I recently started renovating our guest bathroom. Last year we bought a house originally built in 1971. The original owners lived there until it was flipped by investor and we bought from them. Most of the updating work was done pretty well, but it's still an old house. The guest bathroom was always a bit lacking. They kept the original single-piece fiberglass tub/shower combo and just threw up a glass door to spiffy it up. Not a big deal and perfectly functional, especially for a seldom-used guest bath, though ingress is awkward.
It all started a few months ago when I noticed a stain on the basement ceiling. This coincided with my wife starting to take baths again. Our master bath is a walk-in shower, so she was using this one. The stain also coincided with the basement wood paneling starting to warp next to the stain. Hmm.
Though the drywall was wet, and I could see where it flowed over to the wall, I couldn't pinpoint the source. No active leaks and all the plumbing was dry. So I fill the tub with an inch of water, and still no leaks. Then I used my hands to shove water down the overflow, and bingo!
It was the overflow gasket! Wife had been overflowing the tub with more hot water to keep the temp up. I'm guessing the tub had not been overflowed in years, since the house flipper probably never took a bath.
According to my wife it's my fault, because ever since I turned the water heater down due to the scalding hot kitchen sink, she resorted to overflowing the tub with fresh hot water. Mistake noted...and heater turned back up.
I figured with a massive hole already in the basement ceiling, providing easy access to the drain plumbing, now is a good time to go ahead and upgrade the bathtub. The old fiberglass tub was also making some creaky crackling noises, and you could feel it flexing under your feet. It's about time.
I cut the tub into bite-size pieces for the garbage cans. The smell reminds me of cutting up my Lotus Europa, so there's your GRM tie-in.
The other side of this wall is our master walk-in shower, which was done by the flipper. Seeing tile installed over green sheetrock is pretty disappointing. I'm betting they didn't use any sort of waterproofing either, besides thinset. No signs of water damage yet, but that job is only a year old. At least they used a membrane layer on the floor. Hopefully we get at least a few years out of it.
No mortar was used under this tub, which probably explains the flexing. Surprised it hadn't cracked yet!
And this explains the loose shower head. It was never nailed down, probably since 1971 when the house was built!
The overall plan is:
- Replace tub with something deeper and nicer
- Update valve and trim with black ones to match the rest of the house, including one of those nifty handhelds on a sliding rail
- Cement board the walls
- Add a niche
- Roll-on waterproof membrane over the cement board
- Tile the walls all the way up, probably something white and plain so as not to clash with the floor tile
- Go back to shower curtain because the sliding doors are annoying on an alcove tub
- Keep original speckled yellow floor tile because we're cool like that
- Wallpaper with a funky fun pattern TBD