Finishing the attic 1.
Finishing a trussed attic.
To meet all three goals insulating your finished attic ventilating the roof and maximizing headroom use a combination of dense batt insulation rigid foam sheeting and air chutes.
If you ve measured your attic space and feel you have enough room to accommodate living space chances are you have rafters or you have special trusses called attic trusses which create a large open space under the peak of the roof.
If the roof slope is steeper than 9 inches in 12 inches of run it doesn t take much width to end up with a nice room 12 feet wide with an 8 foot ceiling.
I have this above my own garage.
Nail them to the rafters and angle nail the center support to the top edge of the horizontal brace.
Your attic is now ready for finishing.
Instinctively eyes will be drawn to the sloped ceiling in most attics so it s a good.
The lyons used a web of 16 inch deep engineered trusses to accommodate wiring plumbing and ductwork then topped the plywood subfloor with oak or tile.
Cut the ends to the same angle you used for the pony wall studs.
Most codes require a specified minimum amount of headroom and it s tough to meet this requirement when insulating a finished attic especially since most codes require insulation equal to r 38 or more.
Before you put up wallpaper or decorate.
Prime and paint the walls.
By contrast conventional trusses have supports called webbing that zigzag through the attic space.
Attic trusses have a rectangular shape inside each truss.
It may take 2 to 3 coats to cover the new drywall.
This completes the reframing process.
Attic floors generally need to be reinforced with additional joists and a subfloor.