My first bathroom project

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Supercoley1

Hello, I am just setting about doing my first full bathroom DIY job (not pro at all) and have managed to do most things through internet research etc.
The project in question is a bathroom that currently has a shower over bath, W/C, sink and a wall hung radiator. The room is approx 280cm across the breadth (window wall) and 270cm from the door to the window wall. There a dog leg to the room as the airing cupboard is set within this room into a seperate area on the left of the door.
I will be keeping these apart from the wall hung radiator which I want to remove and then put a towel radiator in another place. I don't have a problem with the plumbing and radiator aspect.
We have had the bathroom like this since we moved in 30 months ago and all we did was to change the bath taps for a shower mixer type, tile the shower area on the window and half the bath side wall (It only had a 420mm high splashback around the bath previous to this), put up a shower curtain rail and laminate the floor. Pretty basic 'quick' but ready to use. The picture below shows what this was like:
bath.jpg

After planning to redo the bathroom we decided to do it early July and it would take a few months to complete due to the budget (Each month we can afford the 'next step')
So on 10th July we started to plan the bathroom. The W/C and sink will remain in the same place. The Bath will still be on the wall but will be moved so that each end is an equal distance from the wall. A frame will then be built around the bath so that I can tile under the rim and make it look like the bath has been 'sunken'.
The radiator which is currently on the right as you enter the bathroom will be removed and then the plumbing redone to put a towel radiator behind the door as you enter the bathroom.
The area where the bath is will be tiled in black, white and lime green inspired by a picture on Toppstiles here:
Fusion Kiwi Wall Tile | Topps Tiles
however we don't have anywhere near the budget to use those tiles and get the exact design. I have sourced some lime green, black and white tiles that are all a lot cheaper and are 150mm x 150mm. The design of this area is here (These plans are rough guides as they don't allow for grout joints. I will line them up properly when I get the tiles to gauge the number across etc when the tiles come.)
This is the 'fold out' design and what you will see facing the bath. The lime is bit bright in these pictures where the tile I have bought is more subtler more like the ones in the Toppstiles picture:
plan.jpg

And this is the plan from above:
plan%20above.jpg

The green/black/white combo will only go as far as the bath surround and the rest will be plain white.
This is the lime tile I have bought. 2 boxes:
Tiles, Ceramic Tiles, Wall Tiles, Gloss Lime Green Tile
The floor will also be tiled with white 330x330 tiles. Very crisp very clean, very bright with the single 'feature' area of the bath drawing the focus.
I will update tomorrow on what I have done already.
Regards
AC
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hello, I am just setting about doing my first full bathroom DIY job (not pro at all) and have managed to do most things through internet research etc.
The project in question is a bathroom that currently has a shower over bath, W/C, sink and a wall hung radiator. The room is approx 280cm across the breadth (window wall) and 270cm from the door to the window wall. There a dog leg to the room as the airing cupboard is set within this room into a seperate area on the left of the door.
I will be keeping these apart from the wall hung radiator which I want to remove and then put a towel radiator in another place. I don't have a problem with the plumbing and radiator aspect.
We have had the bathroom like this since we moved in 30 months ago and all we did was to change the bath taps for a shower mixer type, tile the shower area on the window and half the bath side wall (It only had a 420mm high splashback around the bath previous to this), put up a shower curtain rail and laminate the floor. Pretty basic 'quick' but ready to use. The picture below shows what this was like:
bath.jpg

After planning to redo the bathroom we decided to do it early July and it would take a few months to complete due to the budget (Each month we can afford the 'next step')
So on 10th July we started to plan the bathroom. The W/C and sink will remain in the same place. The Bath will still be on the wall but will be moved so that each end is an equal distance from the wall. A frame will then be built around the bath so that I can tile under the rim and make it look like the bath has been 'sunken'.
The radiator which is currently on the right as you enter the bathroom will be removed and then the plumbing redone to put a towel radiator behind the door as you enter the bathroom.
The area where the bath is will be tiled in black, white and lime green inspired by a picture on Toppstiles here:
Fusion Kiwi Wall Tile | Topps Tiles
however we don't have anywhere near the budget to use those tiles and get the exact design. I have sourced some lime green, black and white tiles that are all a lot cheaper and are 150mm x 150mm. The design of this area is here (These plans are rough guides as they don't allow for grout joints. I will line them up properly when I get the tiles to gauge the number across etc when the tiles come.)
This is the 'fold out' design and what you will see facing the bath. The lime is bit bright in these pictures where the tile I have bought is more subtler more like the ones in the Toppstiles picture:
plan.jpg

And this is the plan from above:
plan%20above.jpg

The green/black/white combo will only go as far as the bath surround and the rest will be plain white.
This is the lime tile I have bought. 2 boxes:
Tiles, Ceramic Tiles, Wall Tiles, Gloss Lime Green Tile
The floor will also be tiled with white 330x330 tiles. Very crisp very clean, very bright with the single 'feature' area of the bath drawing the focus.
I will update tomorrow on what I have done already.
Regards
AC
are you keeping the shower/mixer taps? if you have a decent boiler why not sink the pipes in the wall and fit a thermostatic shower bar? be very careful with the shelf around the bath under the shower, as it will be getting a lot of water on it. any leak would be catastrophic:thumbsup:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
are you keeping the shower/mixer taps?
Yes. Budget is far too tight for a new shower system 🙂

if you have a decent boiler why not sink the pipes in the wall and fit a thermostatic shower bar?
Because this house is brick wall throughout, no stud walls. There is only a 1" plaster that
I can chisel out from.


be very careful with the shelf around the bath under the shower, as it will be getting a lot of water on it. any leak would be catastrophic
I will be tanking the shelf and all the walls around the shower (plus the floorif necessary.) I am planning on getting a longer 'hose' and positioning the shower in the centre of the wall where there is no shelf on the back wall which may help a little as hopefully the shower curtain will stop a lot of the water getting outside of the bath.

Advice and suggestions are welcome though 🙂 Will be useful to get some second opinions on most things.

AC
 
Thats alot of tanking but I like your planning style.
Very well thought out!

Maybe you could keep us posted on how you get on a and follow with the final pics?!
 
Do you think I need to tank the floor considering the shower curtain should hold the water within the bath? If I can just tank the actual bath walls and shelf that would ease the strain on the budget a little 🙂 Especially at the prices for tanking

AC
 
That should be fine mate yeah. No need to tank floors really unless you're creating a wetroom with no shower tray sort of thing.
 
Yes. Budget is far too tight for a new shower system 🙂
Because this house is brick wall throughout, no stud walls. There is only a 1" plaster that
I can chisel out from.
I will be tanking the shelf and all the walls around the shower (plus the floorif necessary.) I am planning on getting a longer 'hose' and positioning the shower in the centre of the wall where there is no shelf on the back wall which may help a little as hopefully the shower curtain will stop a lot of the water getting outside of the bath.
Advice and suggestions are welcome though 🙂 Will be useful to get some second opinions on most things.
AC
even with brick walls you can sink the pipes. just cut through the brick with a 4 inch grindette and chisel out. very messy job but worth it. i would do it but tape up the doorway so the dust remains local:thumbsup:
 
You do have the cost of a new set of taps/controls and a new shower head though 😉 Not cheap. I think it's a little too far for the budget at the mo.

The plywood and waterproofing is stretching at the mo. lol

AC
 

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