Jump to content

new bathroom in opposite side of house to where water feeds and drainage are


Recommended Posts

Thinking of installing a bathroom at front of house upstairs, but water sources and drainage are to rear side of house.


I?m sure I?m not the first and it?s entirely possible, but any experiences requested.


Things that spring to mind as potential challenges?

1. What sort of shower is feasible with combo boiler at other side of house ? (Water pressure/impact on other bathroom)

2. How to route drainage to back of house ?

3. Planning reqd ?

1. Not a fan of combis in houses/multiple bathrooms so will leave that to others.


2. Biggest problem will be the 4'' waste pipe if you're having a loo, if so, might be easier to go straight down to the ground floor and run it under the floor void to the nearest drain. If you've got a solid ground floor then requires digging a trench etc, messy.

The other option is to try to run a waste pipe within the depth of the upper floor (depends on direction of joists and depth of fall required to get to a vertical stack), or run it below the ceiling and box it out (can look ugly).

You might be able to use a macerator and have a smaller bore waste pipe, again not a fan as they can be noisy and prone to blockages.


3. You shouldn't need planning if no material change to elevations e.g. modifications to a window, but you will need Building Control to sign-off the new works.

you need to do some measuring, the fall needs to be 1 in 40 which is 2.5cm drop per horizontal metre


a soil pipe is 110mm diameter, the most common joist depth on old houses is 200mm


you'll need some fairly serious structural joist work if you're going at right angles to the joists (can't cut a 110mm hole in a 200mm joist)


I'll second that a macerator is a no-go

You could run the waste pipe externally but that would definitely need planning, and if it's as you say, at the front of the house, you might not get approval if it spoils the character of the property.


Is it a semi or detached property? If so, could the waste go out to a side elevation and down the side of the house?


Do you know where the main sewer is? Usually they are in the road at the front of a house, so you may already have drains running under the house or down the side, which you could connect into. This can be done internally, but would require a double-seal internal manhole, not the most aesthetically pleasing unless it was in a utility/boot room or similar...

I?ll take all the plumbing /drainage from/to the rear of house.

Agree on macerator.

May have to build platform to get the waste pipe fall reqd to outside rear wall.

Waste will probably be to side of rooms (terrace house) partly under floor and possibly right through a chimney breast.

Shower may have to be electric, are they as shit as they were when I lived in bedsits years ago ?!

If there is drain/sewage near the front of the house it might be possible. Box in the soil stack in the corner of your front room, then excavate to connect to the drain. But I think it's fairly unlikely in a terraced house, where the sewers are all at the back.


Otherwise... running a full size soil pipe internally along the length of the house is pretty much impossible. Even if your joists run in the correct direction, you won't get enough of a downward trajectory to run it between the floor and ceiling. Boxing it on the ground floor will look awful, and again probably impossible if you have chimneys.


So... reconsider the macerator perhaps. Or find another location for the new bathroom. Or just put in a shower without a loo, then you can use a flex hose for the waste.

Our house is a conversion with bathroom at front of house. Soil pipe boxed in and drops down through kitchen which is also at front of house (we have a weird layout!). We do have a macerater for the loo but not the bath/sink, the drop is fine for that. The poo chewer has been totally fine and they are loads better than they used to be. To be honest, to mitigate risk, we have a ?liquid only? rule for that loo and really crappy thin loo paper but with another loo in the house that?s fine?. (I feel I am straying dangerously close to Foxy?s thread so will stop now!)


Actually, the only real downside is that we don?t have an extractor fan as we?d need to put it on front wall of house and I think there is some weird planning rule about not having an extractor on the front?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • In 2016 London City Airport began using concentrated flight paths. When there's a predominantly westerly wind, incoming aircraft approach from East London (north of the River. When there's a predominantly Easterly wind, incoming aircraft approach the airport from the West: circling through Forest Hill, Dulwich, Vauxhall, Tower Hamlets, Docklands. This latter flight path affects many of us in South East London. https://www.london.gov.uk/who-we-are/what-london-assembly-does/questions-mayor/find-an-answer/london-city-airport-concentrated-flight-paths The planes going into City are often below 2,000 ft, so very noisy. Sometimes we have incoming Heathrow at the same time, flying higher. The early flights that I hear e.g. 04:30 are incoming to Heathrow. They are scheduled to land at 05:30 but are 'early'. Apparently the government allows a percentage of flights to arrive early and late (but these are now established as regular occurrences, informally part of the schedule). IMHO Londoners are getting very poor political representation on this issue. Incredible that if you want to complain about aircraft noise, you're supposed to contact the airport concerned! Preposterous and designed solely in favour of aviation expansion.
    • Yet another recommendation for Jafar. Such a nice guy, really reliable and fair. He fixed a problem with our boiler and then incredibly kindly made two more visits to replace a different part at no extra cost. 
    • I didn't have any problems with plane noise until city airport started flying planes to and from about 5-8 minutes apart from 5.30 am or  6 am,  and even with ear plugs and double glazing I am woken at about 6 well before I usually would wake  up. I have lived here since 1986 and it is relatively recently that the planes have been flying far too low over East dulwich. I very much doubt that they are headinbg to Heathrow or from Heathrow. As the crow flies we are much , MUCH closer to City Airport than Heathrow or Gatwick. I even saw one flying so low you could see all the windows, when I was in Peckham Rye Park.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...