I've just ripped out the 1st floor bathroom in my 1920's terraced house in the UK which invovled replacing a floor joist that had rotten at the end. It sits in the brick wall at either end so I've been able to level that and get it to the height of the neighbouring joist by packing slate underneath the ends. The new bathroom will have a large shower, toilet, and sink with tiles floor and walls (see image below). I intend to install most of the bathroom myself, but hire a tiler.
My next step is to re-floor the room since the old floorboards need to go. For info, the joists are 6x2", ~400mm centres, and 2m span.
* What material should I use for the new flooring?
* Can I just put 22mm structural ply directly onto the exposed joists and depend on that to be a good enough surface to tile onto?
* Do I need to add additional structural support?
What I have also realised when I got the level onto the rest of the floor is that the joists have a bit of a slope.some are level along the length, but have slope aross the way, and some slope along their length down towards the door (see image below, arrow end is lowest point).
* Is this going to be a problem for installing the bathroom/tiling the floor?
My next step is to re-floor the room since the old floorboards need to go. For info, the joists are 6x2", ~400mm centres, and 2m span.
* What material should I use for the new flooring?
* Can I just put 22mm structural ply directly onto the exposed joists and depend on that to be a good enough surface to tile onto?
* Do I need to add additional structural support?
What I have also realised when I got the level onto the rest of the floor is that the joists have a bit of a slope.some are level along the length, but have slope aross the way, and some slope along their length down towards the door (see image below, arrow end is lowest point).
* Is this going to be a problem for installing the bathroom/tiling the floor?