Where to move the shower? 'Wet-room'?
rgrindrod
3 years ago
last modified: 3 years ago
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Sammie J
3 years agoRelated Discussions
Grout staying wet 8 hours after shower
Comments (7)"if the plumbing is behind layers of 1/2" cement backer board, paint on waterproofing (black waterproofing paint completely covers 1/2" backer board), the pan liner, and tile, how would water get to the inside of the shower pan and wick through the grout?" When I posted I didn't know how your shower was constructed. But if you have a topical waterproofing on your cement board and a pan liner on the floor, the pan liner membrane goes down and gets lapped up the walls 8" to 10" and gets stapled to the studs. The cement board on the walls goes over the pan liner. If there was a leak behind the wall, it could spray on the back of the cement board. It could run down the cement board and go between the cement board and the pan liner, wetting the mud in the floor. I'm not saying that is what's happening. But it's an option. I've seen it before. And you are correct, a water leak behind the wall could show itself in a ceiling below. With the "new news" that the grout is cracked, yes, water could be getting into that crack, thus the slow drying at that joint. In lightweight shower construction, changes in plane (wall-to-wall and wall-to-floor) should be caulked instead of grouted. The surfaces can move independently of one another. Caulk will flex with the movement, grout can crack. Also, if he used a "pan liner", it should have been set on sloped deck mud. Not flat on the subfloor, with sloped mud on top of the flat liner. The flat liner can cause moisture that gets under the tile (through your cracked grout for example) to pond. It can show as damp grout lines that are slow to dry. If the liner was sloped as required by code (which yours may be), the moisture will hit the sloped liner and flow towards the drain. If he used a topical membrane on the walls and on the floor instead of a pan liner on the floor, then all of the above is pretty much non-applicable. With a topical membrane on all shower surfaces, it's probably just latent water running down the shower head wall, or the crack in the grout storing water and being slow to dry....See MoreShower stone tiles & grout remain wet/dark
Comments (3)Do I understand correctly that to inspect/unplug weepholes, we will have to remove the stone around the drain? Is there any hope of doing that without destroying it? How do we unplug the weepholes? Are there any special tools required? It CAN be done, even as a DIY task. You need to cut the grout joints around the tiles you're going to remove, and then use a hammer and chisel. once you have the tiles out, you need to be very careful not to damage the pan membrane. All it takes is a pin prick, and the whole thing is coming out. Once you clear the weepholes, though, you need to tape them off and water test it before you put it all back together to make sure it's still watertight....See MoreBasement shower/wet room-ideas & kerdi?
Comments (1)I know some folks do this sort of shower with a toilet in it, let me tell you why I wouldn't: I think the toilet would be constantly damp and covered with water spots. Unless you have extremely soft water with no minerals and you only use liquid soaps [generally clean rinsing] and banned most hair products, I think you'd need to get on your hands and knees to dry the toilet after every shower. And remember: a curbless still needs to be lower than the surrounding floor, so the shower either has to be carved into the slab, or the slab will need to be raised. In the process of designing my house, I came up with all sorts of creative ideas to resolve space planing dilemmas. Some worked and I kept them; more didn't, and I had to keep thinking. For me, this would be in the 'keep thinking' column....See Morewet room remodel - add freestanding tub or 2nd shower head?
Comments (4)I like your idea of a double shower and a free standing tub in the current location or in the area the tub is in now, depending on what lays out best! I like the ability to shower at the same time and each have our own controls and showerhead. I would enclose the lower window so there is tile and leave a window up high that is private and lets you look out without anyone looking in at you below the neck lol....See MoreLisa
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