And so it begins... Completed...

PerryGunn said:
No more pictures from me today - yesterday they took off more old plaster and removed existing buried pipes/cables then drew lines all over the place to work out cable and plumbing runs so not much to show really.

My wife had an interesting chat with the electrician who spend ages with her discussing light positioning and the different bulb colour temperatures and how they'll look with the tiles. We're getting some cool proximity-sensing light switches though, they're installed behind the tiles and you just touch the tiles in the right area to switch the lights on/off - no more pull cords and the perfect man toy to confuse visitors :D

wait until the "old-man" memory hits in and you're playing pat-a-cake with the tiles to get the lights on :D
 
Well, as we're now two weeks into the bathroom refurbishment, I thought it was time for an update.

So far I can't fault the people doing the work, they are very attentive to minor details and spend a lot of time with us discussing all the fine points. Most of the work is being done by a single fitter who has been fitting bathrooms for the company for over 18 years - so he knows his stuff - he calls in additional people/trades as he requires them. It seems to work well as he is in overall control of the job and can schedule additional labour or visits from their electrician etc. as required They also have an overall project manager who monitors a number of jobs ensuring that they're on schedule and the correct equipment/products are delivered in good time. We had one minor hiccough when the bulk of tiles turned up and they were the wrong colour - turned out the PM had ordered the wrong colour code - but it was spotted immediately and the correct ones ordered.

There's also been a fair amount of additional work that is 'hidden', e.g. we installed a new condensing boiler and megaflow hot water system in the attic a few years ago and, during severe winters, the condensate pipe from the boiler is subject to freezing where it runs under the eaves to discharge into the drains - we've had this re-routed so it now runs internally and connects into the bath waste.

The room ended up being stripped back to bare brick, the ceiling was plasterboarded, holes cut for the new lights and the electrician hung temporary lighting in place so that the fitters could see what they were doing
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The hall-facing cupboard was demolished and reconstructed to the correct size for the new layout, adding a radiator recess
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Then the rest of the room was boarded out to give a decent surface for tiling and all joints filled/sanded
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Ceiling has been skimmed and coving added. A nice touch was the addition of some marine ply at the top of the wall edge of the coving which will allow the top row of tiles to slide behind and give a neater finish
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The wall by the door was plastered in a more traditional way to ensure that it was square to the other wall and could finish flush with the door carcass
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Cutouts for shower controls and pipework for the rain shower and pencil shower heads
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Boarding up the cupboard and radiator alcove
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Initial installation of shower controls and pipework. Central temperature control and separate flow control for each shower head
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Initial installation of bath controls and pipework - same control set as the shower with a central temperature control and separate flow controls for bath and pencil shower head
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Bath in place and boarding around controls. The silver thing in the corner of the bath is the holder for a pull-out pencil shower head
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There we are, halfway through, we're 'coping' by having showers at work/friends/family but pleased that it's only another two weeks and the end is in sight :)
 
Taz said:
when i win the lottery i will build my own house
Nah, if you win the lottery let someone else build it for you - but you can sit and watch while quaffing caviar and champagne surrounded by a bevvy of beautiful babes :wink:
 
pvr said:
Where is the HiFi? :D
I wouldn't pay someone else to install something like that :P

I'm not particularly fussed about music in a bathroom as I take showers rather than long baths but, if Cindy decides she can't live without listening to Bruno Mars while she relaxes in the bath surrounded by scented candles, I'll install some ceiling speakers for her
 
Taz said:
just a thought, why are you using copper pipe? i always use plastic these days
I'm not - the bathroom fitters are. :)

I think that plastic is easier if you're doing DIY as it's push-fit and you don't need to learn how to bend and solder copper but, on the downside, you need more space to get plastic pipe to go round corners etc as it's not that flexible so you can't bend it into tight curves and need to use the push-fit 90 degree connectors which are a fair bit wider than the pipe. Our central heating pipework is plastic under the floors where it can't be seen but reverts to copper for the visible sections such as the radiator flow and return pipes.

For something like this where you want rigid pipework that follows quite a tight path you can't beat copper - and it just looks so much nicer....
 
PerryGunn said:
Taz said:
just a thought, why are you using copper pipe? i always use plastic these days
I'm not - the bathroom fitters are. :)

I think that plastic is easier if you're doing DIY as it's push-fit and you don't need to learn how to bend and solder copper but, on the downside, you need more space to get plastic pipe to go round corners etc as it's not that flexible so you can't bend it into tight curves and need to use the push-fit 90 degree connectors which are a fair bit wider than the pipe. Our central heating pipework is plastic under the floors where it can't be seen but reverts to copper for the visible sections such as the radiator flow and return pipes.

For something like this where you want rigid pipework that follows quite a tight path you can't beat copper - and it just looks so much nicer....


all makes sense
 
It's now the end of week 3 and things are starting to come together, all the 'invisible' stuff has been done and it's beginning to look like a bathroom - the plumbing/drainage/electrical bits are essential but, because they don't have much visual impact, they make it feel as though everything is progressing very slowly

We had our old cast-iron soil pipe removed and replaced - the iron one went in the skip and, within about 15 minutes, some pikies were pulling it out and throwing it in their van to sell for scrap
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The new, larger, shower tray was fitted and connected to the waste
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Floor has had a layer of ply (glued and pinned) to provide a nice flat surface for the final floor - the strip next to the shower shows the colour of the flooring that will be going down
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Then tiling started - this made a huge difference and is the thing that makes it start to look loike a bathroom again
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So it's another 2 days of tiling & grouting then the lighting, toilet, sink, shower cubicle, flooring etc. can be fitted - projected finish date is Friday 31st and we can't wait :lol:
 
sars said:
Looking good, bet you can't wait :thumbsup:
You said it Sars, Cindy is literally counting down the hours

I've been showering at work during the week which isn't too bad but Cindy's been having to visit our daughter in the evening after work and a shower, cup of tea and quick chat has been adding well over an hour a day to her schedule - which throws everything else out
 
Machine monkey said:
Great work Perry bet you can't wait to have the first shower :thumbsup:
Cindy has already called 'dibs' on that one... although, if I'm lucky, I might be able to sneak in there with her :lol:
 
do your shower controls have a large square cover or something? strange for the tile to be cut like that and not circular drilled.

should look good that when its done
 
Beetlegav said:
do your shower controls have a large square cover or something? strange for the tile to be cut like that and not circular drilled.

should look good that when its done
Yes, there's a large flat plate that fits over them
 
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