Why do many hotel ceilings (in the US) look like this?
Why do many hotel ceilings (in the US) look like this?
Textured ceilings probably help hide things, but why the lines?
Why do many hotel ceilings (in the US) look like this?
Textured ceilings probably help hide things, but why the lines?
Drop ceiling. That’s a panel and there’s 1-2 ft of space between it and the real ceiling. It’s much easier to run your utilities there than in the walls, and the panels make it easy to access.
With all the horror stories I heard about issues with leaking pipes or faulty electrical circuits requiring ceilings and walls to be torn down, the real question is why we don't do all the ceilings and walls like that.
This is rhe same reason I will never buy a house on slab: gotta hammer up the floor, fix, repour and refloor if you ever need those pipes down below.
Drywall is so cheap and easy, and leaks and failures so infrequent it doesn't make sense to have "easy access" to the interior of walls. Drywall is the easy access.
It's not a suspended ceiling, it's a concrete slab. It's probably a prestressed concrete slab and the lines are the individual panels. It could be poured in place but I doubt it as that would require a ton of form work and be very slow and expensive.
Yes, this answer. Try hitting it (don't). Also reduces heating costs in old properties with high ceilings.
People being confidently wrong in the comments again. It's the seam between two pre-cast hollow-core slabs. This is how every single apartment building is built at where I live.
People being confidently wrong in the comments again
Lol! Every thread. Can't say I haven't been that person, too. 😅
My garage was constructed with those at my old house. Allows you to have usable space under the garage. But it leaks when they install incorrectly -- no membrane was installed on the top side and they put the lumber walls on the same cement block as the spancrete. They are supposed to build up a half course of cement block so that the base of the lumber walls sits higher than the garage floor.
I think they're wall panels that fit together instead of real taped and bedded drywall. Probably makes it easier to replace if there's damage. Kind of like using carpet tiles instead of rolled wall-to-wall carpet.
ETA- something like this. https://trusscore.com/products/wall-and-ceilingboard.html
You can open or replace this fake ceiling square by square as behind it you may find some electrical stuff that sometimes needs to be repaired. It’s also probably cheaper.
It’s kind of the same as the floor in data centers. If you’ve been in one, the floor is a fake floor made of square sort of plastic tiles. Below that you have the cold air that goes into the servers, AC and DC power, fire and water detectors, cables road etc. You need an easy access to those fake floors or ceiling for maintenance.
The floor is a fake floor...
Have also seen grated floors for the same reason. Like a fence that you walk on, so you can actually see the cable management below
The grates allow cool air to be forced up in front of racks. Unless your company cheaped out on datacenter construction, picked a room too small, didn't leave room for the ramp to get up to proper height without breaking code on the incline, and had to rig a half-height raised floor that barely left room for electric, let alone proper air flow, so there had to be a huge air handler on top of the unit to blow cold air in the wrong places. And then bought a generator that wasn't beefy enough to cover the AC, so every time the power went out it's a mad scramble to put rolling units in place to keep the room at ~90F.
And all of the brass thought themselves geniuses for saving a few dollars.
They’re precast concrete planks that span the width of the building. You’re looking at the seams between the planks.
As many people commented, it's a gap between concrete slabs. it is more pronounced in the basement of my building, because they didn't try much at cover it.
Btw, I photographed it earlier to demonstrate the great work engineers done neatly guiding wiring and piping.
Edit: provided photo as a link
https://photos.app.goo.gl/RCsS9fJmFnp4XGbR9
Because it’s cheap.
Either it's a fake ceiling or they are slabs of concrete.
sourceOne of the best ways to understand this is to imagine a multi-storey car park. Concrete exterior walls, support pillars and wide open spaces. Now imagine it being a hotel. All the internal walls and ceilings could go anywhere. What you need is sound/heat insulation and somewhere to hide all your pipes and cables.
Quick, clean and crisp-looking are big concerns from the constructor and operators’ point of view. Whatever methods and materials work best will tend to become industry standard.
Because that's how they're made
You can tell by the way that it is.