- Aug 10, 2002
- 5,847
- 154
- 106
Bought a new home and it came with a drop ceiling in the bathroom and kitchen; both of which I promptly removed. I dont like drop ceilings as they have no place in a humid environment like bathroom.
When removing them, I could see the reason for their installation. 2 family house, one unit one top of the other, both with same layout so the drop ceiling makes accessing the second floor kitchen and bathroom plumbing easy by removing first floor drop ceiling.
So for reasons of accessibility, I'd like to keep the drop ceiling and making me have second thoughts about installing a drywall ceiling.
I see there are drop ceiling tiles that are decorative alternatives to the traditional tiles. Anyone ever used them?
If I put the ceiling back into the kitchen/bathroom, I want something that wont absorb cooking odors or attract humidity like the traditional porous gypsum ceiling tiles. While the decorative tiles are a plus, I'd like them to be functionally better or I just might put in a drywall ceiling instead. Your thoughts are appreciated.
When removing them, I could see the reason for their installation. 2 family house, one unit one top of the other, both with same layout so the drop ceiling makes accessing the second floor kitchen and bathroom plumbing easy by removing first floor drop ceiling.
So for reasons of accessibility, I'd like to keep the drop ceiling and making me have second thoughts about installing a drywall ceiling.
I see there are drop ceiling tiles that are decorative alternatives to the traditional tiles. Anyone ever used them?
If I put the ceiling back into the kitchen/bathroom, I want something that wont absorb cooking odors or attract humidity like the traditional porous gypsum ceiling tiles. While the decorative tiles are a plus, I'd like them to be functionally better or I just might put in a drywall ceiling instead. Your thoughts are appreciated.