jonny round boy
Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2007
- Messages
- 3,227
Part 1 - Design & Planning
Once upon a time (well, a few years ago) I was fortunate to be able to rescue some BIG sheets of solid surface material that had been written off by the manufacturer, and were headed for the skip.
I knew it would come in useful, as we were planning some major work on the house & I wanted to build a bespoke shower tray for our en-suite in the attic room. I'd found a picture somewhere on the internet (so long ago now I can't remember where) of a shower tray with a duckboard area:
[attachthumb=1]
I liked it, and started designing something similar. The space for the en-suite was small, about 2500 long by 800mm wide, and I planned on having the duckboard area in front of the main tray. I'd also planned on making the duckboard itself from some white SS material. The design went through several incarnations, before finally looking something like this:
[attachthumb=2]
[attachthumb=3]
The tray was going to be 800x800, with the duckboard area 300x800. The plan was to have a separate waste in this front section, to drain the water away:
[attachthumb=4]
The delay from getting to this 'final' design and actually starting the build ended up being about 3 years, such is the nature of renovating houses on a shoestring budget, whilst you're still living in them! Anyway, we eventually had the roof replaced in September/October last year, and then began working on the internals.
Construction of the shower tray began between Christmas & New Year last year. The first stage was making an MDF template of the tray to ensure it would actually fit in the space intended:
[attachthumb=5]
[attachthumb=6]
It was at this stage that I realised that the design with the duckboard simply wasn't going to work. The duckboard area was just too small to be useful, and only got in the way. I decided to do away with this part, but that presented another problem; my girlfriend & I both wanted the glass shower door to be a simple as possible, without any plastic/rubber seals around it. The seals never quite look right, are difficult to keep clean, and end up looking grubby very quickly. Having the door without seals would look far better, but some water was obviously going to escape, and that water would need to be dealt with somehow.
The answer was obvious; build the shower tray without the front section, but keep the 2nd drain & carry the solid surface across the entire floor, effectively creating a 'wetroom' look. So, the tray was re-designed, to incorporate the whole floor, with coved 'skirting' to the same height as the tray:
[attachthumb=7]
It would be a lot more work, and I wasn't quite sure how it was going to work in practice, but the theory seemed fine...
Once upon a time (well, a few years ago) I was fortunate to be able to rescue some BIG sheets of solid surface material that had been written off by the manufacturer, and were headed for the skip.
I knew it would come in useful, as we were planning some major work on the house & I wanted to build a bespoke shower tray for our en-suite in the attic room. I'd found a picture somewhere on the internet (so long ago now I can't remember where) of a shower tray with a duckboard area:
[attachthumb=1]
I liked it, and started designing something similar. The space for the en-suite was small, about 2500 long by 800mm wide, and I planned on having the duckboard area in front of the main tray. I'd also planned on making the duckboard itself from some white SS material. The design went through several incarnations, before finally looking something like this:
[attachthumb=2]
[attachthumb=3]
The tray was going to be 800x800, with the duckboard area 300x800. The plan was to have a separate waste in this front section, to drain the water away:
[attachthumb=4]
The delay from getting to this 'final' design and actually starting the build ended up being about 3 years, such is the nature of renovating houses on a shoestring budget, whilst you're still living in them! Anyway, we eventually had the roof replaced in September/October last year, and then began working on the internals.
Construction of the shower tray began between Christmas & New Year last year. The first stage was making an MDF template of the tray to ensure it would actually fit in the space intended:
[attachthumb=5]
[attachthumb=6]
It was at this stage that I realised that the design with the duckboard simply wasn't going to work. The duckboard area was just too small to be useful, and only got in the way. I decided to do away with this part, but that presented another problem; my girlfriend & I both wanted the glass shower door to be a simple as possible, without any plastic/rubber seals around it. The seals never quite look right, are difficult to keep clean, and end up looking grubby very quickly. Having the door without seals would look far better, but some water was obviously going to escape, and that water would need to be dealt with somehow.
The answer was obvious; build the shower tray without the front section, but keep the 2nd drain & carry the solid surface across the entire floor, effectively creating a 'wetroom' look. So, the tray was re-designed, to incorporate the whole floor, with coved 'skirting' to the same height as the tray:
[attachthumb=7]
It would be a lot more work, and I wasn't quite sure how it was going to work in practice, but the theory seemed fine...