Tiling the downstairs bathroom (part two)
Following on from fitting the new shower cubicle, the next job in the downstairs bathroom was to tile the other walls to match those of the shower cubicle. Here’s how it looked at the start, on the opposite wall is the toilet, vanity unit and washing machine, with tiling part way up the wall beside the toilet and behind the basin.
Grouting, lots of grouting, and then I could put everything back into the bathroom.
First job was to cut the silicon sealant off from around the sink, disconnect the taps, and carefully remove the sink. If I had of dropped it then I’d be in the do-do for sure:
In France, unlike in the UK, they don’t fit isolating valves underneath the sink. So when I’d removed the vanity unit and wanted to turn the water back on, I had to then re-connect the tap to the pipework, tie the tap handle down to stop the water coming on, and work around it as I continued work in the bathroom. What a pain.
Stripped all the old tiles off the wall using my SDS hammer drill, great fun and quite quick and easy to do:
And then on with tiling the wall, using the bottom of the existing mirror as the reference point and ensuring that the tiles line up horizontally with the others in the shower cubicle.
Its a bit fiddly but basically you count the number of whole tiles required down the wall, and allowing for the tile gaps and grouting, cut a part-tile to go in as the bottom row. Lots of use of the spirit level and repeated measuring to make sure everything is square and true so that as you tile up the wall it all lines up with the required height.
Grouting, lots of grouting, and then I could put everything back into the bathroom.
Putting the sink vanity unit back in place proved to be troublesome because I moved the vanity unit a few cm to the left as I’d originally installed it too close to the washing machine which meant that it was really difficult to jiggle the washing machine out from the gap if you ever needed to get to the back of the machine.
Moving the vanity unit slightly to the side meant I had a bigger gap for the washing machine, but then when I had fitted and silicone’d the sink in I found that the flexi tails on the taps weren’t long enough to reach the pipework. Grr, another trip to Mr Bricolage to buy some longer tails for the taps ...
Moving the vanity unit slightly to the side meant I had a bigger gap for the washing machine, but then when I had fitted and silicone’d the sink in I found that the flexi tails on the taps weren’t long enough to reach the pipework. Grr, another trip to Mr Bricolage to buy some longer tails for the taps ...
Although I’ve written this as one continual sequence of activities, it actually took me about 4 days of solid work over a week to do all this. It does look a lot better though.
Labels: Renovations
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