Home Improvement Interior Remodel Walls & Ceilings

Exposed Beam vs Exposed Joist Ceilings

A country kitchen with an open beam ceiling

Compassionate Eye Foundation / Getty Images

Stately, attractive, and open: an open ceiling beam look is one that many owners of conventional, flat ceilings would love to have. Exposed beam ceilings conjure up images of past ages. Farmhouse, country, and rustic-styled kitchens tend to have open ceilings.

Ceilings in conventional homes have similar structural members: joists. Can you remove the ceiling drywall and expose the joists to create an exposed beam look? Understand the pros and cons of removing ceiling drywall to expose joists by first learning about beams and joists and what the project would look like upon completion.

What Beams and Joists Are

Beams

Traditional building techniques that used beams for ceilings and floors relied on sheer size for strength. Span lengths could always be increased by increasing the width and height of the beam. At a time when old growth forests were prevalent, supplying massive beams for construction was not a problem.

Exposed Beams

Exposed beams in residential buildings were not common. When possible, post-and-beam ceilings were closed up to help hide the roughly hewn beams and the floorboards supported by the beams. Ceilings allowed owners to heat homes far more efficiently by shrinking the volume of the home.

Exposed beams have experienced trends over the years. With the advent of cheap electric heating in the 1960s, tall, arching ceilings and exposed beams once again had their heyday. Inexpensive heating made it possible to keep large room volumes warm for less money.

Joists

Like beams, joists are structural members that hold up floors and roofs. Unlike beams, joists rely on multiplicity, height, and improved wood quality for their strength.

Joists are spaced every 16 inches, far closer to each other than beams. Joists can be tall, too: up to 12 inches and sometimes more. More importantly, improved manufacturing techniques allow joists to be lean and compact, while still safely carrying weight.

Exposed Joists

Exposed joists are ceiling structural members that are made visible by removing the ceiling drywall or plaster. Sometimes, ceiling drywall is removed and the ceiling joists are substituted with other structural elements to create a completely open ceiling. Exposed joists are different: the joists stay in place to duplicate the look of beams.

Why Exposed Beams and Joists Look Different

The post-and-beam, or post-and-lintel, style of construction does not apply to most modern homes. After removing the ceiling drywall, the exposed joists will not look the same as beams.

Joists and Beams Have Different Dimensions

A joist is sized differently from a beam. You may find joists that are two-by-ten inches or two-by-twelve inches, but not the thick, square six-by-six or greater dimensions one might expect with the beam style.

The visual difference is highlighted even more when the joists are I-beam joists: a vertical section of OSB or plywood with horizontal pieces of LVL or solid wood at the top and bottom. These types of joists are not meant to be exposed.

Joists Are Spaced Closer Than Beams

Because they are smaller and weaker on a one-for-one basis, joists are spaced more frequently than beams. Joists may be spaced up to 16 inches apart from each other. It's a look that doesn't immediately register to the eye as beams, since beams are thicker and farther apart.

Joist Ceilings Have Wires and Vents

Closed ceilings have various wires and ducts snaking through holes drilled through the joists or running between the joists. If a joist-based ceiling is opened to create the exposed beam look, all of these wires and ducts are exposed, too.

Exposing Joists Pros and Cons

Pros
  • Uses existing materials

  • Unique look

  • Greater airflow

  • Increased ceiling height

Cons
  • Joists don't look like beams

  • May have obstructions

  • Reroute wires, pipes

  • Closer spacing

2 Alternatives to Exposed Joists

Achieving an exposed beam style by taking down ceiling drywall usually isn't worthwhile. Taking down the drywall is the first project. The second project is to clear out and clean up the attic. A couple of alternatives give you a similar look for substantially less effort: DIY faux beams or polyurethane faux beams.

DIY Faux Beams

For a timber-beam look in your house without using real beams, build your own faux beams out of clear, light pine. The beams are very easy to make, simple to attach to the existing ceiling, and can even be disassembled with little effort.

Faux beams are essentially three-sided boxes attached to cleats that are themselves attached to the ceiling. Screws driven in from the side attach the faux beams to the cleats.

Polyurethane Faux Beams

For a pricier but easier-to-install alternative, purchase faux beams made out of high-density polyurethane. The beams look remarkably like the real thing. And since beams are up on the ceiling and cannot be examined close-up, they usually will pass for the real thing.

Polyurethane faux beams are lightweight and easy to install. The downside is that they tend to be extremely expensive.