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| Cutting This simple, white drywall ceiling is broken up over the kitchen by an opening to the floor above. To its left we can see the stair heading up. The wood in these openings echoes that in the kitchen counter below. |
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| Another view of the space shows the stairs next to the kitchen, echoed directly outside. Let's take a look upstairs ... |
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| This bedroom has an unusual feature, a skylight above the headboard. The light it adds to the room is tangible, and it breaks up an otherwise plain-Jane white ceiling. |
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by emily jagoda
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| Materials White drywall and plywood top this living space. The latter goes a long way to break up the space and to link the overhead plane to the wood wall at right. |
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by Specht Harpman
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| In this bedroom, wood walls run along the sides while a taller white ceiling with boxed-out beams makes up the center portion over the bed. The design is like an inversion of an exposed wood structure with white drywall below it. |
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| A view from above shows how the ceiling extends past the mezzanine's glass guardrail. It's a unique touch, if another surface to dust. |
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| This kitchen uses a similar tactic, but here it is rendered in another color and material and receives an exhaust hood. The ceiling gives some intimacy to the kitchen and seating area at the island, while also housing the flue; otherwise the latter would enter oddly into the drywall ceiling. |
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| Stepping Different heights can also work toward breaking up drywall ceilings. As in the previous example, the lower ceiling gives intimacy to this kitchen, but the living area has more breathing room. |
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| Looking from the living area to the kitchen, you can (barely) see another use of the stepped ceiling in the top right corner. A diffuser shows that the air supply can be put into the vertical surfaces, leaving the ceiling free of grilles. |
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| Stepping/Layering Here is a living area with a stepped ceiling much like the previous example. Yet the band of light on the wall at right hints at the layering that is going on as well. |
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| The low ceiling at right — seen from the opposite direction of the previous photo — reveals the clerestory windows that sit between the two ceiling planes. These high windows help bring in natural light even when the blinds are closed for privacy. More: Ceilings: The Fifth Element Cuckoo for Coffered Ceilings |
The clerestory windows were creatively done; the drywall underneath creates a light shelf (a greening strategy to bring daylight further into a space), without the expense or look of the commercial product - a great idea for a north-facing space.
Actually, I find the lighting in all of these spaces to be rather dull - it's all ambient. No task lighting (aside from those pendants over the one kitchen island) and definitely no sparkle/accent lighting! I realize that they were going for the minimal look, but one can design minimally with more dynamic lighting.
The lack of color - aside from a few red barstools and the extended yellow soffit - is rather disturbing as well. Can a space not be modern and colorful at the same time? I'm convinced that people who live in beige and gray houses live beige and gray lives. These are some beautiful spaces, but there won't be colorful parties in any of them.