I guess this is the right place as its not explicitly woodwork
In a few weeks we are going to scrape the existing bathroom bare (plasterboard out etc) and redo the room nicely and properly.
Most of the reason is that the existing tiiles have blown off the wall due to water ingress or generally shoddy workmanship prior to us.
With that in mind, for the shower over bath area, do I get the swanky water'proof' aquapanel AND tank the area for the joints, or would regular decent quality gyproc do and still tank it?
I'm planning to for OTT on the stud framing and have them at circa 150mm centres at the bath end, and maybe 200mm on the sides, with a sheet of ply or OSB then the plasterboard of choice from above. That way it shouldnt ever move to cause the tiles to get compromised.
Unless I'm being mental and overengineering things, which is my usual tact anyway, Thoughts?
In a few weeks we are going to scrape the existing bathroom bare (plasterboard out etc) and redo the room nicely and properly.
Most of the reason is that the existing tiiles have blown off the wall due to water ingress or generally shoddy workmanship prior to us.
With that in mind, for the shower over bath area, do I get the swanky water'proof' aquapanel AND tank the area for the joints, or would regular decent quality gyproc do and still tank it?
I'm planning to for OTT on the stud framing and have them at circa 150mm centres at the bath end, and maybe 200mm on the sides, with a sheet of ply or OSB then the plasterboard of choice from above. That way it shouldnt ever move to cause the tiles to get compromised.
Unless I'm being mental and overengineering things, which is my usual tact anyway, Thoughts?