rieferman is correct. You can't leave foam board exposed. Not only is it flammable, when it does burn it generates toxic smoke, something I wouldn't want below my bedroom.
It also seems substandard, even for 1985, to build a bedroom above an unheated/un-airconditioned garage without insulating the floor of the bedroom. I'm not understanding why the insulation is needed in the garage for these houses, if there is living space above them.
Appreciate the thoughts on the flammability (word?) of the foam board. I'll heed that advice. Don't need to burn the garage down, much less the house. As for not understanding insulating the garage, the temps fluctuate in there a whole lot in the day. While it is not heated or AC'd, insulating would keep it more stable. In turn keeping the room above it more stable. From a work mess standpoint working on the garage is easier than the bedroom. Also, the portions of the garage walls that are exterior are not insulated, but the walls that share it with the house interior are insulated. The stupid thing is, the very same walls that are exterior portions on the first floor are exterior walls for the second floor in the master bedroom on all three sides (south, west, north).
If you blow it in, you might consider using a metal detector to find the wiring/plumbing and consider leaving spaces with it empty for future renovations.
Noted. There is pluming up there from the master bath and guest bath. There is evidence of that on the ceiling
Exposed foam insulation is a No-No, for fire/safety reasons. As mentioned.
IIRC, it will also break down if left exposed and is exposed to UV (aka sunlight or in your possible case, UV from welding arcs).
Also, you'd have to add some pretty thick pieces of foam board to get a 'decent' R-value. Probably about as thick as the ceiling joist cavity is. Cause most insulation materials are (usually) pretty close in R-value/thickness. No free lunch there.
Do it once and do it right. Pull the drywall, install insulation and vapor barrier, install drywall (with screws!), spackle. Done.
Your bedroom will be cooler/warmer AND quieter with the joist cavities/space between the bedroom and the garage insulated.
IMHO, trying to put blown insulation into the floor/celing joist cavities (garage ceiling joists are the bedroom floor joists in this case) is one of those 'Possible but probably not the best ways to do things' things.
And I am also shaking my head and thinking "WTF!?##$" for a builder -AND- the building codes putting a bedroom over a garage with NO insulation. WTF?
No insulation in the garage walls, I can sort of see that one. But no insulation on ALL the 'exterior' wall/floor/ceiling of the heated/cooled house space? WTF?!?!?
Somehow in 1985 'they' ignored or forgot about insulation? 1920's or 1930's or maybe up to the 40's or 50's, but come on. 1985 and there was no insulation?
I'm glad you mentioned something. Blown in on the ceiling does seem kinda messy if/when the ceiling drywall is finally pulled down. Am I thinking correctly here?
I know this should be done right. I was just curious if anyone heard about putting foam board on the ceiling like my neighbor did. The condition of the ceiling drywall is not the best. I'd like to pull it off but I'm trying to keep that urge at bay for the meanwhile. I'm just talking through this. I've got to get the garage walls done and the shed built outside. Doing too much at once!
Here's a pic of our setup. I figure it is better thane trying to describe it in writing. The green line in the garage indicates insulated walls in the garage. Blue outline & text is the second story of the house.
The garage temp fluctuates
a lot. I work from home and I'm in and out of the garage throughout the day. I have observed and felt those temperature differences in the garage and in the master bedroom, in the winter time and in the summer. I think I might go get some thermometers and put one in each place and show how much these numbers one in one day. In the summer its brutal from the afternoon sun. (I plan to insulate the garage door as the heat just radiates from it). In the winter the north wall of the master bedroom (and my walk in closet) is a fridge. We just had more insulation blown in in the attic over the bedroom so looking forward to seeing how that helps.