Progress has been slow. Finished doing the main gutting of the original room and washbasin temporarily plumbed in.
I'd forgotten how much I hate the waste pipe aspect of plumbing. Great chunky compression connecters in a tight space not good for control of profanities in the workplace and I have the scars to prove it.
And adjustable spanners are The Spawn of Satan. Constantly re-adjusting themselves while you're tighteninng a compression joint and I swear that they randomly change the direction of the knurled knob you turn to adjust the jaw opening. I'm going to treat myself to a set of proper spanners and sling the adjustables in the skip.
Remember that pipe of unknown provenance that ran horizontally. Well, that was cut and a 22mm stop end put on the remaining length protruding from the wall. I'd still not thought how I could actually cut that piece flush or even below the surface of the wall, add a stop end ...belt and braces. So I started to chisel out a bit of the crumbly wall surrounding it. Once I had made a bit of a hole I found out that the pipe was loose and not connected to anything. Result!
Also decided that all walls and ceilings will be plasterboarded. The alternative is a shed load of work stripping wallpaper off which had been painted over. The clean-up continued removing as much extraneous 'add-ons' so as to give a cleaner line. The last remaining part of that pipe went. (AndyT ...I stuck all the pipe in the skip. I've had it for over a month so I reckon I've got a good deal). Discovered that the door was double-skinned and solid T&G for acoustic isolation. Double-glazed glass panel above with wide spacing - ditto for acoustics.
Must say that I'm not enjoying this one bit. I'd forgotten just how many different trades' are needed in a bathroom - plumbing, timber work, electric (under supervision from a tame sparks !). So many different tools and I have zero space to put them. It's a dogs dinner.


and it's doing my head in.
But now we come to the interesting bit. The two walls where the corner shower is going are not at 90 degrees. Nowhere near. To compound the problem, the shorter wall is stepped in the vertical sense. Used to be a mirror in there.
Using the laser level this is the reference line telling me how much to bring out the bottom half - which is pretty vertical. Not so the top half that shrinks away from the vertical.
That board is screwed down as a reference line from which to work off. Trouble No. 2 is that there is a rafter too close to where the shower drain is positioned
and so that reference line needs to come out probably 22mm ie one sheet of ply and one sheet of NoMorePly cement board.
I then put a square on that reference line and fixed the other side to give me the 90 degree outline for the shower tray. That's when I discovered that the two walls are not square. These are the two ends of the shower back wall (1 meter)
I'm tempted to treat the back longer wall as the master and fiddle about with the shorter wall as I'll have to fiddle with it anyway to take into account that step. And as I type this I'm thinking that maybe if I remove the covering....top half lath and plaster, bottom half ...who knows..and get some 4 x 2 then I could screw them to the original uprights but offset forwards to (a) get rid of the step (b) make the wall vertical (c) square on to the back wall and (d) give me the sideways shift I need to cler the shower tray drain away from that rafter. Only problem....I have no 4 x 2.
But we're getting there.