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- 6 Feb 2022
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We've started a kitchen makeover project, and the first step was removing the tiles from the wall, which came off easily on one wall (not shown) but then on the other two walls it took a ton of plasterboard away and decimated the plasterboard in other places (see pictures).
We know that we'll need to replace a lot of the plasterboard, which is adhered to the breeze block wall with dot and dab, however the issue that we have is with the kitchen units, where the plasterboard has crumbled near the edges and we haven't got a nice straight line of board.
We want to just tile along the same space, between the work surface and the bottom of the kitchen units.
As some of the plasterboard is crumbled, our questions are:
1. Firstly, is the remaining plasterboard strong enough to hold up the kitchen units and extractor unit? (Still standing from yesterday's demolition work)
2. Will we be able to cut away the plasterboard in this area and then just cut new board to measure, and fix onto the breezeblock wall, and then re-tile? Or will we need to remove kitchen units (top and/or bottom, including oven/cooker) and plasterboard floor to ceiling?
3. Given my limited DIY knowledge and abilities, would it just be better to get a professional round to do it? (I'm fairly certain that we'll be able to tile ourselves afterwards)
Thanks!
We know that we'll need to replace a lot of the plasterboard, which is adhered to the breeze block wall with dot and dab, however the issue that we have is with the kitchen units, where the plasterboard has crumbled near the edges and we haven't got a nice straight line of board.
We want to just tile along the same space, between the work surface and the bottom of the kitchen units.
As some of the plasterboard is crumbled, our questions are:
1. Firstly, is the remaining plasterboard strong enough to hold up the kitchen units and extractor unit? (Still standing from yesterday's demolition work)
2. Will we be able to cut away the plasterboard in this area and then just cut new board to measure, and fix onto the breezeblock wall, and then re-tile? Or will we need to remove kitchen units (top and/or bottom, including oven/cooker) and plasterboard floor to ceiling?
3. Given my limited DIY knowledge and abilities, would it just be better to get a professional round to do it? (I'm fairly certain that we'll be able to tile ourselves afterwards)
Thanks!