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Collected Transients

Sound Effects for Sound Designers

Home Sound Effects Library Implosion
Implosion

Implosion

Rated 5.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating
(1 customer review)

$100.00

Implosion is an extreme sound effects collection of buildings being destroyed by explosives.

SKU: CT_008 Categories: Sound Design, Sound Effects Library, UCS Metadata Tags: building, collapse, debris, dynamite, explosion, explosive, implosion, rubble
  • Description
  • Specifications
  • Reviews (1)
Implosion is a intense sound effects collection of buildings being destroyed with explosives.

This collection features 10 unique building implosions recorded across the country. Each implosion is recorded with 4 to 14 channels of audio. To offer multiple perspectives, mics were placed as close as 50m (~150ft) and as far away as 600m (~2000ft) from the various explosive demolitions.

What’s included?

  • Large Office
  • Steel Mill
  • Bank
  • Cooling Towers
  • Stadium Roof
  • Dormitory
  • Hospital
  • Medium Office
  • Small Office
  • Stadium

Library Preview

Each building implosion includes multiple mixes of microphones and perspectives:

  • Full: All microphones from all distances and perspectives mixed together in a way that fully captures the best qualities of the implosion
  • Main: A mix of the main microphones. True to the experience of witnessing the implosion in person
  • Mono: A straight shotgun mic recording with less reflections from surroundings
  • Distant: Mics left to record at varying distances from the implosion, capturing thundering tails and reflections
  • Alternate Perspectives: From reverberant parking garages and reflections behind buildings, to extra close or distant recordings

Each sound effect in Implosion is provided in two formats:

  • Processed: Various mic layers are dynamically processed with compressors/limiters to bring out the best elements from each implosion. Volume automation and light EQ are used to enhance the sounds of rubble as the buildings collapse, which can get lost in the extremely loud explosions.
  • Edited: Only global gain adjustment to each mic layer of the sound effect. No plugins are used and the full dynamic range of the original recordings are retained. Great for the times you need more control in your sound design.
ultrasonic implosion sound effects

Ultrasonic Content

Like every other sound design library from Collected Transients, Implosion is recorded at 192kHz/24bit so all of the delectable ultrasonic content is properly captured. “But I’m not a dog!” you say, “I only hear to a mere 20,000 Hz.”

Fret not, Sound Designer, the ultrasonic content in these collections is captured to allow you to massively pitch-shift and process the sounds while retaining fidelity and revealing elements you couldn’t perceive before. Don’t take our word for it. Listen to demos and learn more here!

Thorough UCS Metadata

Implosion offers thorough UCS compliant metadata that works across all popular audio database software. Each file is embedded with exhaustive information about the recording. Aside from the usual ‘description’, many other fields are available that provide useful tidbits like recording notes, microphone information, category, and sub-category. All sound effects also come embedded with an image showing exactly what was being recorded.

View Implosion Files/Metadata


This Implosion sound effects library is the culmination of a year of plane flights, road trips, hotel rooms, thorough planning, and changing those plans on the spot. Each implosion recording was an intense experience and the final product is no different. Learn more about each implosion and perspectives included below:

Large Office Implosion Progression
Large Office Implosion – Martin Tower – Bethlehem, PA
650,000 sq/ft | 21 Stories | 450 lbs Explosives

This behemoth stood as the tallest tower in Bethlehem for almost 50 years. Two series of wonderfully punchy dynamite explosions brought the massive building back down to earth in around 17 seconds, leaving plenty of time for rubble sounds from mass amounts of steel and reinforced concrete.

  • Full – 200m + 300m | (650ft + 1000ft)
  • Main & Mono – 200m | (650ft)
  • Building Reflections – 300m | (1000ft)
  • Inside Car – 200m | (650ft)
Steel Mill Implosion Progression
Steel Mill Implosion Spectrogram
Steel Mill Implosion – Weirton Steel Mill – Weirton, WV
420,000 sq/ft | 370 ft Tall | 750 lbs Explosives

A metal leviathan, the Weirton steel mill could only be brought down with a truly massive explosion. An explosion so loud, with a shock wave so strong, it shattered an entire neighborhoods windows, and destroyed one of the microphones used to record it.  The mass of pure metal slowly crumpled to the ground releasing over 50 years worth of steel dust and debris.

  • Full – 100m + 450m | (300ft + 1500ft)
  • Main & Mono – 100m | (300ft)
  • Distant – 450m | (1500ft)
Bank Implosion Progression
Bank Implosion Spectrogram
Bank Implosion – Pasadena State Bank – Pasadena, TX
84,000 sq/ft | 12 Stories | 600 lbs Explosives

This glass covered brick building was brought down with two series of timed explosions. Known as “Pasadena’s first skyscraper”, it met it’s demise after 17 years of vacancy. The implosion consists of wonderfully thuddy and sharp explosions followed by a nice mixture of brick and glass debris falling to the ground. Total demolition cost: $2.5 million.

  • Full – 150m + 200m + 250m | (500ft + 650ft + 825ft)
  • Main & Mono – 150m | (500ft)
  • Distant – 250m | (825ft)
  • Building Reflections – 200m | (650ft)
Cooling Tower Implosion Progress
Cooling Tower Implosion Spectrogram
Cooling Towers Implosion – Brayton Cooling Towers – Somerset, MA
250,000 sq/ft | 500 ft Tall | 1800 lbs Explosives

Not one tower… but two! This was a world record implosion: the tallest cooling towers ever imploded. Constructed over a 2 year period at a cost of $600 million, the two structures took around 12 seconds to fall to the ground. That’s $50 million a second! The implosion consists of two simultaneous blasts that thunder out across the bay. The concurrent blasts, combined with the towers’ height, provides great constant concrete debris.

  • Full & Mono – 600m | (2000ft)
Stadium Roof Implosion Progression
Stadium Roof Implosion Spectrogram
Stadium Roof Implosion – Bradley Center – Milwaukee, WI
160,000 sq/ft | 150 ft Tall | 400 lbs Explosives

This enormous stadium was in the process of being demolished when crews realized the safest way to bring down the roof… was with explosives. Makes sense, right? The massive metal and glass covered roof and brought down with a simultaneous blast, with plenty of debris and glass shard sounds at the tail.

  • Full & Mono – 100m | (300ft)
Dormitory Implosion Progression
Dormitory Implosion Spectrogram
Dormitory Implosion – Carmichael Tower 3 – Nashville, TN
105,000 sq/ft | 14 Stories | 400 lbs Explosives

The folks at Vanderbilt University wanted to tear down the four “Carmichael” towers, but apparently had a real disdain for tower three in particular, as it was the sole tower slated for demolition via implosion. Using a continuous series of blasts, it fell in around 10 seconds.

  • Full – 50m + 200m + 250m + 350m | (150ft + 650ft + 825ft + 1150ft)
  • Main & Mono – 50m + 200m | (150ft + 650ft)
  • Close – 50m | (150ft)
  • Distant – 350m | (1150ft)
  • Parking Garage – 250m | (825ft)
Hospital Implosion Progression
Hospital Implosion Spectrogram
Hospital Implosion – Southshore Hospital – Miami Beach, FL
150,000 sq/ft | 10 Stories | 250 lbs Explosives

When this hospital was finally ready for implosion, it was nothing but a reinforced concrete shell. A steady series of sharp explosions toppled it to the ground. The bare structure made for some wonderfully authentic large concrete rubble sounds.

  • Full – 50m + 150m | (150ft + 500ft)
  • Main & Mono – 50m| (150ft)
  • Distant – 150m| (500ft)
Medium Office Implosion Progression
Medium Office Implosion Spectrogram
Medium Office Implosion -Building of the Southwest – Midland, TX
85,000 sq/ft | 9 Stories | 200 lbs Explosives

Smack in the middle of downtown Midland, this concrete and glass structure stood vacant for decades waiting for it’s demise. Two series of dynamite explosions were used to topple the building. The urban environment provided this implosion some great reflections.

  • Full – 200m + 250m + 400m| (650ft + 825ft + 1300ft)
  • Main & Mono – 200m| (650ft)
  • Distant – 400m| (1300ft)
  • Parking Garage – 250m| (825ft)
Small Office Implosion Progression
Small Office Implosion Spectrogram
Small Office Implosion – Arthritis Foundation Building – Atlanta, GA
130,000 sq/ft | 5 Stories | 200 lbs Explosives

One of the smaller buildings in this library, but you couldn’t tell from the explosions! A set of massive methodical detonations followed by rapid blasts brought this concrete structure to the ground. Close mic placement captured wonderfully clean explosions and concrete rubble.

  • Full – 50m + 150m + 400m| (150ft + 500ft + 1300ft)
  • Main & Mono – 50m| (150ft)
  • Distant – 150m| (500ft)
  • Very Distant – 400m| (1300ft)
Stadium Implosion Spectrogram
Stadium Implosion – University Hall – Charlottesville, VA
80,000 sq/ft | 100 ft Tall | 450 lbs Explosives

U-Hall, as the students called it, was put out of commission in 2006. The stadium stood vacant for 13 years, and fell in just 15 seconds. Two separate sequences of dynamite blasts turned structure to dust.

  • Full – 150m + 200m| (500ft + 650ft)
  • Main & Mono – 150m| (500ft)
  • Building Reflections – 200m| (650ft)

Size

1.75 GB

Length

~34 min

Sound Effects

42

Files

84

File Type

.wav

Resolution

192 kHz/24 bit, 96 kHz/24 bit, 48 kHz/24 bit, 44.1 kHz/24 bit

Equipment Used

DPA 4006TL, DPA 4060, Earthworks TC30, Instamic Pro Stereo, Oktava MK-012, Sanken CO 100K, Sennheiser MKH 60, Sennheiser MKH 8040, Sony PCM-D100, Sound Devices MixPre-10T, Zoom H4n

1 review for Implosion

All reviews are from verified owners. Own this library? Submit your own review and get a free copy of our "Feedback" library. Each review is manually verified for ownership. Please allow us some time to send your free library!

  1. Rated 5 out of 5

    Charles Maynes – November 23, 2020

    The implosion library is a great resource to expand any library with great destruction sounds

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