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Jennifer February 23rd 04 03:47 PM

Drywall doesn't meet ceiling?
 
I spent a large part of last weekend stripping wallpaper and removing
crown molding and chair rail from my dining room. I was surprised to
find that the top of the drywall is about an inch and a half short of
meeting the ceiling in that room. From a redecorating perspective,
it's not that big a deal since we'll be installing pressed tin
ceilings with a cornice, so the gap will be covered again, but I've
never seen this before.

The ceiling gives a little when I push up on the edges, but seems
sturdy in the middle; the whole ceiling doesn't push up.

Is this common? Is it a sign of poor construction? Is it something I
should rectify? Does anyone know if there's any kind of insulation
value lost from having it this way?

TIA for any opinions/information!

--
Jennifer

SQLit February 23rd 04 04:38 PM

Drywall doesn't meet ceiling?
 

"Jennifer" wrote in message
om...
I spent a large part of last weekend stripping wallpaper and removing
crown molding and chair rail from my dining room. I was surprised to
find that the top of the drywall is about an inch and a half short of
meeting the ceiling in that room. From a redecorating perspective,
it's not that big a deal since we'll be installing pressed tin
ceilings with a cornice, so the gap will be covered again, but I've
never seen this before.

The ceiling gives a little when I push up on the edges, but seems
sturdy in the middle; the whole ceiling doesn't push up.

Is this common? Is it a sign of poor construction? Is it something I
should rectify? Does anyone know if there's any kind of insulation
value lost from having it this way?

TIA for any opinions/information!

--
Jennifer


It was quite common in homes that were just an inch taller than standard
8-12 foot ceilings. I remember doing a home with the gap on the bottom. Home
owner was torqued but it was allowed by the local authorities at the time. I
would cut thin strips of drywall and install them. At least fire tape them
for a good seal. Check the insulation before installation of the drywall. If
there is none, you might consider sprayed foam in the walls. I had my block
home done in Tempe 3 years ago. What a difference it made. Exterior walls
only, including the garage, 1925 square feet, just under a grand.



[email protected] February 23rd 04 09:32 PM

Drywall doesn't meet ceiling?
 
(Jennifer) wrote in message . com...
I spent a large part of last weekend stripping wallpaper and removing
crown molding and chair rail from my dining room. I was surprised to
find that the top of the drywall is about an inch and a half short of
meeting the ceiling in that room. From a redecorating perspective,
it's not that big a deal since we'll be installing pressed tin
ceilings with a cornice, so the gap will be covered again, but I've
never seen this before.

The ceiling gives a little when I push up on the edges, but seems
sturdy in the middle; the whole ceiling doesn't push up.

Is this common? Is it a sign of poor construction? Is it something I
should rectify? Does anyone know if there's any kind of insulation
value lost from having it this way?

TIA for any opinions/information!


well they did a poor job of installing the sheet rock. I would
never leave a room that way. It doesnt matter a bunch if you are
doing cornice but its not correct. Insullation value is minimal
unless its an outside wall. I am not sure why you can push up on the
ceiling near the edge? Do you mean push up the sheetrock ceiling? It
should not move at all. unless you mean the tiny bit of bend between
the ceiling joists? Is this an older house or new? either way it
should have been done correctly. Good contrators do not leave gaps
like that

HA HA Budys Here February 24th 04 01:07 AM

Drywall doesn't meet ceiling?
 
Maybe the ceiling LIFTED? Do you have roof trusses?


Jennifer February 24th 04 03:48 PM

Drywall doesn't meet ceiling?
 
) wrote:

Insullation value is minimal unless its an outside wall.


One wall is, the other three are not.

I am not sure why you can push up on the
ceiling near the edge? Do you mean push up the sheetrock ceiling?

It
should not move at all. unless you mean the tiny bit of bend

between
the ceiling joists?


That's probably it. There's not a lot of give, just a little. It
feels like it's lifting a little, then bending a little.


Is this an older house or new?


Built in 1980.

It's weird, because none of the other rooms are like this. All of the
walls in the adjacent rooms meet the ceiling.

I will probably do as SQLit recommended and patch them up before we
install the cornice.

Thanks for the responses :)

--
Jennifer


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