Inside a Tampa storefront lined with sculptural speakers, glowing amplifiers and rotating student artwork, visitors to The Sound Attic sit down and listen.
The listening gallery, founded by Charles Weiner, curates high-end audio systems from around the world and directs sales into paid student internships, creative programs and travel opportunities for young artists and marketers across Tampa Bay.
Charles Weiner spent more than two decades working in federal procurement, including supporting U.S. Special Operations Command. Music remained a personal passion throughout that career. After leaving government service, he and Lauren began thinking about how a business built around sound could also support education and the arts.
“I really wanted to do something different than just opening up a regular hi-fi store,” Weiner said. “I wanted something a bit more meaningful.”
That idea became The Sound Attic, a student-led gallery where interns help run much of the operation. Students from the University of South Florida, the University of Tampa and Ringling College of Art and Design handle marketing campaigns, social media, graphic design and brand storytelling while gaining experience inside a working business.
Visitors move through listening rooms built around different audio traditions. British studio monitors anchor one room. German luxury audio systems fill another. Japanese amplifiers glow behind glass while American speakers inspired by 1970s rock sit in a separate space.
Each room highlights a different approach to sound, design and audio heritage.
“We curate systems that tell a story,” Weiner said.

A business built with students
The Sound Attic quietly opened in January and held its ribbon-cutting in early March. The business now operates with seven paid interns who take on roles across marketing, design and operations.
Weiner describes the model as experiential learning.
“They are learning by doing,” he said. “The students are doing the work. They’re guided, but they are driving the direction of the brand.”
Faith Quails, a marketing student at USF and the gallery’s lead marketing intern, has already experienced how unusual the internship can be. Before the store even opened, she traveled with fellow intern Marcella Copeland to the Porsche Experience Center in Atlanta for training tied to Burmester, the German luxury audio brand whose sound systems appear in Porsche and Mercedes-Benz vehicles.

“It was very exciting,” she said. “It was my very first business trip.”
Weiner stayed in Tampa so the students could take the spotlight.
“It really is about the students,” he said. “I am very much in the background.”
Interns also see the business side of the gallery. Weiner walks them through operating costs, including rent, utilities and revenue targets. When the business generates profit beyond operating expenses, the students help decide how those dollars support travel, grants and other opportunities.
“We keep saying, make this your capstone,” Weiner said. “Make this your home run.”
Luxury systems with a story
The Sound Attic sells high-end audio equipment across a wide range of price points. Entry-level speakers start around $1,000 per pair, while reference systems can climb into six figures or more when paired with flagship amplifiers and components.
The gallery organizes its inventory around craftsmanship and audio heritage. Systems reflect different audio traditions, from British Bowers & Wilkins engineering to Japanese Luxman components and studio monitors used in professional recording environments such as Abbey Road.
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Weiner describes the purchase of a system as something more than a transaction.
“It becomes an act of patronage.”
Customers take home handcrafted audio equipment while helping support internships, student artists and programming tied to music and design.
“There’s no place in the world where you can buy Burmester knowing that 100% of the profit supports art education and student opportunity,” Weiner said.
Listening with intention
Weiner’s connection to sound began early. As a teenager, he saved money to buy one of the first CD players released in the mid-1980s.
He still values formats that encourage focused listening instead of background streaming.
The Sound Attic recreates the kind of listening environment that once centered music in the home. Visitors sit down, play a full track and hear details often lost through streaming or phone speakers.
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“I want people to hear music as they’ve never heard it before,” Weiner said.
Student artwork rotates throughout the gallery. Each piece includes a QR code linking to the artist’s biography and portfolio. Artists keep the proceeds from any sales.
The gallery’s interior layout also came together through a student collaboration. University of Tampa design intern Chloe Green helped shape the visual concept and room layout while working with House of Fleck Interiors and House of Tropi Studio on the space.
Turning philanthropy into a platform
Lauren Weiner, Charles’s wife, built and later sold government contracting firm WWC Global, which grew into a major federal contractor before its sale to a Native American investment group. The Weiners have also supported philanthropy at the University of South Florida, including scholarships through the Women in Leadership & Philanthropy program.
The Sound Attic expands that approach into a business model designed to generate opportunities over time.
Weiner says he did not build The Sound Attic as a personal income venture. Instead, proceeds from the business are reinvested into internships, student travel and creative opportunities for the students involved.
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Interns gain real-world experience while building portfolios and industry connections. Burmester representatives have already discussed hosting students in Berlin to learn about audio engineering and manufacturing.
“We’re not looking to build more wealth,” Weiner said. “We’re looking to build more opportunity.”
The gallery’s operating model targets roughly $400,000 in annual revenue to cover costs. Sales beyond that threshold support travel programs, design competitions and other initiatives developed with the student team.

Building a Tampa Bay model
The Sound Attic has begun developing partnerships across Tampa Bay’s business community. Weiner is exploring collaborations with Porsche Tampa and the Motor Enclave, where visitors can experience Burmester sound systems installed in luxury vehicles.
The gallery also functions as an event space for listening sessions, industry discussions and gatherings that bring together faculty, students and business leaders.
Weiner sees the Tampa location as the first step in a broader vision.
“I would love there to be a Sound Attic in every city.”
Each location would partner with nearby universities while reflecting the character of its own market. A Boston gallery might feature New England artists. A Los Angeles location could spotlight film composers and recording studios.
For now, the Tampa gallery is focused on building traffic, growing sales and creating opportunities for the students helping run it.
For the Weiners, the goal is simple: turn a lifelong passion for music into a business that gives young creatives a place to learn, work and launch their careers.
To learn more about The Sound Attic, visit its website here.
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