matters? The room is 16' x 16', but I'm not sure how high the ceiling is. The walls are probably around 8' high and the ceiling is probably somewhere around 16' high at the peak. Would it be best to stay away from turning this into a listening room or can it work well?

Thanks in advance for any help!
ketchup
Give it a try...what is there to loose?

Do you have another option? If not, make the best of what you have.

I have a 12'X12' room with a vaulted ceiling (and another with a 7' planar/flat ceiling) and no particular problems I could relate with either, other than I might like the room to be larger. REctangular is a bonus maybe but not a show stopper. A room is what it is. If you have flexibility in locating the speakers optimally for your listening position, that is of course a bonus.

Vaulted ceilings will generally make a room sound different, often better from an openness and sound staging perspective , particularly if the ceiling is angled rather than planar.
Mapman,
Thanks for the response. This room is in a house that I'm looking at, so unfortunately I can not give it a try! I'm glad that you're getting good results in your square room, though. That's promising.
Any other thoughts?
My "audio room" has a cathedral ceiling (same thing as vaulted?) 8'-11' high. I think it sounds fine, though I do not crank the volume to extremes. But I have been told by an expert that the ceiling can act as a horn and should be treated at the seam with broadband absorption panels. I haven't tried this as I prefer sleeping in our bed rather than one of the stalls in our barn.
Square rooms are tough. Vaulted ceilings can be good--but not always. I would put your equipment in the room and take some basic frequency measurements with a test CD (we sell one) and a Radio shack SPL meter. See what the response is below 100 Hz. If you have 10 to 12 db peaks which is likely with those dimensions it's unlikely you will smooth things out without the use of a parametric eq. If your peaks are more modest then you may be able to tame them enough with appropriate trapping. If so, then you could wind up with a very comfortable listening area.

Obviously, you would need more than just bass traps--but that's going to be the biggest hurdle. If you get over that one the rest is almost certainly doable--unless you have a wall of glass or something else you haven't mentioned that could create other problems.