No "Room Correction" Topic option. Why?


I wanted to pose a question on room mods but do not see a logical place
to insert it so I am going with "Speakers" as a good, wrong choice.
Moderators, can you attend to this deficiency? 

My question: I am redoing my listening room in several ways.
Not because it was bad-quite the contrary. But because the room 
was a dark hole so I bought three new windows and replacement door.
The existing wall allowed rain water in from the patio floor outside.

 I started dismantling a 20' section of wall. As I opened the wall i found the
existing base plate-not treated wood, to be dust. Then mold on the drywall.
then termite evidence. 

Once the old crap was gone, I poured a concrete base plate 20 feet and another 6 feet
on the return. Termite damage had trashed the double sill plate and parts of two joists.

With all the wiring exposed I discovered an abandoned 220 a/c line buried in the wall.
Voila!  I had 2 dedicated 110v outlets for another part of the room. 

Might as well add 5 can lights while I was at it.

I upgraded the Streaming ethernet line from cat 5 to cat 7. Might as well
since I had sawsalled thru the old line. 
Then I learned that fiber is a better bet so I will be changing that later.

Another find! A buried abandoned entry door offering a 30" x 80" x 10" shelving
opportunity! 

I started this task by removing the old carpeting.

Now to my question. 

Shall I go with new porcelain tile flooring and plan on area rug -or-
put carpet back for its superior sound absorbing properties?

I hope someone out there has been down this road and has
an experience to share?

Thank you!


chorus
I think some might be missing half the point, which is the baseline noise floor of the room. 
Others here have suggested it, but I will reiterate that the most significant positive thing you can do for a room's modal distribution is to design it with modal distribution in mind.  With good H:W:D ratios you can do more to make a room sound good than any treatment added after the fact.  Way more.  Trying to fight bad room dimensions is a bandaid at best and phenomenally expensive if good.  Spend some time reading some acoustics books on studio control room design to understand how to control first order reflections without  treatment, and how to use treatment to fine-tune, not "fix" your room.  "Room correction" EQ remedies anomalies at the spot where the measurement is taken and usually makes things sound worse elsewhere.

You're in a unique position to fix your room problems at their root.  It would be a shame to just put it back together the same way and add various treatments (some which may work, some which may not) that fit a visual aesthetic when good ratios, construction, and geometry look purposeful and beautiful all by themselves.
Egan, you are absolutely right. The first thing one notices upon entering my music room is the quality of the silence. Not only are there no distracting noises, but the room has a positive quality of its own - sorry, but that’s the best description I can write. Could be as Tomic says, "the baseline noise floor of the room."

I would add that books and articles on acoustics often discuss H x W x D in terms of opinion and rumour instead of science. The only way, IMO, is to do very many computer simulations. Cox and D'Antonio at Salford have done all this - all the heavy lifting. I am just the beneficiary.

@tomic601 , I had the same experience at Quietrock. After talking with them I bit the bullet and paid the bucks. May your project prosper!
Tomic, you might like to know that both M1 and BuildSecure are low-odour, low-VOC, non-toxic substances. Unlike some other construction glues I could name. And elastomeric is only common sense in an active earthquake zone.