Discuss Bathroom tiling nightmare - HELP in the Bathroom Tiling Advice area at TilersForums.com.

M

Mrs. Buckets

Hi there,
A bit of professional advice needed please. We moved into a flat about 2,5 years ago and the bathroom had been newly refurbished. Already for about a year now I had been looking at the grouting getting "porous" and beginning to crack. Some of the tiles seemed to start poking out as well. It was only after a leak was apparent on the other side of the bathroom wall that we decided to take the bathpanel apart (no access hatch...) to see what was going on and it seemed there had indeed been a leak for a while as the drylining (?) was grooved around the bath. Initially I thought that the Silicon around the bath and the shower screen was faulty so I redid this and when that didn't work it became apparent it was the grouting that was leaking.
I then went ahead and removed the tiles from two of the walls and that wasn't too hard at all as the drylining (I am assuming that is what it is; very thin plastered type of layer - I am a woman with no experience in these things) under the tiles was so wet it was practically off the wall. We are now looking to have someone come and tile the walls for us (a problem in itself finding someone...) but what I really want to know is how can we make sure the walls are protected in the future. What material to use under the tiles, is there specific grouting etc. I would like to be armed with some information so I can also vet anyone who might eventually come and quote for the job. We are pretty desperate as we (2 adults and 2 kids) are currently having shower hunkering in the bath so as not to get the walls wet.. Also if you can recommend someone willing to do this in W9 with a rock solid reputation and skills I would be very grateful!
Sorry for the long saga but I really don't know where to turn to.. HELP!
Thanks for any comments you would take the time out to write.
Buckets
 
O

Olz

Hi Buckets,

You need to ensure that the walls are tanked, there are a few different solutions, paint on kits, stick on sheeting......

Have you got any pics...

The plaster will have been chased out when the bath was fit if its chased horizontically around the lip of the bath when it was fitted, not as a result of leaking.

As extra peice of mind you could also have the a grout sealer applied.

Oli
 
D

DHTiling

Hi there,
A bit of professional advice needed please. We moved into a flat about 2,5 years ago and the bathroom had been newly refurbished. Already for about a year now I had been looking at the grouting getting "porous" and beginning to crack. Some of the tiles seemed to start poking out as well. It was only after a leak was apparent on the other side of the bathroom wall that we decided to take the bathpanel apart (no access hatch...) to see what was going on and it seemed there had indeed been a leak for a while as the drylining (?) was grooved around the bath. Initially I thought that the Silicon around the bath and the shower screen was faulty so I redid this and when that didn't work it became apparent it was the grouting that was leaking.
I then went ahead and removed the tiles from two of the walls and that wasn't too hard at all as the drylining (I am assuming that is what it is; very thin plastered type of layer - I am a woman with no experience in these things) under the tiles was so wet it was practically off the wall. We are now looking to have someone come and tile the walls for us (a problem in itself finding someone...) but what I really want to know is how can we make sure the walls are protected in the future. What material to use under the tiles, is there specific grouting etc. I would like to be armed with some information so I can also vet anyone who might eventually come and quote for the job. We are pretty desperate as we (2 adults and 2 kids) are currently having shower hunkering in the bath so as not to get the walls wet.. Also if you can recommend someone willing to do this in W9 with a rock solid reputation and skills I would be very grateful!
Sorry for the long saga but I really don't know where to turn to.. HELP!
Thanks for any comments you would take the time out to write.
Buckets


If you let me know where you are..( Location) then maybe i could recommend a good tiler for you.


I've moved your thread to the Tiling forums where it will get seen my alot more people to assist you in getting advice, you'll need to register to reply though but it only takes a minute and is free so dont worry about that.


This is a guest post and cannot be replied to by a guest in the tiling forum mate..


Moved back to guest forum..
 
M

Mrs. Buckets

Thanks for your replies, everyone!

I have had a few guys come over and the general consensus seems to be that the whole bathroom will now need to be retiled as the chances are the new tiles would not match the old ones (different batch). Argh! How likely is this going to be and how noticeable? The tiles seem to be a 13 in a dozen type, slightly off-white, 10cmx20cm.
Tanking around the bath, as Oli mentioned. What is the best way of doing the tanking? Is membrane the best way?
Regarding the location, we are in London W9 (Maida Hill).

Oh and, I tried to register but my activation email never arrived. I might try again later but am currently busy hitting my head on the bathroom wall.

Thanks again!!!
 
B

Buckets

Thanks for all your replies!

I have had a few guys over and the consensus seems to be that the whole bathroom will now need to be retiled as the likelyhood of the new tiles (even when the same kind as the original tiles) matching the old ones is slim. Apparently there are slight colour and even size differences in different batches... So we have just gone astronomical with the quotes.

Tanking has indeed been suggested, I assume membrane is the best way. And flexible grouting and anti-mould Silicon.

Oh, and we are in London W9 (Maida Hill) in case anyone knows someone who is really good and can do a good enough job to make sure I will never have to worry about our bathroom again. :)

Thanks!!!
 
B

Buckets

Hello,

It is me again. Ok, it seems that the opinions on the bathroom job fall into two categories:
1. tank around the bath and tile the whole bathroom to make sure tiles will match
2. no tanking required, use PVA (I thought this was a no-no?) and tile using the special grout. Only tile the two walls that have been exposed. Tiles might be a bit different but after a few weeks this is not noticeable.

The tiles are 10cmx20cm, slightly off-white metro style tiles.

I really don't know anymore.. Any expert opinions?

Thanks!

Buckets
 

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C

cuttintiles

the best corse of action after a faliure is rip out and start again (imo).

you could prime the walls with a tilers primer (NOT PVA!!!!!) apply a tanking system to the bath area, retile, grout with a good quality grout (like ultracolour)
apply new Silicon seals and job done.

this is going to be more expensive but the best solution, alternativly :

prime the exsisting two walls, retile, grout and Silicon seal again, less expensive, less time but not as good a job
(imo).

best of luck
 
B

Buckets

Thanks cuttintiles. Amazingly all the contractors so far are insistent on the PVA and look at me like I am crazy when I question this.
The contractor today thought the tanking was unnecessary but it seems to me that you might as well put it in..
Ultimately the situation is that we are going to be in this flat for another year max and then selling it on. So what I am after is a solution that will do the job and will last but is not a whole remodelling.
Do you reckon just doing the two walls will end up looking odd?

Thanks!
 
C

cuttintiles

as i said beforw buckets, the best corse of action is rip out and replace, unless you have 4/5m2 of the same tiles knocking about your house!
if you do not then you need to go to the tile shops with one of your tiles and match them, those tiles are redily available but ofcorse different batches of tiles mean they can be a different colour and or a different size!
the size part is more important than the shade of white as they will be on opposite walls to the originals.

hope this helps
 
M

mikethetile

I would tank as its an over bath shower

I think you will struggle to match the tiles as theres a shade variation between batches. trying to match and getting a colour variation will only highlight a previous problem when you come to sell , the same with the shade variation on the grout

one idea to think about is to pick a different colour metro tile and grout and make a feature of it

care needs to be taken if the plasterboard has been saturated that it has dried out without any damage and is still structurally sound

plaster skim needs priming with a suitable primer, not pva

any tiler that reccomends pva needs crossing of your list
 
B

Buckets

Thanks "mikethetile" and "aph257" for your comments. This confirms to me that the few quotes we received so far are a bit suspect..

What about putting an aquaboard or similar on the wall and tiling on that? Would that help with the tiles staying up (no, I really would not them falling off! :lol:)? This is such a nightmare... It really is hard to find someone who REALLY knows what they are doing. It's crazy that someone like me with no knowledge of tiling can question things like the whole PVA thing without these guys knowing anything about it. Drats. :mad2: <--- the bathroom wall
 
M

mikethetile

yes you can use aquaboard if you wish or use ordinary plasterboard and tank , often works out cheaper

its a shame that more people dont have your common sense when it comes to these matters, it would save a lot of people heartache

you wouldnt buy a car without finding out about it first so why choose a tradesman without finding out whats involved in the job and the correct way to do it
 

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Bathroom tiling nightmare - HELP
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