I am a time-deprived DIY person near Gloucester. I want to refurbish a (very small) en-suite. I am prepared to do work myself - but, particularly with plumbing, and tiling, I suspect a professional would do a better job (and do it *much* quicker).
My problems are:
While I've visited retail show-rooms, only a tiny number of choices of products are on display. This prevents me from seeing the products I will need before committing to order them - which feels risky.
Of the products I have seen, they appear to have had re-branding applied (perhaps to make price-comparison more difficult) - but this also undermines getting technical information (such as accurate scale drawings) to establish exact size/shape - which is especially important in my tight confined en-suite space. For example, it's impossible to tell from photos if it would be feasible to recess a frame for a shower-door by 15mm into the plaster/wall on either side - and none seem to be available to examine in stores.
I'm finding it difficult to establish a bathroom fitter (plumber; tiler; carpenter - etc. ) prepared to quote to do the installation. I'm told by one retailer that the going rate is £220/day - I've no problem with that price (if they'd be working for me at it) but it's hard to establish, based purely on price, that whoever I'd have to accept would do the job to my preferred specification. One bathroom fitter gave a quote and recommended vinal finishes/products I wouldn't want - then declined to provide a detailed quote if I wanted ceramic/porcelain tiled walls/floor. The company who cited £220/day are trying to persuade me that an £800 shower door (of a design that doesn't look convincing - and for which no sample is available for me to approve) would be better for me than the <£300 bi-folds I see online. I'm awaiting a formal quote from that supplier - but I am not optimistic it will be a viable proposal.
Questions:
What's the best way to go about getting technical data on things like showers, shower doors; shower trays - etc.? With tiles, I could ask for samples and order from many companies on-line... but it is harder to see how to gain confidence that other size/design critical components will be 'right'. For example, I'm considering replacing the existing electric shower with a thermostatically controlled mixer fed by a combination boiler. The ones I saw in the show-room ranged from £200-ish to £507... and only the most expensive one really appealed. Online, I see an even greater range of prices - from £100-ish upwards... but they all look almost identical - none seem to come with specifications to discriminate between them. Are there any good strategies to ensure I buy a good quality mixer shower online?
Do you have any hints about how to find trades who are prepared to take on a project like this? Estimates for doing the work range from 1 to 2 weeks... DIY - all-day-every-day - I think it would take me a month... and I don't have a free month. I suspect it could take 1-2 months just to acquire all the parts (shower; matching sink-tap; shower-tray; under-sink 'vanity unit'; floor and wall tiles of suitable colours.
Is it best to try and find the products to be installed before finding the installer? I anticipate that, if I do it that way... the installer may complain that the product isn't suited to the job for one reason or another... but... if I leave the selection of products to the installer - I seem to lose oversight on finishes and component quality. Any ideas?
My problems are:
While I've visited retail show-rooms, only a tiny number of choices of products are on display. This prevents me from seeing the products I will need before committing to order them - which feels risky.
Of the products I have seen, they appear to have had re-branding applied (perhaps to make price-comparison more difficult) - but this also undermines getting technical information (such as accurate scale drawings) to establish exact size/shape - which is especially important in my tight confined en-suite space. For example, it's impossible to tell from photos if it would be feasible to recess a frame for a shower-door by 15mm into the plaster/wall on either side - and none seem to be available to examine in stores.
I'm finding it difficult to establish a bathroom fitter (plumber; tiler; carpenter - etc. ) prepared to quote to do the installation. I'm told by one retailer that the going rate is £220/day - I've no problem with that price (if they'd be working for me at it) but it's hard to establish, based purely on price, that whoever I'd have to accept would do the job to my preferred specification. One bathroom fitter gave a quote and recommended vinal finishes/products I wouldn't want - then declined to provide a detailed quote if I wanted ceramic/porcelain tiled walls/floor. The company who cited £220/day are trying to persuade me that an £800 shower door (of a design that doesn't look convincing - and for which no sample is available for me to approve) would be better for me than the <£300 bi-folds I see online. I'm awaiting a formal quote from that supplier - but I am not optimistic it will be a viable proposal.
Questions:
What's the best way to go about getting technical data on things like showers, shower doors; shower trays - etc.? With tiles, I could ask for samples and order from many companies on-line... but it is harder to see how to gain confidence that other size/design critical components will be 'right'. For example, I'm considering replacing the existing electric shower with a thermostatically controlled mixer fed by a combination boiler. The ones I saw in the show-room ranged from £200-ish to £507... and only the most expensive one really appealed. Online, I see an even greater range of prices - from £100-ish upwards... but they all look almost identical - none seem to come with specifications to discriminate between them. Are there any good strategies to ensure I buy a good quality mixer shower online?
Do you have any hints about how to find trades who are prepared to take on a project like this? Estimates for doing the work range from 1 to 2 weeks... DIY - all-day-every-day - I think it would take me a month... and I don't have a free month. I suspect it could take 1-2 months just to acquire all the parts (shower; matching sink-tap; shower-tray; under-sink 'vanity unit'; floor and wall tiles of suitable colours.
Is it best to try and find the products to be installed before finding the installer? I anticipate that, if I do it that way... the installer may complain that the product isn't suited to the job for one reason or another... but... if I leave the selection of products to the installer - I seem to lose oversight on finishes and component quality. Any ideas?