where to buy a bathroom, oh and have it fitted
where to buy a bathroom, oh and have it fitted
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Discussion

_Deano

Original Poster:

7,414 posts

277 months

Friday 28th January 2011
quotequote all
Now that the house is being rented out, the last two tenants and the estate agent have mentioned that the main family bathroom needs updating (my fault, i did question them about the house). It's pretty much the bathroom that was installed when the house was built back in the 70's.
So the wife and I have been looking around at the large stores (B&Q, Dolphin etc) and sort of laugh at their quotes of up to £4K to replace a bath, sink toilet and the tiling!
Initially i thought that a budget of £1K was going to be more than enough, but so far it seems that i am wrong; even though the bathroom is about 10" x 11".

So can any advise me on how i can go about getting my bathroom gutted and revamped?
Do i buy from one place and have them fit it? If so where would be a good place to start? Or should i buy from one place and then try and find a fitter that knows what they are doing?

I really have no idea about the aspects of bathrooms installation and would probably flood the house.

cheers
DJ

Ferg

15,242 posts

281 months

Saturday 29th January 2011
quotequote all
If you are putting the bits back in the same place I would imagine you'd find a suite (bath, pan, cistern, basin and ped) with taps for £250. A days work to put it in (maybe £300 with materials)then some tiling etc to be done.

The small problem you may have is that your toilet is probably low-level and a new one (cheap) will be close-coupled which will make the soil connection wrong (probably).

justin220

5,671 posts

228 months

Saturday 29th January 2011
quotequote all
Imin the same boat. Think I will source all the parts and get someone in to rip out the old one and fit the new one.

http://www.bathshop321.com/ is where I've been looking. Any thoughts?

We're also considering removing the bath and putting in a walk in shower (only bathroom in the house) but worried this would put off potential buyers.. ?

Sorry for the slight hijack

scirocco265

421 posts

200 months

Saturday 29th January 2011
quotequote all
I did this in my first house when cash was low. New bathroom suite £250 from B&Q but then I paid an extra £100 for some uber modern taps (made all the difference). Went to a tile warehouse place and found some really good tiles that were end of line to do 3 walls floor to ceiling for £120, and floor tiles for £50. Plumber charged me £80, tiler charged me £200.

Brand new contemporary bathroom for £720.

I wonder how I have failed to replicate this since, last bathroom cost £7,500 eek

justin220

5,671 posts

228 months

Saturday 29th January 2011
quotequote all
Thats bloody good!

I'm budgeting £1k for all the parts, and £1k for plumbing and electrics.. Must be do-able at that!?

Spudler

3,985 posts

220 months

Saturday 29th January 2011
quotequote all
Ferg said:
If you are putting the bits back in the same place I would imagine you'd find a suite (bath, pan, cistern, basin and ped) with taps for £250. A days work to put it in (maybe £300 with materials)then some tiling etc to be done.

The small problem you may have is that your toilet is probably low-level and a new one (cheap) will be close-coupled which will make the soil connection wrong (probably).
Exactly this^^.

I fitted a suit (Roca) from Buildbase, steel bath etc for £200. Thats a trade price but even at retail with some discount you'll get a good price. Hire a local plumber and you'll save an absolute fortune.
Go to the likes of B&Q if you wish but you'll pay WAY over the odds.
If your handy, make up your own bath panel, you'll never know its a boggo bath suit.

Ferg

15,242 posts

281 months

Saturday 29th January 2011
quotequote all
Take care with steel baths.
They have to be a decent thickness otherwise one moderately heavy object will flex the steel, but not the enamel and you've got a chip. Acrylic everytime for most situations, unless you go for a resin which is big money.

Spudler

3,985 posts

220 months

Saturday 29th January 2011
quotequote all
Ferg said:
Take care with steel baths.
They have to be a decent thickness otherwise one moderately heavy object will flex the steel, but not the enamel and you've got a chip. Acrylic everytime for most situations, unless you go for a resin which is big money.
Agreed.
I got put on to the Buildbase steel bath by a couple of plumbers we use (& they are old tartssmile) and i would also recomend them.
I have seen the steel baths in B&Q, same price but the Roca is far superior quality.
I installed one in a rental in mine and would have no hesitation in installing one in my own home.
Like i said, lob the bath panel and make your own and no one would know the bath was sixty quids worth wink...AND im a fussy !

_Deano

Original Poster:

7,414 posts

277 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2011
quotequote all
justin220 said:
Imin the same boat. Think I will source all the parts and get someone in to rip out the old one and fit the new one.

http://www.bathshop321.com/ is where I've been looking. Any thoughts?

We're also considering removing the bath and putting in a walk in shower (only bathroom in the house) but worried this would put off potential buyers.. ?

Sorry for the slight hijack
not a problem - and thanks for the link; that setup would suffice, just need to measure it up.