Who we help

Clear technical guidance for the people and groups closest to the issue

Bouman Acoustics supports people and groups who need independent technical guidance about data center noise. The audience is often diverse, but the underlying need is consistent: a calm explanation of what the issue may be, what information matters, and what next step makes sense.

Residents near existing or proposed data centers

Individual residents often begin with a simple question: is what I am hearing normal, temporary, or something that deserves closer attention? Bouman Acoustics helps residents understand likely sources, identify what to document, and decide whether a more formal review is warranted.

Homeowners associations

HOAs often need a more organized technical perspective that can serve multiple households at once. Bouman Acoustics helps review neighborhood concerns, interpret project materials, and structure technical questions in a way that supports constructive communication.

Neighborhood groups and community coalitions

Informal or organized neighborhood groups often need a shared technical foundation before meetings, outreach, or public comment. Bouman Acoustics helps these groups move from scattered observations toward clearer documentation and more defensible next steps.

Community attorneys and related advisors

Attorneys and advisors working alongside residents or neighborhood groups may need help interpreting acoustical issues, permit language, likely source behavior, and measurement strategy without overstating conclusions.

Secondary audiences

Also relevant for planning groups, municipalities, and journalists

In some matters, local planning participants, municipal staff, and journalists also need concise technical interpretation in plain language. Bouman Acoustics can help explain common source types, expected concerns, and the practical significance of acoustical documentation or permit conditions.

Contact strategy

If the issue involves data center noise, start with a technical first look

Early clarity can prevent wasted effort and improve the quality of follow-up questions, documentation, and decision-making.