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Truss Uplift
An Uplifting Experience
From the Carson
Dunlop Technical Library
Truss uplift has nothing to do with plastic surgery or under- garments. It is a phenomenon
common in homes built with roof trusses as opposed to rafters.
If a house suffers from truss uplift, the top floor ceilings literally lift off the
interior walls in the winter. They drop back down in the summer. Needless to say, this is
a tad disconcerting to the homeowner. At first glance, one might assume that the floors
have settled. Actually the ceiling has gone up - sometimes creating a gap of as much as
two inches where interior walls meet the ceilings.
What is a Truss?
Trusses are prefabricated structural assemblies which hold up the roof and the top floor
ceilings. Trusses tend to be a stronger lighter and less expensive approach to roof
framing.
Trusses are strong because they make use of the most efficient geometric shape we know of
- the triangle. Trusses are a series of triangles fastened together with gusset plates.
The outside members of a truss are called chords while the inner pieces are known as webs.

Why Truss Uplift?
Houses have changed over the years. Attics of newer houses have lots of insulation and
ventilation. They also have roof trusses instead of rafters and ceiling joists. The bottom
chord of a truss is buried below a deep blanket of insulation. Even on the coldest days
the bottom chord is nice and warm. The top chords however, are above the insulation and
get very cold in a well ventilated attic. While the bottom chord is warm and is drying
out, the top chords are doing just the opposite. The cold winter air has very high
relative humidity. The top chords absorb moisture from the air causing them to elongate.
With the top chords growing and the bottom chord shrinking, the truss arches up in the
middle causing the ceilings to lift off the walls. In the summer, the cycle reverses
itself.
What Is The Problem?

No problem really - from a structural point of view. But cosmetically it's another story.
No one has yet solved the problem, but some builders mask it by securing the ceiling
drywall to the top of the walls and not to the trusses for a distance of 18 inches away
from the walls. The drywall flexes and stays fastened to the walls while the trusses lift
above it.
Others use a decorative moulding where the walls meet the ceilings. They fasten the
mouldings to the ceilings but not to the walls. As the ceilings move up, the mouldings go
with them hiding the gap.
One little tip to remember. If you're redecorating, always do it in the winter when the
ceiling is at its highest point. Otherwise you'll have a stripe around the room
below the moulding next winter!
See also: Partition Separation
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