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sphillips72 June 26th 18 06:44 PM

Bathroom ceiling toward the walls than in the middle
 
We recently re-tiled the shower surround in our guest bathroom. The bathroom
is a smaller bathroom, 5' deep and 8 feet long. Anyway while working on the
tile, I noticed that the ceiling seemed to be lower at each end of the
bathroom than it is in the middle. So I broke out my level and sure enough
there is almost an 1 1/2 inch to 2 inch difference between the edges of the
room to the center. It's almost like a dome shape, or upside down U. Almost
like it's crowning. There are no cracks in the drywall. What would cause this
to happen? What can be done to fix it. I'd prefer not to rip out the drywall
since there is blown insulation in the attic. Would the easiest solution be to
add furring strips to the high spots to bring it level with the lower ends and
add another sheet of drywall to make the surface level?

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...e-1169559-.htm



trader_4 June 26th 18 06:55 PM

Bathroom ceiling toward the walls than in the middle
 
On Tuesday, June 26, 2018 at 1:44:07 PM UTC-4, sphillips72 wrote:
We recently re-tiled the shower surround in our guest bathroom. The bathroom
is a smaller bathroom, 5' deep and 8 feet long. Anyway while working on the
tile, I noticed that the ceiling seemed to be lower at each end of the
bathroom than it is in the middle. So I broke out my level and sure enough
there is almost an 1 1/2 inch to 2 inch difference between the edges of the
room to the center. It's almost like a dome shape, or upside down U. Almost
like it's crowning. There are no cracks in the drywall. What would cause this
to happen? What can be done to fix it. I'd prefer not to rip out the drywall
since there is blown insulation in the attic.


I think that's the key here. Since you have an attic, go do some exploring
as to how the ceiling joists run and what's going on there. That's a big
difference and something should be obvious from up there.






Would the easiest solution be to
add furring strips to the high spots to bring it level with the lower ends and
add another sheet of drywall to make the surface level?

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...e-1169559-.htm



[email protected] June 26th 18 09:03 PM

Bathroom ceiling toward the walls than in the middle
 
If you just now noticed it, why not leave well enough alone???

micky June 26th 18 10:49 PM

Bathroom ceiling toward the walls than in the middle
 
In alt.home.repair, on Tue, 26 Jun 2018 17:44:02 GMT, sphillips72
m wrote:

We recently re-tiled the shower surround in our guest bathroom. The bathroom
is a smaller bathroom, 5' deep and 8 feet long. Anyway while working on the
tile, I noticed that the ceiling seemed to be lower at each end of the
bathroom than it is in the middle. So I broke out my level and sure enough
there is almost an 1 1/2 inch to 2 inch difference between the edges of the
room to the center. It's almost like a dome shape, or upside down U. Almost
like it's crowning. There are no cracks in the drywall. What would cause this
to happen? What can be done to fix it.


Leave it alone. It's better for singing. All the opera singers and
the best popular singers have vaulted showers.

I'd prefer not to rip out the drywall
since there is blown insulation in the attic.


Then don't do that.

Would the easiest solution be to
add furring strips to the high spots to bring it level with the lower ends and
add another sheet of drywall to make the surface level?


No. The easiest solution would be to do nothing.

How long have you had the house? How long did it take you to notice
this?

Frank[_24_] June 27th 18 12:04 AM

Bathroom ceiling toward the walls than in the middle
 
On 6/26/2018 4:03 PM, wrote:
If you just now noticed it, why not leave well enough alone???

Sorta discovered this thing in my first house which was new. I put a
chair rail and ceiling rail in the dining room. I measured the ceiling
rail first on one side and cut two sections for opposing walls. The
first fit but the second came up an inch short. Someone told me that
was common to find in all houses. Rooms may not quite be rectangular.

=?iso-8859-15?Q?Tekkie=AE?= June 27th 18 07:27 PM

Bathroom ceiling toward the walls than in the middle
 
sphillips72 posted for all of us...



We recently re-tiled the shower surround in our guest bathroom. The bathroom
is a smaller bathroom, 5' deep and 8 feet long. Anyway while working on the
tile, I noticed that the ceiling seemed to be lower at each end of the
bathroom than it is in the middle. So I broke out my level and sure enough
there is almost an 1 1/2 inch to 2 inch difference between the edges of the
room to the center. It's almost like a dome shape, or upside down U. Almost
like it's crowning. There are no cracks in the drywall. What would cause this
to happen? What can be done to fix it. I'd prefer not to rip out the drywall
since there is blown insulation in the attic. Would the easiest solution be to
add furring strips to the high spots to bring it level with the lower ends and
add another sheet of drywall to make the surface level?

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...e-1169559-.htm


Since you can get in the attic check there first. If no leaks or other
misfortunes it was probably not installed correctly. Do you have a ceiling
fan or light there? It may have pulled the drywall up... I would leave it
alone. If there are no problems you will eventually forget about it.

--
Tekkie

Bob F June 27th 18 08:44 PM

Bathroom ceiling toward the walls than in the middle
 
On 6/26/2018 10:44 AM, sphillips72 wrote:
We recently re-tiled the shower surround in our guest bathroom. The
bathroom
is a smaller bathroom, 5' deep and 8 feet long. Anyway whileÂ* working on
the
tile, I noticed that the ceiling seemed to be lower at each end of the
bathroom than it is in the middle. So I broke out my level and sure enough
there is almost an 1 1/2 inch to 2 inch difference between the edges of the
room to theÂ* center. It's almost like aÂ* dome shape, or upside down U.
Almost
like it's crowning. There are no cracks in the drywall. What would cause
this
to happen? What can be done toÂ* fix it.Â* I'd prefer not to rip out the
drywall
since there is blown insulation in the attic. Would the easiest solution
be to
add furring strips to the high spots to bring it level with the lower
ends and
add another sheet of drywall to make the surface level?


It's like an igloo. Any water that condenses will run down the walls and
not drip on you from the ceiling.


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