Sorry, I went off on the wrong track, for me 'Gas Turbine' means a combustion turbine. Your problem is considerably simplified by the fact that there is no air inlet and exhaust to contend with. The 85 dB(A) at three feet is the normal standard for operating personnel who are not wearing protective gear. The reduction gear, in my experience, will give you the greatest problem. It's all very well saying it's out of your scope, but when it comes to measuring sound pressure levels at 3 feet from the machine base, how can you tell the proportion of noise coming from the turbine or the reduction gear ? I'm surprised that the given untreated acoustic power is given as high as 110 dB(A), where is the noise coming from ? shaft and bearing noise should not be of such a high level. It would seem to me that most noise produced would be of mechanical origin (not combustion noise) so the transmission of vibrations through the concrete base of the turbine will be the point to watch.
Your job is made easier since mechanical noise is of a discrete frequency (with harmonics) linked to rotational speed, and not the wide-band freqencies you get with large volumes of moving air (exhaust). Consequently, knowing the major frequency allows you to better design soundproofing equipment specifically for this frequency.
One of the most effective cladding materials I have used for close enclosures (as near the source as possible) to reduce noise at 3 feet is a rockwool panel about 6 inches thick with a lead sheet (foil) membrane in the middle which is free to vibrate and therefore absorb energy. The inner face is of course expanded metal grille to expose the greatest surface area of rockwool (better than round-hole perforated sheet).