Hi all,
Homeowner here.
I’m currently having my (tiny) bathroom renovated, along with a separate cloakroom/WC room.
I’m wondering what your opinions are on the tile job that they have done for me.
The job is still ongoing currently. It’s being done by a “bathroom installer”, who is a certified plumber. He employs a tiler, and has also brought in an electrician for the earlier electrical work.
I noticed that they used dot-and-dab for all tiles. After a few days I did some research and learnt that this was not an approved method. I told them my concerns about condensation and leaking behind the tiles using dot and dab. Subsequently I asked them to remove the tiles around the bath area to redo them using the correct troweling method. They accepted being challenged, and they removed the tiles without damage to the tiles, and are now relaying those correctly.
The main guy (bathroom installer, aka plumber), said that he can also replace the plasterboard after removing the tiles and tank the walls to give me peace of mind about leaking.
He has been forthcoming to resolve the issues I was unhappy with regarding the tiling and has accepted to pay for any replacement tiles required. However, I would like to get your opinion of the state of the tiling before I asked them to remove the tiles around the bath, and whether there is anything else I should be ensuring when they are redoing them and also in terms of cuts and joins.
Homeowner here.
I’m currently having my (tiny) bathroom renovated, along with a separate cloakroom/WC room.
I’m wondering what your opinions are on the tile job that they have done for me.
The job is still ongoing currently. It’s being done by a “bathroom installer”, who is a certified plumber. He employs a tiler, and has also brought in an electrician for the earlier electrical work.
I noticed that they used dot-and-dab for all tiles. After a few days I did some research and learnt that this was not an approved method. I told them my concerns about condensation and leaking behind the tiles using dot and dab. Subsequently I asked them to remove the tiles around the bath area to redo them using the correct troweling method. They accepted being challenged, and they removed the tiles without damage to the tiles, and are now relaying those correctly.
The main guy (bathroom installer, aka plumber), said that he can also replace the plasterboard after removing the tiles and tank the walls to give me peace of mind about leaking.
He has been forthcoming to resolve the issues I was unhappy with regarding the tiling and has accepted to pay for any replacement tiles required. However, I would like to get your opinion of the state of the tiling before I asked them to remove the tiles around the bath, and whether there is anything else I should be ensuring when they are redoing them and also in terms of cuts and joins.
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