I'm trying to figure out the best way to get hot & cold water to the right location for a shower room in an extension.
The shower is up against the old part of the house, which consists of a cavity brick wall. Conveniently there's an opening through the wall nearby. Inconveniently the cavity is blocked by an older doorway reveal which has been blocked up.
I really don't want to put a false wall in as we are fighting for millimetres in this space.
The image below shows the layout, S= shower spigots/mixer valve location B = Basin location
The point where the new block infill meets the old brick where you can see the odd missing halfbrick is the old doorway/opening reveal, and is currently blocked across the cavity.
One idea that crossed my mind is if I can punch through that block/reveal and scrape out a brick or two on the right for the mixer valve spigots. I can then drill through the new blockwork at J and rise up to the ceiling and the supply nearby. I can't rise inside the cavity as I'd have a hard job getting through the wall plate.
Is this insanity?
I'd need to make an opening a couple of bricks high in the cavity blocker to give myself enough space to feed some cunningly pre-bent copper pipe through it.
The less desirable alternative is to put a false wall with the shower controls on the window side, and bring the enclosure to the left, this will give me a problem getting the pipes past the floor joist that is against the wall, and it will complicate the fitting of an extractor fan in that wall as well. If so, how much depth should I allow for a false wall?
Any thoughts anyone?
The shower is up against the old part of the house, which consists of a cavity brick wall. Conveniently there's an opening through the wall nearby. Inconveniently the cavity is blocked by an older doorway reveal which has been blocked up.
I really don't want to put a false wall in as we are fighting for millimetres in this space.
The image below shows the layout, S= shower spigots/mixer valve location B = Basin location
The point where the new block infill meets the old brick where you can see the odd missing halfbrick is the old doorway/opening reveal, and is currently blocked across the cavity.
One idea that crossed my mind is if I can punch through that block/reveal and scrape out a brick or two on the right for the mixer valve spigots. I can then drill through the new blockwork at J and rise up to the ceiling and the supply nearby. I can't rise inside the cavity as I'd have a hard job getting through the wall plate.
Is this insanity?
I'd need to make an opening a couple of bricks high in the cavity blocker to give myself enough space to feed some cunningly pre-bent copper pipe through it.
The less desirable alternative is to put a false wall with the shower controls on the window side, and bring the enclosure to the left, this will give me a problem getting the pipes past the floor joist that is against the wall, and it will complicate the fitting of an extractor fan in that wall as well. If so, how much depth should I allow for a false wall?
Any thoughts anyone?
