Hi there,
I bought this 1500mm X 800mm X 30mm grey slate shower tray.
www.sonasbathrooms.com
It will be installed on a raised bed of 2.5 inch concrete blocks, and I might put a sheet of 18mm Marine Plywood on top of those.
I have no choice but to raise the slate shower tray as it's an apartment building on an upper floor with a concrete floor.
I like the look of the LED lights here:
The example above is probably a tiled shower floor though, not a slate tray. If I do something like this could I overhang my shower tray by about an inch as illustrated here?
The problem with this is that people will be stepping from the bathroom floor tiles onto the black shower tray so there is a danger that the edge of the slate shower tray might get damaged. Any thoughts?
Here is another example:
Again that one is using a tiled shower floor. How would you approach this in my case where I have to use a slate tray (I've bought it now and won't change it)? Even if I wasn't putting in the LED light strip I'd need to tile up the front of the concrete blocks to blank off that area so maybe there is a way to do it by cutting an edge off the 2.5 inch blocks and tiling the top half of the block as shown here:
I'd appreciate your thoughts!
I have a second (related) question.
In the photo above you can see LED lights at the top of the shower. I'd like to do that also. Do you think adding these would cause issues with waterproofing / tanking? I know it's out of the immediate wet area but am I introducing a risk of damage from steam damage if I do that (note that there is no window in the bathroom but the extractor fan is directly over the showerhead)?
Thank you for your input guys!
Regards,
Dave
I bought this 1500mm X 800mm X 30mm grey slate shower tray.
SLATE 1500x800 Shower Tray Black with shower waste
SLATE 1500 x 800 Shower Tray Black - with FREE shower waste

It will be installed on a raised bed of 2.5 inch concrete blocks, and I might put a sheet of 18mm Marine Plywood on top of those.
I have no choice but to raise the slate shower tray as it's an apartment building on an upper floor with a concrete floor.
I like the look of the LED lights here:
The example above is probably a tiled shower floor though, not a slate tray. If I do something like this could I overhang my shower tray by about an inch as illustrated here?
The problem with this is that people will be stepping from the bathroom floor tiles onto the black shower tray so there is a danger that the edge of the slate shower tray might get damaged. Any thoughts?
Here is another example:
Again that one is using a tiled shower floor. How would you approach this in my case where I have to use a slate tray (I've bought it now and won't change it)? Even if I wasn't putting in the LED light strip I'd need to tile up the front of the concrete blocks to blank off that area so maybe there is a way to do it by cutting an edge off the 2.5 inch blocks and tiling the top half of the block as shown here:
I'd appreciate your thoughts!
I have a second (related) question.
In the photo above you can see LED lights at the top of the shower. I'd like to do that also. Do you think adding these would cause issues with waterproofing / tanking? I know it's out of the immediate wet area but am I introducing a risk of damage from steam damage if I do that (note that there is no window in the bathroom but the extractor fan is directly over the showerhead)?
Thank you for your input guys!
Regards,
Dave