- Joined
- 6 Sep 2004
- Messages
- 1,072
- Reaction score
- 75
- Country

I need to install a shower/bath mixer valve within a solid wall. Ideally I would like to remove an entire vertical section of the wall from floor to ceiling about a foot wide and replace this with two panels of 18mm WBP plyboard thus creating a cavity for the valve and pipework.
This method, though, would prove time consuming and very messy so I am considering removing sufficient existing plaster and breezeblock material to create a suitably sized aperture to achieve the same result. The problem is how much of the wall would I safely be able to remove without risking weakening the wall with disastrous results? I would want to create a space of about 300mm x 400mm plus room for three pipes below and one pipe above. Just to be clear, this property is a flat in a 20’s or 30’s block so when I use the term ‘breezebock’ this may not be the same as the modern equivalent. It is though fairly easy to remove and appears to be composed of a brick formation.
Thanks in advance for any help.
This method, though, would prove time consuming and very messy so I am considering removing sufficient existing plaster and breezeblock material to create a suitably sized aperture to achieve the same result. The problem is how much of the wall would I safely be able to remove without risking weakening the wall with disastrous results? I would want to create a space of about 300mm x 400mm plus room for three pipes below and one pipe above. Just to be clear, this property is a flat in a 20’s or 30’s block so when I use the term ‘breezebock’ this may not be the same as the modern equivalent. It is though fairly easy to remove and appears to be composed of a brick formation.
Thanks in advance for any help.