The bathroom has been completely renovated. I am so disappointed with a lot (see previous posts). I am not very familiar with this subject, so I would appreciate your opinions and knowledge! In the shower/bathtub, the water doesn't drain as it did before the renovation; instead, it stays along the walls. Can there be enough slope even though it looks like it does in the picture?

In the part of the bathtub that is farthest from the drain, should the water on the floor flow towards the floor drain? It doesn't.

The plumbers hired by my landlord bent some pipes to fit. The pipes are not installed straight. It looks like they've tried to build Fort Knox, and clumsily, but I don't know if it's common for it to look like this? The shower curtain won't be able to sit tightly against the wall due to the pipes. Aren't pipes supposed to be run along the floor? The pipes come in at the floor at the other end of the bathtub and need to go to the low-placed mixer, so why do they go up to the ceiling?

The sealing against the wall where the pipes come in is done with some sort of rubber cup that is about 0.5 cm larger in diameter than the pipes. The glue came loose because they sprayed water there when they were cleaning up after themselves. So the "cups" are hanging loose. Inside the wall mat, the plasterboard is visible in the holes. Are there any rules about how old pipes "can" be?

The glue under the toilet spilled out on the sides when they flushed the floor, causing an ugly mark on the mat.

Really grateful for answers!
 
  • Shower area with visible piping above, connected to a showerhead and valve, showing potential installation issues.
  • Close-up of a shower floor with water pooling near the drain, suggesting inadequate sloping.
  • Pipes entering bathroom wall with visible gaps, faulty sealing, and misaligned, highlighting issues post-renovation in terms of drainage and installation.
Last edited:
Click here to reply
Vi vill skicka notiser för ämnen du bevakar och händelser som berör dig.