Building With Style: Cathedral Ceiling Solutions, Part I

1 MIN READ
The term “cathedral” ceiling must have been invented during the 1920s by some over-zealous real-estate agent. It has stuck, and now it is applied to any residential space that does not have a flat ceiling. Cathedral ceilings can be expressive and beautiful; especially when the interior finish follows a complex geometry of intersecting roofs and gables, as in a second floor bedroom under the eaves. But then the geometry is very simple – just a gable-ended room, for instance – simply plastering over the joists can create a strangely artificial and bland character unless the proportions of the room are perfect. In this case, exposed structure and texture on the ceiling may be called for. On a ceiling with a

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About the Author

Gordon Tully

Gordon F. Tully, an early and long-time contributor to JLC, is an architect based in Norwalk, Conn. To learn more, visit his website at architully.com.

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