amorgan wrote: i visited a showroom this morning who quoted me a minimum 6-7k including removal, disposal and all plumbing/tiling. this seems quite steep to me. any advice would be great!
amorgan wrote: » hi guys, i'm looking to totally refit an upstairs bathroom at the moment and i'm just looking for what i can expect cost wise. the room measures 180cm x 264cm approx. (71 x 104 inches) it's currently got a separate bath and shower which i would like to keep but possibly reposition depending on cost. i'd be looking for not much tiling ideally, to keep the cost down. maybe just the shower, floor and a row around the bath to protect walls. i visited a showroom this morning who quoted me a minimum 6-7k including removal, disposal and all plumbing/tiling. this seems quite steep to me. any advice would be great!
BrokenArrows wrote: » shopping around is key. For your 6-7k original quote id expect them to gut the entire bathroom and kit it out with brand new bath, shower, sink, radiator, plumb and tile the whole place as well as fit any fixtures you have (towel rack, toilet role holder, hang mirrors etc) and still have some change left over.
BrokenArrows wrote: » So all you want to do is move the bath and shower and to put some new tiles in and paint the rest? 6-7k is taking the piss, seriously. What exactly did this estimate involve? The things which will make this job complicated or not will be the location and availability of the plumbing. If its easy to access and move then its an easy job. Ripping out the old shower will probably be a pain in the ass depending on how its fitted.
amorgan wrote: if anyone can pm and recommendations or companies, that would be great too. i need to get out and hit every supplier i can find!
Sleeper12 wrote: » You've a better chance of getting replies if you you say what county's you are in
Sleeper12 wrote: » ...when in fact by law only a REC can do any electrical work in the bathroom. This includes changing a bulb believe it or not...
cletus wrote: » Can you link to the legislation that says I must employ a sparks to change the bulb in my bathroom
Sleeper12 wrote: Basically a light fitting is "an electrical installation" Only a REC can modify, repair or replace this so technically it's illegal for anyone but a REC to change a bathroom light bulb & he has to cert the job too.
cletus wrote: Either way, I won't be paying an €80 call out fee to change a bulb (having says that I've replaced both an electric and pumped shower in my house, so I've already broken the law )
EHP wrote: Most ceiling light fittings in Bathrooms are outside the zones for part 7 so don't need a REC to change the bulb, but if inside the zones technically do. The reason for this is every fitting within the zones have to be sealed against water/steam ingress, you would be amazed the amount of light fittings in bathrooms that have had covers etc removed and not replaced. The regs also look for all electrical fittings within the zones to be RCD protected and this needs to be tested when any works are completed on the fitting. This rule might seem to go a bit far but there is reason for it.
EHP wrote: » You have broken the law, outside of this when you replaced the showers did you complete any tests to ensure your safety just because it works doesn't make it safe. Most likely your home insurance will be void also. If any REC completes any work in your property and discovers that the showers were fitted by non recs they will have to report it or else they can also be held liable in the event of something going wrong.
van_beano wrote: » Paid €3500 for the same length and width room to yours last month, in Dublin, only difference is there's no bath and just a square area for the shower. It's an ensuite. Got the old toilet, sink, tiles and shower pulled out. under floor pipes were redone as the original pipes were housed in a box above floor level. Replaced everything again and had the shower area and ensuite floor tiled. Also had a radiator piped into there (no previous rad there). There was a new electric shower connected here (previously an immersion shower). I already have an electric shower in the main bathroom so there was a new electrical box beside fuse box connected to stop the showers being used at the same time. I was quoted about €6k by another company we found at the Ideal Homes expo for the same job. Shop around.