ASSAP logo The new house effect
Bookmark and Share

What's making noises in your house?
What's making noises in your house?

The picture above is an exaggerated (and inaccurate!) view of the voids in a typical house. These include an attic and the areas below floorboards and behind walls. All of these could conceal objects, particularly pipework, that is capable of producing odd sounds.

These sounds tend to be the same each day. Though we might not know exactly what they are, they become familiar, however dramatic some may sound.

Investigation technique pages
Analysing cold spots
Doors that open by themselves
The 'new house effect'
Vigils in the dark?
Why use science?
What approach to investigation?
Paranormal words
What is a haunted place?
Paranormal activity or nature?
Is my house haunted?
Science applied to paranormal
Geology and ghosts
Paranormal & science theories
Geomagnetism in the paranormal
Using people on vigils
Science for investigators
Paranormal sounds
Recording EVP
Evidence is everything!

Building work

The new house effect can appear even after you are used to your house's peculiarities. What happens, for instance, if you have building work done? There could be new walls, pipework, windows, ceilings, any number of new things capable of producing odd noises.

It is quite likely that during, and after, building work in your house or flat you will get a mini new house effect. There are all sorts of new bits causing noises and some old familiar noises might vanish. So even people who have been living in the same house for years might suddenly get the feeling that there is 'someone else' there with them.

Of course, reports of hauntings often appear when there is building work on a house. It is sometimes attributed to 'spirits' being displeased at the the disturbance to the house they were familiar with. But what if there is a more prosaic explanation, namely the new house effect?

 

   

It's just the ghost!

When people first notice something odd going on in their homes, they are usually understandably reluctant to consider the possibility that it could be paranormal. However, once they have decided that it IS paranormal (for whatever reason), everything becomes paranormal! Not only are unexplained knocks down to the 'ghost' but so are apparently normal chance incidents. Anything that goes missing is now the 'ghost'. Any malfunction of a household appliance becomes suspicious. Unusual pet behaviour is attributed to supernatural causes.

Of course, not everyone reacts in this way but once the idea that a house is haunted takes hold, everything tends to be seen in a different light. Anything that doesn't have an immediately obvious cause can be attributed to the haunting.

All of these little incidents, that in other circumstances would be ignored as of no importance, now become evidence of paranormal activity.

First vigils

When you go on a vigil at an allegedly haunted place for the first time, you will inevitably be subject to the 'new house effect'. Since you don't know what normal creaks, groans and shadows to expect, they can appear like paranormal phenomena.

The best way around this is to go repeatedly to the same vigil location. In addition to identifying (and eliminating) the natural sounds and sights of a particular location, you can also establish baselines for any instrumentation you are using.

If it is impossible to return to a particular location, all is not lost. You can always take along someone who is familiar with the building along. They should be able to tell you what is perfectly normal and what is, potentially, paranormal. You can also use positional baselines to try to get some meaningful instrumental data.

If you go on vigils several times to the same place (which you should), you may well notice that repeat visits never seem as 'active' as the first visit. You may also find that people who are new to the location report the most anomalous phenomena. This is, of course, the new house effect!

© Maurice Townsend 2007