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chalkandbell

I’m slap bang in the middle of a bathroom refurb at the moment (no hot water, no suite and only an outside loo) so obviously found this article extremely interesting!

I haven’t got a budget as such but we are intending to move pretty soon so wanted the room to look nice but also be functional for us for the next six or nine months while not costing the Earth.

Readers may be interested to know where we sourced what was needed. We are lucky that we have an original roll top bath (temporarily residing in the spare bedroom) The toilet and pedastel sink are traditional style and were bought online for a great price. The basin mixer tap, Hudson Reed shower, bath pipe sleeves and oval shower rail were all from eBay. Great prices and free delivery. We are replacing all the old radiators in the house with column style ones and these are also from eBay and the heated towel rail was from the same seller.

Tiles from Wickes and lovely vinyl flooring from a reliable local shop we’ve used previously.

We have an excellent local plumber (finally!!) but the tiler and builder (who is plastering the whole room for £200) are unknown quantities, having seen them advertised locally. Eek!

As with our recent kitchen refurb it is the tradesmen that push up the cost....we have ended up replacing our cold water storage tank and cylinder with a pressurised system but this will mean a decent shower at long last. It seems pointless to do what we’re doing just to end up with something as bad as we ripped out! We also have to replace our antiquated asbestos soil stack as the new toilet goes out of the wall at a different angle.

My husband has removed all the old tiles and I am painting the walls and bath. I love F & B paint but in this instance I am using Valspar paint matching to give me ‘Dimity’ on the walls at a fraction of the price.

I’m a firm believer that fixtures and fittings can be easily replaced but having the plumbing, tiling and building work done properly at this stage is money well spent! You really don’t need to spend a fortune to get something special.

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Resh
Also, consider electronic showers/bath fillers. If you are doing electrics anyway, these are cheaper than many premium (Hansgrohe etc) taps and pretty easy to install. We used Mira Mode kit for the baths, and it works brilliantly, is Wifi controllable (think running your bath from downstairs or setting showers to each person’s temp preference), and is sleek/easy to clean. Also, wetroom tanking is not hard, nor the kit expensive, but as others have said, your fitter is of paramount importance here. This picture of our guest bathroom is an underfloor shower tray and tanked floor, with decoupling mat, underfloor heating and stone tiles. Getting the floor structure and tanking right is important but so is angling the floor so that water from the bath runs into the shower tray and drains. Not easy to get right.
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Richard Leaman

Rush is right about the importance of getting the floor levels correct! We stayed in a hotel in Norfolk which was being refurbished and were the first users of a brand new “Premier” room. The bathroom was large and looked a picture but next morning, we enjoyed the open, walk in, frameless shower which was lovely to use but then the steam cleared and found a lake had formed heading into the bedroom and saturating the carpet as the whole floor was angled to drain the wrong way. The owners were rather dismayed and moved us to another room but it turned out that whilst the installers of the wet room style floor had run the shower, it was only to see if it worked and never ran it long enough to watch the water flow away. So yes...make cast iron sure that you are certain the floor is angled to drain the water properly as it flows when in use!

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