I've got a wet room bathroom that seems to be constructed by the wall panel being glued onto plasterboard which is on timber studs.
If I wanted to move the basin and/or towel rail, how much of a headache would this be in terms of opening up the walls and patching it back in?
A fix wouldn't have to be visually perfect by any means. I want to have the whole thing taken out and replaced, but the lead time for a bathroom fitter in my area is 4 months, and I have vague plans to do more substantial works in, say, 12 months. So there is an incentive to improve the room without completely destroying it in the process.
Hot and cold feeds, and waste connections are available already in the new locations.
I'd imagine you'd have to open up a significant portion of wall to install suitable material for the sink and towel rail to be screwed to. Either studs or sheets of OSB screwed to the existing.
I've got a wet room bathroom that seems to be constructed by the wall panel being glued onto plasterboard which is on timber studs.
If I wanted to move the basin and/or towel rail, how much of a headache would this be in terms of opening up the walls and patching it back in?
A fix wouldn't have to be visually perfect by any means. I want to have the whole thing taken out and replaced, but the lead time for a bathroom fitter in my area is 4 months, and I have vague plans to do more substantial works in, say, 12 months. So there is an incentive to improve the room without completely destroying it in the process.
Hot and cold feeds, and waste connections are available already in the new locations.
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