I'm building some sort of intuitive hybrid design of all this, and I don't recall the source material...
I try to follow my ears.
The latest I was reading called for the area between the speakers to be diffusive and not absorptive.
I'm thinking the corners should be absorptive to avoid resonances/blurring from early reflection.
The way I'm going, so far, since this is my first build/final exam is to attempt a continuous transition from a controlled front wall to a live room behind it.
I will have to see how the bass nodes work when I get things in place [soon], since the front 3 walls are square and the back 5 are like half an octagon.
It's a small room 11.3'Wx10.5'Dx9.4'H; I call it a microstudio.
It's a complex space is why I am playing by ear instead of calcs; open doors [bass traps!] etc. I'll attempt to figure things out as I move back in construction from the fron wall.
Agreed that this is small for listening space. You may already know this, but since this is a new forum, it pays to explain for those readers who may not understand...
One of the "accepted" rules for listening space is in the delay between the source signal (from your studio monitors) and the delayed signal (from elsewhere in the room) at eardrum contact. If the timing difference is too short, your brain cannot separate the two signals and the result is a muddying of the content- even phase problems are perceptible which may not actually be a problem in the audio/ the flip side is that you can "correct' the phase problems perceived by your ears and wind up hurting the mix in the process.
If the delay between source and reflection is too great, it makes the audio distracting and hard to mix.
According to most criterion, the back wall is often the source of your strongest reflection, since it is in the direct path of the original sound pressure wave. If this wall is (in your case) 10.5 ft deep, and let's assume you are seated about 3 feet back from your monitors, which are centered about a foot from the wall (?)... From your ears, there's a remaining 6.5 feet of space behind you. As the waves pass your head, strike the wall, and return (even with diffusers on that rear wall), the first major reflections begin at 6.5 + 6.5 = 13 ft of travel. That's 13ft / 1130ft/s = 11.5 ms - too early for clarity. It has been argued that 18 - 20 ms is around the minimum (and even ideal) delay time for your earliest reflections without causing confusion to your ears.
Under those conditions, I'd (personally) suggest considering going with a predominantly absorptive room. Although a dead room is not ideal for listening, it will at least allow you critical listening capability without all the normal hindrances of a small room. You'd have to then train your ears not to mix too wet in that room.
Just my $0.02