Bath to walk in shower.... questions

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Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
Never thought it would happen but health dictates.
Do I go local or are any of the BIG companies worth trying.
My thinking is that with the BIG companies that is what they do so 'should' have good ideas.
We all know of these salesmen who quote eg £10K.......then phone the boss to find today's special offer is £2K....... don't want that.
 

fossyant

Ride It Like You Stole It!
Location
South Manchester
Local all the time
 

Kingfisher101

Über Member
My mother was quoted 2K for this job a few years ago.
I'd get 3 quotes from local people I've had good success with Tradespeople I've got off My Builder. You post the job then interested people reply and you can see their feedback etc. They all have been great who I've had and I've not been ripped off.
 
D

Deleted member 26715

Guest
@Dave7 I don't think it's just health issues, I think it's the sign of the times, I'm looking at exactly that currently, we took our bath out a few years ago & then considered selling the property, 2 of the estates agents came round & said, 3 bed house, that's a family house they will expect a bath so we put one back, then decided not to sell :laugh:. But now it's more acceptable especially if on a water meter, but as always the best thing is recommendation, failing that, MyBuilder, Checkatrade, or one of the websites, if you can be bothered to get several quotes.
 

oldwheels

Legendary Member
Location
Isle of Mull
We removed the bath as my wife could not manage getting in or out even with assistance so opted for what is called a semi wet room with shower. This meant ripping the whole interior out and lining the walls and the floor upturned all round so no water can escape. There is a curtained bit at the shower but only one side needs to be used. Very practical. It is a very small room anyway but we got local tradesmen to do the job at about £7000 about 7 years ago.
I find shower cabinets are a PITA as they are very restricting.
 

Electric_Andy

Heavy Metal Fan
Location
Plymouth
Yes I'd always go local. My partner had this done but as part of a help for heroes grant (or similar). She just has one permanent (immovable) screen and it works well. In a smaller room, I think a shower tray is a trip hazard so best left open IMHO
 
D

Deleted member 26715

Guest
@oldwheels assuming this is upstairs how did they deal with the doorway? I'd like to go wet room type, but always thought you had to have a slight slope to get rid of the water to the drain?
 
@oldwheels assuming this is upstairs how did they deal with the doorway? I'd like to go wet room type, but always thought you had to have a slight slope to get rid of the water to the drain?

If you position the shower right, a small rubber flap on the door and an appropriate joint on the threshold would do the job.
 

T4tomo

Legendary Member
@oldwheels assuming this is upstairs how did they deal with the doorway? I'd like to go wet room type, but always thought you had to have a slight slope to get rid of the water to the drain?
you do need a slope somewhere.
if you need wheelchair access then that's the only was to go, if you can cope with a stem then a small step upto a long large gently sloped shower tray in a corner think shower area and drying off are , with one fixed glass wall 2/3 length at the shower end maybe a better was to go, otherwise your floor is always wet all over the whole room, which is a PITA if you only pop in to clean your teeth and get your feet wet or slip on a wet floor.
 

Tenkaykev

Guru
Location
Poole
I'd certainly go local. I'd be very wary of the big companies, they may not have their own team of installers and just sub out the installation work as cheaply as they can.
 

oldwheels

Legendary Member
Location
Isle of Mull
If you position the shower right, a small rubber flap on the door and an appropriate joint on the threshold would do the job.
It is a ground floor installation I have and the shower is about 6ft away from the door. There is a tray about 4ft square under the floor covering which slopes to the drain. There is a 3ft high door and two curtains but only one is needed and the water gets nowhere outside the immediate shower area.
I have been in other wet rooms with no barrier or curtain and the water does spread in those cases.
 

icowden

Veteran
Location
Surrey
Do I go local or are any of the BIG companies worth trying.

One of the key factors in this is how you want to pay for it. If you have the money then probably a local company to fit exactly what you want. If you need to pay for it over 4 years on 0% finance however, then you are going to need to use a big company.
 

Pale Rider

Legendary Member
My local authority has a list of approved contractors for this type of work.

Your authority may be the same.

Still no guarantee, but a lot less chancy than sticking a pin in Checkatrade.

I recently did something similar, ripping out the bath for a shower.

My bathroom is ground floor which made a walk-in more of an option.

The builder, who was on the council list and a lapsed acquaintance (this being Sunderland), told me the walk ins were OK, but seemed to get tatty and grubby faster than others.

And he wanted to dig up the concrete floor to make a gradient, adding more costs.

The solution in my case was a large tray surrounded on three sides by custom made white polycarbonate sheet.

That's floor to ceiling, tied in, and solid as a rock.

I was advised the clear plastic cabinets from the DIY sheds are to be avoided.

Inevitably, there's a step on mine of a few inches to get in, which a younger fit person would barely notice.

Could be a problem if my mobility declines a great deal more.

By the way, there's no window on the right hand side, that's just a reflection off all the shiny new surfaces.

588061
 
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