Hello!

I have a small dilemma. I'm going to partition a room. The downside is the slanted ceiling, but that can be solved quite easily anyway. The big problem I'm struggling with is that the wall also needs to be at a slight angle so I can fit another door.

So, build the slanted ceiling and also add a type of 20-30 degree angle on the interior wall. How can this be solved most easily?

I don't know if my useless sketch helps, but I hope someone understands what I mean :D
 
  • Sketch showing a sloped ceiling intersecting with a proposed angled wall. Labels indicate "Front beam," "Back beam," and "Top view" for room division planning.
Probably don't quite understand what you need help with? Isn't it just a matter of framing the wall? Is it the angles you need help with?
 
Unfortunately, your sketch doesn't help, as it doesn't show where the windows, doors, and slanted ceilings are.

The image of what a slanted ceiling is adds nothing.
 
Is it just sloping ceilings? Is there room for a standard door? If the room on the left has a section with straight ceiling, angle the door 45 degrees and open it towards the usual high wall. Maybe a sliding door between the rooms?
 
Hello!
Yes, maybe the picture wasn't very sensible. But the small image in the top right corner is a top view of how the interior wall should curve in the room. The ceiling is slanted, so the angle for the interior wall will be quite tricky at the top given that it doesn't go straight through the room.

However, I do have a carpenter on the way to take a look at it :)
 
It's not particularly complicated actually. I've done a similar operation myself. A bit of high school trigonometry and you're all set.
 
That was where the shoe pinched. But a solution I thought of is to make the angles straight instead. Then it becomes easier in the ceiling :crysmile:
 
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