Hello,
a friend of mine wants to install a toilet on the exterior wall of his prefabricated house.
However, a backing wall is necessary for this.
A backing wall is generally useful anyway, as a future shelf or storage area, right??? That is my question.
What are your experiences?
Thanks, Tom
a friend of mine wants to install a toilet on the exterior wall of his prefabricated house.
However, a backing wall is necessary for this.
A backing wall is generally useful anyway, as a future shelf or storage area, right??? That is my question.
What are your experiences?
Thanks, Tom
M
motorradsilke24 Jul 2023 07:38kbt09 schrieb:
@motorradsilke ... the supply and drainage pipes could then be installed in the screed there as well.Yes, but they definitely have to run at least a short distance inside the wall to reach the fitting and the drain.H
hanghaus202324 Jul 2023 10:39mayglow schrieb:
Why is that an advantage? (Genuine question) As someone inexperienced, I don’t find it very practical that the mirror is currently “further away” (rental apartment). But maybe I’m missing something (pun intended) Good question. My wife likes it that way.
ypg schrieb:
No pipes run inside exterior walls. motorradsilke schrieb:
That is just a recommendation in the relevant DIN standard. I just checked because in our case, the utility room sink is also located directly on the exterior wall. It serves to streamline the planning and construction process. Planning, heat demand calculation, and construction are less labor-intensive and achieve a more efficient use of the enclosed space when the structural shell is simpler to build and does not require partial re-machining. For prefabricated houses, this simplifies assembly, which also speeds up the weather-sensitive stages of the work. Regardless of construction method, the principle “time is money” applies.
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Pinkiponk24 Jul 2023 20:15-LotteS- schrieb:
Oh, I really like those tiles...
Do you still remember their exact name? That would be great! 🙂Thank you, that means a lot, especially since the tiles received quite a bit of "criticism" here on the forum. They are from the company Steuler and are called Brush. When we bought them, they were available in yellow, blue, May green, and olive green. We chose May green. In the brochures, May green, May green Brush (with Brush, the colors blend similarly to watercolor paintings), and white are often combined. I find it very beautiful and impressive in the photos, but such combinations probably require bathrooms considerably larger than ours. So we opted only for plain May green, without the Brush effect and without white.
We wanted colored tiles in the bathrooms because we need a bit of cheering up in the mornings. ;-)
Pinkiponk schrieb:
Thanks, that means a lot, especially since the tiles were also quite heavily criticized here on the forum ;-)Oh, I must have missed that in your thread 😀 Since we are building a log cabin-style house, I have been looking for nice color accents that still blend harmoniously. Thanks again for the manufacturer recommendation; the tile is definitely making the shortlist!
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