Help with awkward-shaped bathroom

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Minnie

Hello

Hoping to get some good advice here. I'm attempting to do my first ever tiling job, and now that I'm unemployed, on a tight budget so can't afford plasterers etc.

It's a council house just over 100 years old and it looks like the current tiles have been placed onto a concrete wall. There were three courses (not sure if that's the correct word for a layer!) of 15-15cm tiles. The top two I've got off with no problem and have managed to get the adhesive off easy enough, but it looks like the bottom layer of tiles have been laid onto something more concrete based. I'm not sure why and I'm not sure whether to hack this off or if it's covering up something bad.

That's the first problem. The second problem is there's a few funny angles. Some people have said I'm better of sticking with small tiles, whereas others have said to get big ones for the horizontal parts and cut them (obviously more wastage if I go wrong)

I've plenty of pictures if anyone's interested.
 
bleach ain't gonna cure it Minnie (managed to open pics:hurray🙂 council have a "duty of care" and a "decent home" mandate to adhere to. Insist on a home visit with an Environmental Health Inspector, that black stuff aint gonna go away with bleach:thumbsdown:


Yes, everyone was supposed to be getting new kitchens and bathrooms before 2010. That ain't gonna happen apparently. Lambeth didn't get the funding and it's not going to happen until 2011.

Thing is, I want to get it done before Christmas as a sort of Christmas present for b/f. I had already told Lambeth that b/f had already had pneumonia and respiratory failure, but as far as they were concerned, I should open the window and clean the area with bleach.

Won't that primer stop the problem if I repaint and start ensuring the fan is used?
 
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council have a duty of care, Minnie, I'm assuming that you're still funding the council with rent! they have an obligation to maintain the property Minnie, wether they say they can afford it or not!
 
council have a duty of care, Minnie, I'm assuming that you're still funding the council with rent! they have an obligation to maintain the property Minnie, wether they say they can afford it or not!


Fair enough doug, but the problem is, this is Lambeth Council, and even if they did agree to it, it would take them months to come round to look at it, and then months to fix the problem.

If I did the tiling etc. could the problem be sorted after?
 
You need a circulation of air and to open windows to remove the moisture in the bathroom, expelair would be a good choice


Doug said it couldn't be removed? Actually, he didn't, he said the mould couldn't, not the moisture. Sorry Doug :smilewinkgrin:

We did have a big fan that broke and b/f bought another one that was tiny and not up to the job. The cord was also too short for me to reach (I'm 5ft 1in) so could never be a**d to reach to switch it on. Didn't want it coming on every time we switched light on in the winter as it was too cold so probably our own fault really.

Funnily enough, I decided to do a search and found this blog where someone with a similar problem rang Lambeth in March. It seems the problem was still not rectified in September. She did seem to want a lot done in one day though. There'd be workmen tripping over each other

Unravelled: Bathroom refurb, (in)courtesy of Lambeth Council
 
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Doug said it couldn't be removed? Actually, he didn't, he said the mould couldn't, not the moisture. Sorry Doug :smilewinkgrin:

We did have a big fan that broke and b/f bought another one that was tiny and not up to the job. The cord was also too short for me to reach (I'm 5ft 1in) so could never be a**d to reach to switch it on. Didn't want it coming on every time we switched light on in the winter as it was too cold so probably our own fault really.

Funnily enough, I decided to do a search and found this blog where someone with a similar problem rang Lambeth in March. It seems the problem was still not rectified in September. She did seem to want a lot done in one day though. There'd be workmen tripping over each other

Unravelled: Bathroom refurb, (in)courtesy of Lambeth Council
the spores are the health hazard Minnie, apart from that, if you tried tiling over where there appears to be an obvious water/moisture ingress, your tiling is doomed to failure, a cement based or dispersion adhesive will not adhere to a damp substrate, call the council, and point them to this thread!!
 
the spores are the health hazard Minnie, apart from that, if you tried tiling over where there appears to be an obvious water/moisture ingress, your tiling is doomed to failure, a cement based or dispersion adhesive will not adhere to a damp substrate, call the council, and point them to this thread!!


The condensation is at the top and around the windows though, not lower down where I plan on tiling, although I do realise thata spores are floating about in the air.

I've got a feeling you don't know much about Lambeth Council. They're not one of the better councils. :smilewinkgrin:

I'm more likely to suffer a nervous breakdown dealing with them before I get anything off them.
 
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