![]() The plaster of paris acts as a hardening agent, while the joint compound keeps the mixture smooth and workable. I covered this gap with drywall tape and a 50:50 mixture of joint compound and plaster of paris, sometimes called hybrid plaster. Once the sheetrock patch was up, there was a half-inch gap between the existing ceiling and the new patch. I screwed the sheetrock directly into the ceiling joists, which of course were now easy to find since I had completely exposed them. I used a 3-foot by 4-foot panel of sheetrock to fill in the area of missing plaster. ![]() Fortunately, I was wearing a respirator, so I wasn’t breathing in the history.Īfter a shower and some intensive shop vaccing, I went out and picked up a sheet of 3/8-inch sheetrock, which is about the same thickness as the existing plaster. Some of the dust that rained down on me probably originated in Industrial-Revolution-era coal fires. It must have settled in the space above the ceiling during the century-and-a-half since the ceiling was installed. It seemed to be the sort of black dust that tends to accumulate in cities. But as I pulled down the ceiling, I was showered in sandy plaster dust, which I expected, and a thick black grime of unknown origin, which I did not expect. I did my best to set up plastic drop cloths to seal off the floor and the washer and dryer. And then I set about peeling the old plaster away in big chunks.Įvery time I remove old plaster, I think I’ll be able to contain the dust, but it never works out that way. I used a utility knife to cut a line between the loose plaster and the stable plaster to prevent any damage to the stable parts of the ceiling, and to keep the area of missing plaster as square as possible so that it would be easy to fill in with sheetrock later. The loose plaster also had the consistency of damp cardboard, so I decided to pull it all down and replace it with sheetrock. When I tried pushing the loose plaster back into place, I discovered that a bunch of plaster chunks had gathered above the loose plaster, preventing it from sitting flush against the lath. ![]() I decided to leave the hole I had created in the ceiling for the time being and moved on to the ceiling’s main problem area – a roughly 3 foot by 4 foot section of cracked and buckled plaster that seemed ready to collapse at any moment. I did my best to gently secure the surrounding plaster with more plaster buttons, but in the end I was left with a mess. The plaster in this area was so soft that it seemed to be held together by the ceiling paint and little else. ![]() But as I tightened the screw on the first plaster button, the entire plaster button punched through the crumbly plaster. So instead, I settled for screwing the plaster buttons into the lath. But as we’ve already established, joists were hard to come by in this corner of the ceiling. To fully support the weight of the ceiling, it’s best to screw plaster buttons directly into a ceiling joist. I began working in a corner of the ceiling where a small section of plaster had come loose. Then, once the plaster is secure, the plaster buttons can be hidden with a skim coat of plaster or joint compound. The idea is that the plaster button distributes the pressure from the screw and prevents the surrounding plaster from cracking. Plaster buttons are special washers that can be used with screws to secure plaster to the underlying lath. But since a large portion of the ceiling in the laundry area had completely detached from the lath, and was fighting a losing battle against the forces of gravity, I decided to use plaster buttons to reattach it to the lath. Last year, I used construction adhesive to repair the loose plaster walls in the bedroom, which worked well and seems to be holding up all these months later. I would later discover that the ceiling joists in this part of the stairwell not only run in the opposite direction from what I had expected, but are also spaced at irregular intervals. Each new hole I drilled created a little cascade of plaster dust and loosened the surrounding plaster even more. After drilling a dozen holes in the ceiling, I hadn’t found a joist. A week and a half ago, I had just started repairing the plaster ceiling in my building’s common laundry area on the ground floor of the stairwell, and things weren’t going well.
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