How They Pulled It Off: A Ceiling That Conceals Recessed Lighting

In photographer Andrew Rowat’s kitchen, custom paneling made of particle board creates indirect light and cleverly hides the mechanicals.

How They Pulled It Off: A Ceiling That Conceals Recessed Lighting

In photographer Andrew Rowat’s kitchen, custom paneling made of particle board creates indirect light and cleverly hides the mechanicals.

When photographer Andrew Rowat and his longtime friend and former officemate, architect Delnaz Yekrangian, began renovating his Toronto townhouse, they were already operating under a compressed timeline. Rowat, in short order, got married, became a father, and welcomed his first son, and the home, located in the city’s Roncesvalles neighborhood, was in need of a gut renovation. 

The arrival of the pandemic, Yekrangian explains, threw an additional wrinkle into the work, but she and Rowat devised a plan: "We had to be very strategic about where we could interfere or intervene with the existing house and where we couldn’t," says the founding partner at Aleph-Bau. Rowat, who previously split his time between New York and Shanghai, has photographed spaces and structures on all seven continents, and Yekrangian, also based in Toronto, has worked in Rotterdam, San Francisco, and her native Iran, with an emphasis on repurposing existing buildings. The pair met when they held adjoining studios in a former distillery building, and have stayed friends for nearly a decade, leaping at the chance to collaborate on a project that allowed them to put their combined talents to use.

Yekrangian says Rowat is detail-oriented (so much so that he served as the project manager of the entire renovation), and the team looked for spots to create, as she puts it, "space to do something a little bit different—and also to have some fun."

The ceiling is just cleverly-arranged particle board, but its visual impact is undeniable.

The ceiling is just cleverly-arranged particle board, but its visual impact is undeniable. 

Andrew Rowat

One such spot was the kitchen, where space came at a premium. To add both visual interest and a system for concealing light fixtures, Rowat and Yekrangian looked up—at the ceiling, to be exact. One of Rowat’s goals was to create indirect light; the house, he says, did have recessed lighting, but he wanted to use them as infrequently as possible.  With these two goals in mind, the pair devised a clever solution.

How They Pulled It Off: A Paneled Ceiling That Cleverly Conceals Lighting
  • Sourcing materials for the paneling was easy: they went to Home Depot and picked up particle board, which was then painted to match the walls.
  • The paint was Benjamin Moore Chantilly Lace OC-65 meant to match both the cabinetry and the Corian countertops.

  • The slope in the ceiling panels also serves another need: it conceals a 10-inch exhaust pipe for a six-burner Bluestar range. 

  • It’s a very small space, so we just really followed the modules of the kitchen cabinets, which themselves were mostly driven by function," says Yekrangian.

  • Behind the sloped ceiling, they also filled the voids with sound attenuation material to prevent noise from traveling into Rowat’s young son’s bedroom.

A drawing of the kitchen ceiling panel.

A drawing of the kitchen ceiling panel.

Aleph-Bau


Further detail shows the materials, angles, and construction of the paneled ceiling.

Further detail shows the materials, angles, and construction of the paneled ceiling.

Aleph-Bau

See the full story on Dwell.com: How They Pulled It Off: A Ceiling That Conceals Recessed Lighting
Related stories: