The original poster said that the client wanted an iso ground. Isolated ground. It is an insulated separate ground buss, separate from the system ground. Those are common for telecom systems, it's an orange receptacle. The idea is that the equipment ground is separate, and should not pick up any interference from other electrical equipment on the other panels.
In a recording studio, the power requirements are not that large, but clean power is neccessary. UPS systems are a good idea, and are effective isolation, but inverters can be noisy, so the unit must be of high quality. Just about all recording equipment runs on low voltage DC, and just about every piece of equipment has an onboard power supply. The ground loop problems come into play when equipment is fed from different sources. A lot of recording equipment has a ground lift switch for that reason. Usually that switch ungrounds the seconary of the power supply so that the ground loop is eliminated. That doesn't always work.
The best way to do it on a new building is to feed a separate panel from a transformer and use both an isolated neutral and an isolated ground.
Another consideration is the separation of the power wiring and the audio wiring. Most recording engineers know better, but that can be a problem as well. If the audio lines do have to cross the power, crossing at right angles should prevent inductive inteference.