There's a lot of conflicting information about this topic and my specific scenario so I'm forced to raise a similar question to some of the other topics.
I have a small bathroom, 2mx2m, with a shower enclosure in the corner. The walls are wooden studded with some form of plasterboard on top. I need to completely replace the plasterboard on both walls. I want the shower area to be tiled with a glass enclosure, and the remaining parts of those walls to be painted. The tiles are very likely to be large (25-30cm) and I'm in the UK.
Some people say I can use moisture resistant boards throughout and tank them for the shower area. Some say a tiled shower needs to be cement board or Aquapanel.
If I use tapered edge moisture resistant plasterboard then I get the advantage that I can paint the remaining wall without getting a plasterer involved. Assuming that the joins of the tapered edge stuff is actually a smooth finish and all the filler type stuff is cheaper than a plasterer?
So I could....
a) Aquapanel the whole thing; tile the shower area; then get a plasterer to plaster the remaining parts of the walls.
b) Moisture resistant plasterboard the whole thing; tank and tile the shower area; smooth the remaining gaps of the remaining walls.
c) Aquapanel the shower area; MR the remaining walls; (make sure there is a stud at exactly the correct place)
I assume that I need to ensure there is a stud where the new shower enclosure is going to be fixed to the wall? Option C would need that anyway.
Are there other options or variants? I'm going to guess that all three will technically work but any advice will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Andy
Shower enclosure substrate with tiles + paint outside
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Re: Shower enclosure substrate with tiles + paint outside
Option C for cheapness/easiness.. skrim tape and filler between cement board and the plasterboard.
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