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10 vs 12 foot ceilings in new construction
Posted on 4/21/14 at 7:41 am
Posted on 4/21/14 at 7:41 am
Wife and I are working on plans with the house designer and downstairs ceiling height is a point of contention. We are building a 4,000sq foot colonial.
We both agree 10 foot is adequate but I am concerned about potential resale... Isn't 10 foot the standard these days?
Wife is concerned that if we do 12 foot everything will look disproportionate because of the extra room and that we will have to buy custom doors, etc, which will eat into our budget. Any thoughts, MB?
We both agree 10 foot is adequate but I am concerned about potential resale... Isn't 10 foot the standard these days?
Wife is concerned that if we do 12 foot everything will look disproportionate because of the extra room and that we will have to buy custom doors, etc, which will eat into our budget. Any thoughts, MB?
Posted on 4/21/14 at 7:47 am to Rev1897
12 foot ceilings will not be something that people will bitch about unless they want to bitch about something. It is an upgrade and a unique feature in no uncertain terms. I don't know what to say about the door fears, just to say that the fears are not based in anything grounded in reality IMO.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 7:50 am to Rev1897
8-9 foot is kind of standard. 12 foot is pretty tall and is mostly done just in the living room/foyer. I'd stick with the 10 foot. You still probably want 8 foot doors and windows. The cost really isn't all that much more. I mean, if you can swing it 12 foot would be nice but 10 will in no way hurt resale
Posted on 4/21/14 at 7:57 am to Rev1897
We went through the same thing and decided to compromise and do 11 downstairs. We didn't have to increase door sizes and it gives us the extra foot. Everyone always thinks they are 12 because you can certainly tell the difference over 10. I would highly recommend it.
ETA: we did 9' upstairs in the kids bedrooms and guest room. And 10' in the master upstairs.
ETA: we did 9' upstairs in the kids bedrooms and guest room. And 10' in the master upstairs.
This post was edited on 4/21/14 at 8:01 am
Posted on 4/21/14 at 8:08 am to Rev1897
12' in living/family, maybe a study is a nice feature. Most construction right now is 10' down and 9' up as standard in my area. I understand what you're saying about down the road 10' being the 8' of today, you could alway hedge and do 11' with 8' doors, aesthetically that would look fine and you could bump area mentioned above to 12' to give a little dimension.
I've got 10' throughout, with cathedral in living room to 13', trey and master to 11', 9' upstairs. One thing about 10' is you will never be able to go back to 8 or 9, spoils you big time
I've got 10' throughout, with cathedral in living room to 13', trey and master to 11', 9' upstairs. One thing about 10' is you will never be able to go back to 8 or 9, spoils you big time
Posted on 4/21/14 at 8:15 am to Rev1897
Whatever you choose, 8' interior doors are a must, which will look proportionate on 10-12' clgs. I hate 6'8" doors.
I would do the bedrooms at 10' and everything else at 12'.
I would do the bedrooms at 10' and everything else at 12'.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 8:20 am to TigerDeBaiter
Do they make an 11' 2x4? If not you are buying a 12' and spending money on labor to have it cut a foot. At that point, 12' might be cheaper, same with drywall 3 sheets 4' tall vs labor to cut a sheet...
Posted on 4/21/14 at 8:30 am to wickowick
quote:
Do they make an 11' 2x4? If not you are buying a 12' and spending money on labor to have it cut a foot. At that point, 12' might be cheaper, same with drywall 3 sheets 4' tall vs labor to cut a sheet...
True, but he's worried about the aesthetics of 12' with 8', which I can understand. May look willy wonka ish
Posted on 4/21/14 at 8:33 am to Rev1897
I designed my own home and went into the design with the assumption that I would have 12 foot ceilings everywhere. By the time I finished the design I only had 12 foot ceiling in the living room, dining room, study and guess bedroom (all down stairs). The kitchen had 9 food ceilings.
All the rooms upstairs were 9 foot with 10 foot vaulted ceilings except the bathrooms and kids study.
If you use 8 foot doors and crown molding you will still get that "grand feeling" with 9 foot ceilings. Furthermore, a change in ceiling height from room to room really added a nice juxtaposition between each room even though some of the rooms were only separated by archways. That is, contrasting ceiling height turned out to be a nice feature.
All the rooms upstairs were 9 foot with 10 foot vaulted ceilings except the bathrooms and kids study.
If you use 8 foot doors and crown molding you will still get that "grand feeling" with 9 foot ceilings. Furthermore, a change in ceiling height from room to room really added a nice juxtaposition between each room even though some of the rooms were only separated by archways. That is, contrasting ceiling height turned out to be a nice feature.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 8:34 am to Rev1897
I subcontracted my house about ten years ago and built the house with 12 in the living areas and 10 in all the bedrooms,this is pretty common.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 9:59 am to Rev1897
We built our house 4 years ago. All of downstairs is 10' except living area which is 11'. In the dining room we did 10ft with a 1' tray ceiling. Have 6" crown for all 10', triple crown in living room and double crown in dining room. Came out really nice. I would suggest going with 8' door/openings to all areas with 11' or 12' ceiling heights.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 10:21 am to ScottieP
Thanks for the suggestions all. Can you compromise at 11? I wasn't aware that they made 11' 2 x fours
Posted on 4/21/14 at 10:26 am to Rev1897
quote:
Thanks for the suggestions all. Can you compromise at 11? I wasn't aware that they made 11' 2 x fours
That's what we did. I don't remember if they just cut them or not. If you are in the Metairie area you are more than welcome to check out my house if you would like. Ceiling height and New vs Old bricks were by far our toughest decisions when we went through this.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 11:23 am to Tigersfan
Tigersfan, Shoot me an email- lsfeagle at gmail if you wouldn't mind.
Thanks for the help all.
Thanks for the help all.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 11:34 am to Rev1897
we have 12 foot ceilings in our house and in our last house. Its a bit harder to keep looking neat but it really makes a room pop.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 11:49 am to aaronb023
quote:
8-9 foot is kind of standard. 12 foot is pretty tall and is mostly done just in the living room/foyer. I'd stick with the 10 foot.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 11:55 am to Rev1897
quote:
I wasn't aware that they made 11' 2 x fours
My framers used 10' precut studs then built a knee wall to get the desired 11' ceilings.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 11:58 am to Rev1897
Built last year. Ihave 12' ceilings in living room/dining room/foyer and 10' every where else. 8' doors throughout the house though. 12' just makes it look a little grander to me.
Posted on 4/21/14 at 12:12 pm to Rev1897
My parent's house is 12 feet throughout the entire first floor. Doors are 7', then 2.5' of Transom, then the picture molding drops down 2' from the ceiling and the gap is painted the same color as the ceiling.
This post was edited on 4/21/14 at 12:16 pm
Posted on 4/21/14 at 1:31 pm to Rev1897
depends on price range under 300K 10 may be ok but when you get above that new construction is moving toward 12 and 14 in living areas you could go to 10 with tray ceilings in bed rooms
And if you are thinking resale- max out the crown mldg in living and master bedrooms- lesser crown in other rooms
And if you are thinking resale- max out the crown mldg in living and master bedrooms- lesser crown in other rooms
This post was edited on 4/21/14 at 1:32 pm
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