Older home, ceilings and walls covered
Hello
We're looking at an old 3 level (walk up attic) Victorian, early 1900s. Structurally, it appears to be sound, solid foundation, straight lines, etc - however, most of the walls in the house have floor to ceiling wood paneling (nice looking wood, not 70's style!) which appears to have been put up over the original plaster, and accoustical tiles on the first floor ceiling, a dropped ceiling in a bedroom on the second floor, etc. In the 2 bedrooms that do still have walls and ceilings exposed, the walls seem OK, but there is considerable fine cracking in the ceilings. I guess what I'm asking is, how should we react to having most of the walls covered in this manner, and to have tiles or dropped ceilings? From reading various sources, this was a common way of dealing with plaster issues, but should we be considering this a good thing that all of these things were already done (it does look nice, not a shotty job by any means), or should we see this as a point of concern? Most of this stuff was clearly done many many years ago, based on the etchings and painted patterns that were applied to them. Thanks for any thoughts...