The following five-part series gives a basic overview of building a shower floor for tile. If you would like a complete step-by-step of the entire process with all the little idiosyncrasies and details  I now have manuals describing the complete process for you from bare wall studs all the way up to a completely waterproof shower substrate for your tile.

If you are tiling your walls and floor you can find that one here: Waterproof shower floor and wall manual.

If you have a tub or pre-formed shower base and are only tiling the walls you can find that one here: Waterproof shower walls manual.

Curb and Pre-slope

Image of a shower diagram

Properly built shower

There are a couple of options to create a shower floor for tile using deck mud. The first is a single-layer shower floor which can then be coated with RedGard or a similar product or covered with kerdi to waterproof it. The other is a normal shower floor with a liner which will have two layers – a preslope, the liner, then the top slope which is then tiled. This series of posts will describe the latter.

Before we start I should note that unless you are using the kerdi waterproofing method or utilizing a liquid membrane as your floor liner you should not have the backerboard installed in the bottom part of the shower. Your waterproof membrane for a shower floor will be installed behind your backerboard. The curb and pre-slope need to be completed before installing the lower wall substrate.

Creating the curb for a wooden floor

The first thing you must do is create the outside curb of your shower. You need to create the “box” which will become the inside of your shower floor. Depending upon whether your shower will be created on a wood or  concrete floor will dictate what material you use for your curb.

If you have a wooden floor you want to use regular dimensional lumber. The 2 x 4’s they carry at Home Depot – those. That is the easiest and most readily available material. Ideally you want to use kiln-dried lumber. That is lumber that is, well, dried in a kiln. By removing moisture in this manner the moisture content of KD lumber is normally between six and eight percent compared to regular dimensional lumber at close to 15%.  Why does that matter? Well moisture and wood don’t mix. As it dries wood has a tendency to warp and twist. The less moisture initially in the wood the better.  KD lumber is best and regular air-dried dimensional lumber is also acceptable. NEVER use pressure treated lumber – ever.

I usually use  three or more stacked 2 x 4’s to create my curb depending on the size of the shower. Simply screw the first one to the floor (with correct non-corrosive screws), stack the next one on top and screw it down, and so on until the desired height is reached. That easy.

Creating the curb for a concrete floor

Image of a brick curb

Using Bricks for a shower cub

For a concrete floor you want to use bricks. Yeah, bricks. Just stack ’em. I use gray concrete bricks (no holes) and stack them two or three high for my curbs. You can use just regular thinset to adhere them to the floor and to each other. Just stack them in the shape you want.

You do not want to use wood for your curb on concrete. Wood will actually absorb moisture from your concrete and start to swell.

Creating the pre-slope

This is one of the steps most often skipped by a lot of people – amateurs as well as professionals. It is imperative! You need it – it’s that simple. Without a pre-slope your waterproof liner will lay flat on the floor. This does not give water anywhere to go. It will sit there, stagnate, mold, . . . you get the idea. With a proper pre-slope any water will drain to the weep holes in the drain and go where it needs to – away.

Lathe for wooden floor

Lathe installation for wood floor

You need to first make sure your shower floor will stay where you put it. On wood you can use regular metal lathe.

You need to place what is called a ‘cleavage’ membrane beneath your lathe. This is just a sheet of plastic or tar paper stapled to your wood floor first with the lathe placed over it. The membrane does not make anything waterproof! If someone tells you that hit ’em in the head with a bat. It is necessary to prevent the wooden floor from sucking the moisture out of the pre-slope prematurely causing it to cure too fast (or not fully) and significantly weakening it.

When your membrane is down staple the lathe over the top of that. Just cut it to the shape of your shower floor and lay it flat on the floor and staple or nail it down. This gives your mud bed something to grab onto. In the above photo I have used plastic as my membrane and only have a partial piece of lathe in – make sure you cover the entire area below your pre-slope.

Image of a properly prepared pre-slope

A properly prepared pre-slope

For a concrete floor you need to mix up some regular thinset except you need to mix it “loose”. That just means you need to add a bit more water than the instructions call for to make it thinner. Cover your shower floor area with this before you start installing your deck mud. The deck mud itself does not “stick” to anything, you need to supply something that will adhere it to your substrate.

Oh crap – Math???

To make the installation easier you’ll want to mark your height lines on your wall studs. To figure out how high it needs to be off the floor you need to figure out your slope. This involves a bit of math – don’t panic! It’s easy. Figure out which corner is farthest from the center of your drain. Your slope needs to go up in height 1/4″ for every foot. If your furthest corner is three feet from your drain center your slope needs to rise 3/4″. Easy enough so far, right?

Your finished floor (after your liner and top mud bed are installed) needs to be 1″ to 1 1/4″ thick at the drain. So, if we make the pre-slope  3/4″ thick at the drain it needs to be a total of 1 1/2 inch thick at all your walls. So mark a line 1 1/2″ from the floor all the way around the wall studs. This will be the height of your pre-slope at the walls. I try to make my pre-slope the correct thickness at the drain so it will be 1 1/2″ at the walls. This way you do not need to draw lines, just level your perimeter with the top of the 2 x 4 studs along the bottom of the wall. Depending on the size of the shower it doesn’t always work, but it saves time if you can work it out that way.

If your shower is not a square, and they rarely are, you still need to have the same thickness at the walls all the way around the perimeter. This means that you will have a steeper slope on the walls closer to the drain. This is normal. If you don’t do it this way you will have uneven tile cuts at the bottom of your wall. By doing it this way you will ensure a level line and, in turn, a level floor around your perimeter.

The height of your pre-slope at the drain can vary. It  needs to be level with the top of the bottom flange of your drain. Regular drains have two flanges which bolt to each other. The pre-slope needs to be at least level or a touch higher than the bottom flange. Your liner then goes between the top and bottom flange to utilize the weep holes in the drain. This allows any water atop the liner to drain. The pre-slope supports the liner so it needs to be level or above every point of the lower flange. Does that make sense?

This is why planning is so important. Your drain needs to be high (or low) enough and your curb needs to be higher than your shower floor – naturally. So figure all this out before you build anything.

Playing with mud

Now we need to mix up a batch of deck mud. Check out that link, I’ll wait . . .

Okay, once your mud is mixed up you want to start packing it in there. If you are going over concrete and have your thinset slurry down, cover the entire bottom of the shower floor first to ensure the entire base will stick. If you have a large shower only spread as much thinset as you can reach over at a time. Start at the walls and pack your mud down really well – beat the hell out of it. Seriously, beat it like the last DMV employee you spoke with. You want to eliminate any voids and create as dense a bed as possible. Don’t worry, it won’t hit back.

Pack it down around the perimeter to just above your line. When you get that done get yourself a 2 x 4 about 18 – 24 inches long. Lay that on top of your mud bed against your wall and tap the 2 x 4 down with your hammer until it is even with your line. This ensures a level, even line all the way around your perimeter. Perfect! Now don’t touch the edges.

Image of properly prepared deck mud

Properly prepared deck mud

Continue to pack mud into your shower base all the way from the perimeter down to the drain. You should have a straight line from the perimeter to the drain without any dips or humps. This will allow water to drain correctly without pooling anywhere. While this particular layer of your shower floor does not have to be exact, you do need to make certain it is fairly flat in regards to the line from the perimeter to the drain.

Image of a consistent pre-slope

Ensure a consistent slope

That’s it. When you get it all packed in there it should have a shape similar to a very, very shallow bowl. Now leave it alone. Really, leave it alone. The next day it will be ready to install your liner and all that fun stuff. Don’t play with it until then.

In my next post I will show you how to install your waterproof liner. Until then leave your pre-slope alone. It’s fine. Quit trying to perfect it. We’ll do that tomorrow. Get away from it. Really. Stop staring at it . . .

Read this next if I haven’t already bored you to death: How to create a shower floor Part 2

{ 809 comments… add one }

Leave a Comment

  • John

    Why in you diagram do you show the backerboard above the top layer of the deck and not embedded ?

    • Roger

      Hi John,

      Because it’s a traditional shower floor. The very bottom can be embedded into the top layer, but it CAN NOT touch the liner at the bottom or it will wick water up into the board.

  • Rick

    Roger,
    Just finished applying Redgard. In what order should I apply tile? I plan on using 12×24’s for shower walls and bathroom floor and 2×2’s on shower floor. Still deciding on how to cover the curb. I’d like to use a solid piece for each of the three sides but not sure it’s in the budget. You’ve got me to this point, help me finish. I need a beer or two for sure! Need to have a few before I use this shower in case it leaks. Thanks.

    • Roger

      Hi Rick,

      So you didn’t flood test your waterproofing? :D

      I prefer the floor tile first with the wall tile overlapping it. That said, if your shower is properly waterproofed it can go in any order you want, it’s purely a personal choice.

      • Rick

        I flood tested when I put in my liner. Should I do it again now that the mud pan is in? Should the bathroom floor be done before the curb so that tile overlaps it also?

        • Roger

          If you already flood tested it you don’t need to do it again. I prefer the floor tile go in first, but that’s purely a personal choice. I just think it looks better.

  • Amy

    Hello Roger,

    Do I need to put 2×6 boards in between the framing studs before doing the pre pitch or even at all? I don’t see it in your pictures above but saw it on (dare I say it) other sites.

    Also, I have the copper hot and cold pipes going through the plywood subfloor a little bit then they bend back into the wall studs. Can I mud and install the floor over the pipes? I have a picture but not sure how to attached it here.

    • Roger

      Hi Amy,

      Most guys do, I don’t. It’s always a good idea to have blocking in there. Yes, you can mud over the pipes.

  • Brian

    Hey Roger.
    I love your site. Thank you much for all your help and advice. I would truly be lost without you. I have a question. Is it necessary to install some sort of support between the studs that surround the shower floor or is the liner nailed to the studs (at the top of course) sturdy enough to hold back the top mud bed. I was thinking of screwing 2×4’s between the stud spaces just to add more support to the edges of the mud bed but I’m not sure if this is even necessary or just time wasted that I could be drinking more “Pepsi”. Thanks in advance!
    -Brian

    • Roger

      Hi Brian,

      Most guys do install 2×6’s between the studs, I’m the rare exception. It’s always a good idea to have solid backing all the way around the perimeter, I just don’t do it.

  • Marty

    Hi Roger,

    First off thanks for this site and all the good info you provide. I am doing my first Kerdi shower. I purchased the 48″ x 48″ kit from Home Depot. This is the one that comes with the Styrofoam base. Followed your Kerdi book as well a Schluder’s website & You Tube videos. Filled up the shower last night for the flood test. 12 hours later started to find wet spots on the ceiling below the shower. :cry: Drained the shower and took some pictures, which I can attach and send to you. So what am I looking for as I tri to find the source of the leak(s)?

    • Roger

      Hi Marty,

      As soon as you drain the shower you will be able to see where water has gotten beneath your kerdi membrane. You can send me pictures at Roger@FloorElf.com and I’ll take a look at them for you if you want. Please use a normal subject line so it doesn’t end up in my spam folder. Marty’s shower floor or something like that will work. My spam filter is an asshole. :D

  • Edward E

    Hi,
    My master bath is being done. The shower walls will have the schluter kerdi from the ceiling down to the floor and run 12″ away from the wall on the concrete floor. (i live in Florida) The concrete floor of the shower area will have the pebbles. Should the kerdi be on the shower floor as well? What kinds of problems do you foresee if the kerdi is not on the floor? Thank you in advance!
    Best Regards,
    Edward

    • Roger

      Hi Edward,

      Yes, it should be on the shower floor as well (unless you have a traditional liner in it). If it isn’t your shower is not waterproof. You’ve waterproofed the vertical walls, where water will get, but won’t sit unless soaked into the substrate. You NEED waterproofing on the floor as well, that’s where all the water will eventually end up.

      • John

        If he does have the traditional liner does the water from the walls just fall into the pvc liner and out the weep holes or do you need to put kerdi band on the top layer of the pan to direct water there?

        • Roger

          Hi John,

          It sheds off the kerdi on the wall, onto the floor, deck mud and liner and down into the weep holes. You don’t need kerdi-band there, gravity does it. :D

  • anne

    Hi, Roger
    I want to have a second opinion from you. I have a contractor working on my new shower stall. They put wall tiles all the way to the rubber shower pan liner and they poured the cement 3inch thick. So the wall tiles are embedded in the shower pan. I have seen several Youtube videos, but haven’t seen anyone doing this manner. So I asked them, they told me they been doing this way for 30 years! Do you think this is proper way or this is acceptable?
    Thank you so much in advance

    • Roger

      Hi Anne,

      I absolutely know it’s not the proper way to do it. I do not think it is acceptable. If your liner is properly installed then it will work, but it’s still not proper.

      • anne

        Hi, Roger
        Thank you so much for your reply.
        Now I’m very worried since it’s on the second floor. What should I look for later as for a sign of bad installation? Do you think my contractor might extend the warranty if I ask? I would appreciate you for your advice.

        Anne

        • Roger

          As I stated Anne, provided the liner is properly installed you don’t need to worry about leaks, the tile against it isn’t going to change that. I have no idea about the warranty, you’d need to talk to him. :D It is not the proper way to do it, but he hasn’t necessarily compromised the installation at all with his method.

  • Matt

    Finally, a write up on doing this from somebody who seems to have common sense.
    Question.
    In my particular scenario, when I pulled up my existing shower pan I found a rather large “keyhole “ shape in concrete floor. The larger diameter, which is probably 10” in diameter provides access to the P-Trap, and the smaller diameter fits snuggly around the drain pipe coming up through the floor. What method to you suggest for closing up this hole prior to putting down my pre-slope. Somebody suggested I install a subfloor from pressure treated lumber, or cement board, but I am thinking that might have been bad advice.

    Thanks for the advice……Matt

    • Roger

      Hi Matt,

      Holy shit! :D YES! That is bad advice.

      You can either fill it with regular concrete or (more easily since you’re doing it anyway) just fill it with deck mud as you install your preslope. Either will work fine.

  • Blaine

    I am reading your tile threads with great interest. I was looking for a thread hopefully that dealt with my issue at hand. I have a 60×36 shower space but I have to hide a 3″ waist line in the front wall of the shower. Its probably going to be a 2×6 wall. Another words I have to build a stub wall to cover the first 18″ of the front wall. Then I’d have to match that facing stub wall on the other side of the opening for the door sizing we would like to have mounted. We figure 28- 30″ door would be fine. So I’d need a curb built in between the walls as the threshhold.

  • Jim Murray

    Dear Mr. Elf, I’m thinking Kerdi over drywall and a mortar pan with a Kerdi-line drain. Would you bury the drywall in the mortar? And if so how would you go about that interface? Also, I need to have the pan very thin at the drain end, what would you recommend if it were to taper to about 1/2″?

    Thanks a bunch, jim

    • Roger

      Hi Jim,

      Put your drywall up first, then kerdi it all the way down to the floor, then create your mud deck right up against it. Run your floor kerdi up the walls at least 2″ and you’re fine. 1/2″, while not *technically* correct, is fine at the drain end of a linear installation.

  • Sean

    Roger, I only have 1 1/2 inches to work with at the drain, this is going over 1 1/4 inches of plywood (2 layers). What is my best option 3/4″ pre-slope and 3/4″ top coat at drain, 1/2″ pre-slope and 1″ top coat at drain, or 1″ pre-slope and 1/2″ top coat at drain? Please and thank you!

    PS. Awesome information…I owe you a Beer err Pepsi! :rockon:

    • Roger

      Hi Sean,

      1/2″ preslope and 1″ top coat would be the best.

  • kevin

    Getting ready to tile, for outside corners of backer to backer do I just use the tape and mortar or is there some kind of corner bead used? Im sure this has been asked but I couldnt find on here and conflicting opinions all over google for backer to green board joint (flat joint), how to seal the joint? Thank you.

    • Roger

      Hi Kevin,

      You can use tape and mortar or a plastic corner bead. Between the backer and green board you can put a bead of silicone. This prevents water from wicking over.

      • KEVIN

        Do you still tape over the siliconed joint? If so, fiber tape and mortar on both sides of joint? Most likely my joint will be under the last tile.

        • Roger

          Yes, you still tape and mud over it.

  • RAINER

    MUST I have a curb? in other words, can the bathroom floor transition DIRECTLY into the shower?

    • Roger

      Hi Rainer,

      You can build a curbless shower if the proper requirements are meant. Google curbless shower. :)

  • Charlie

    Hi Roger,

    First time shower pan builder on wood substrate. I have a curb on two of the four shower sides. Does the curb get a moisture barrier, lath and mud like the slope floor? Or is it just made up of 2×4’s, liner, cement board?, and tile?

    Thank you!
    Charlie

    • Roger

      Hi Charlie,

      It gets the 2×4’s, liner, lath and mud. Like this. Bonus: That happens to be the same layout as your shower. :D

  • joe

    Hey Devil Dog. The Mrs want frame-less glass shower with tile I am installing in master bath soon. I have a wooden floor but was considering benefits of building the curb out of something other than wood 2 by 4 (if possible on wood floor) cause I saw on another site tile guys advising folks to never use wood but bricks or concrete blocks instead due to potential leaks and woods moisture issues. You advised using basic non pt lumber for wood floor which makes sense when securing to floor- just screw it well and then make sure curb is waterproofed. My questions are:
    1. Have you ever used bricks/blocks on wood floors?
    2. how do you make sure bricks secure well to OSB/plywood?
    3. With the wood curb, how do you prevent leaks when a frame-less glass shower hinge will have to be secured (through the tile or contrasting natural stone she has yet to choose) to the curb at least at two points.

    any other suggestions come to mind are welcomed. Not fun living with a “call back” ;)
    thanks again for the help you have given and continue to give.

    • Roger

      Hey Joe,

      I always use bricks on concrete, never on a wood floor. The main problem is bonding the bricks in place, they won’t last. With the wood curb, when drilling holes for the shower pivot, just drill the hole then fill it entirely with silicone before driving in the fasteners. It will seal the hole up as the fasteners are driven into the wood.

  • Roger

    How deep is the pre pitch at the walls? From there I taper at the rate of 1/4″ per foot to my centered drain right? Where the pre pitch mud meets the drain’s lower flange must that be level or slightly over the flange?
    That must mean then that the deck mud is the same thickness wall to drain, right?

    • Roger

      Hi Roger,

      The depth of the preslope will be determined by the distance from your drain to the furthest corner of the shower at 1/4″ / foot plus the height of your lower flange. Yes, the top mud deck is uniform in thickness from the drain to the wall.

  • Nick

    Roger,

    I’ve purchased 3 of your books and am ready to install my mud pan with Kerdi drain. I have a question related to your book: Kerdi Water-Proofing Walls and Floors.
    You describe installing the drain with dry pack mortar then removing it and using thinset to adhere it to the mud mountain you have created.
    Schluter videos show using a wetter version of the dry pack in one step. I assume, your method is to avoid inconsistency with the mud and ensuring it isn’t going to shrink, crack etc. Am I following you correctly? If not what is the problem with Schluter’s version?
    I only ask because to me the Schluter version may be easier for me…but then again, your professional experience matters to me. I don’t know what I don’t know and maybe your version is actually easier from several perspectives I don’t realize.
    Thank you for your time once again. I really enjoy your site and literature.
    Nick

    • Roger

      Hi Nick,

      Yes, it’s because wetter deck mud tends to shrink more. And thinset actually bonds the drain to the deck mud, deck mud won’t stick to anything. If you want you can spread thinset on the bottom of the drain, install it, then pack deck mud beneath it. Same result and you don’t need to remove it.

  • Chris

    Hi Roger

    Great site…..

    I will be using redgard on the walls and the floor (concrete).

    1) Can I make my curb out of deck mud instead of using brick? I would form the curb then pack the form with deck mud. Does it need to be reinforced (lath/rebar)? I would make the curb before I made the slope.

    2) Can I just Redgard the curb directly.

    3) I will be removing a tub and installing a shower only. The area where the p-trap is installed is in an open plastic box. I assume that when I place the deck mud I will fill the box and encase the sewer line with the deck mud. I have extended the drain to the center of the shower (30×60).

    4) Just to clarify. When using Redgard, all change of planes require mesh be used (per your Liquid Topical Shower Waterproofing document). Does this include the backerboard joints as well? Would this would be in addition to the using the mesh tape/thinset on all joints/corners after installation of the backerboard. If so can the same 2″ mesh be used again or does it need to be the 6″ mesh.

    Thanks

    Chris

    • Chris

      1. No. Found answer in other posts. Will use brick with thinset.

      2. Yes

      3. Yes. Ok to fill with deck mud.

      4. No. Not necessary if mesh/thinset was used on the backerboard. I will be using mesh/thinset at the backerboad/deck mud interface also with silicone caulk at all change of planes.

    • Roger

      Hi Chris,

      1. Yes you can, but you need to be careful working around it before it’s tiled. Deck mud is brittle, which means it doesn’t do corners and such well without being covered. And yes, you’ll need to put lath in it to reinforce it. Bricks are MUCH easier.

      2. Yes.

      3. Yes.

      4. Yes, it includes the backerboard joints as well. It is (according to customs, the manufacturer of redgard) in addition to the regular taping and mudding of the corners. It can be the 2″.

      • Chris

        Regarding 4) above. Just reread your Liquid Topical Waterproofing document. Page 154, 15) says to repeat steps 11- 13 for the second coat. Since Redgard requires mesh at the change in planes is mesh still required for the second coat as stated in 11).

        • Roger

          Hi Chris,

          No it is not.

  • JOE CAL

    ROGER,
    FIRST TIME SHOER INSTALL. FRIEND HAS A SOUND BASE ( 3′ BY 3′ ) AND WANTS TO CHANGE THE 1″ BY 1″ MOSAIC TILE ON TOP. CAN I JUST CHIP THEM OUT AND INSTALL NEW ONES. SHE’S MAKING THE REQUEST, AND I FEEL YOU ARE GOING TO GIVE ME THE SAME ANSWER I GAVE HER!

    THANKS IN ADVANCE,
    JOE CAL

    • Roger

      Hi Joe,

      If your shower floor is not topically waterproofed yes you can do that. However, I always recommend replacing everything because I don’t build over someone else’s work. You never really know what’s right or wrong. But yes, it can be done.

  • Lynn

    Roger, your site and your e-manuals are very helpful. I am renovating an existing shower which had a very poorly formed and aligned block-out in the concrete slab. I plan to fill the remains of the block-out with the pre-slope layer before I install the pvc shower liner. The thickness of the pre-slope will vary from 2.5″ at the drain to 3.25″ at the wall to give me the 3/4″ of slope I need for 30″ from the drain to the farthest corner. 1. ) Is this preslope too thick? Should I add some LevelQuik? The concrete patch is just touching the very bottom of the throat of the pvc drain body where the drain pipe attaches. 2. ) Can you give more detail about how to do the thinset slurry to assist the preslope bonding to the concrete? Can I use latex bonding agent instead? 3.) Can I install the cement backer boards down near the top of the pvc liner so the final mud bed can help hold them in place since there are no screws in the bottom 12″ due to the liner behind it?

    • Roger

      Hi Lynn,

      1. No, it is not too thick. No, no levelquik required.
      2. Mix up some thinset with double the recommended amount of water. Spread it onto the concrete before placing your deck mud on it. Yes, you can use latex instead, but it’s overly-expensive for what you’re accomplishing. Thinset works just as well.
      3. It depends on how you are going to waterproof the walls.
      4. There is no number 4. What do you have against the number 4???

  • bub

    Roger, I completed my huge shower floor with small hexagon mosaics and now realize I was not very flat with my mud. i’m considering ripping it up and putting different tile on. 1.) would you use something like SimplePrep 1 gal. Pre-Mixed Floor Patch to smooth out the slope? 2.) How can I assure the new tile will adhere?

    thanks,

    • Roger

      Hi Bub,

      1. I would not. I would use thinset to smooth it out.
      2. By using thinset to smooth it out. :D

      • bub

        thinset, let dry, thinset, tile?

        i tried to smooth it out prior to drying and hadand difficulty getting to lie flat.

        thanks roger,

        • Roger

          Yes. The skim-coat is to flatten and smooth it out, let that cure, then tile.

  • KEVIN

    Hello, I am creating a shower floor that is 29″ wide and 58″ long. My drain center is about 11″ from the wall. My question is since I pitch 1/4″ per ft, that would be approx. 1″ thicker at the farthest point from the drain. You say to make that even all the way around and change the slope angle accordingly so your tiles are even along the bottom. Should I really pitch 1″ over the 11″ from the drain to the walls closest to it? It seems like that would be very steep and look odd. Any information would be helpful, thank you. Kevin

    • Roger

      Hi Kevin,

      With offset drains you can do as you describe – with the larger slope like that at one end, or keep a consistent 1/4″ per foot slope from the drain to all walls and cut the uneven slope in the bottom row of your tile (perimeter will not be level).

  • Stephen

    Hi, Roger.

    First off, let me say that I read through your waterproofing manual, and I really found it helpful and very well written. I work in the marketing and training field, and I was impressed with how well you could take a relatively dry subject and make it interesting and even entertaining. It was a quick and informative read.

    I apologize if my questions are already answered on your site, but with three little kids at home and another on the way, I have very little time to peruse the site for clarifications. :bonk: So thanks in advance for your patience.

    So I have three questions: one is related to waterproofing, one is related to information I’ve received from contractors, and one is related to shower seats.

    1) Topical Waterproofing Transitions: In your waterproofing manual, you suggested the paint-on options as possibilities for the topical waterproofing application on the walls (and the shower floor, I believe). I really like this idea as to me it seems the most foolproof. My question is how you would handle the transition from the walls to the shower floor. You made a mention in passing that some of these topical applications require a fabric-like transition, but I didn’t really see anything more in that vein. Perhaps this is covered in your detailed manual, but I’m not quite ready to make the purchase as we are still considering using a contractor to build our shower. Which takes me to question 2….

    2) Contractor Tales: I’ve gotten three quotes from contractors to finish my basement bathroom. One of the contractors works with the general contractor I used to help finish my basement, and the other two were recommended by a tile shop. I have received quotes to complete the job from $900 to $2300 to $3000. So here’s are my questions. I talked with my contractor about the process his guy (the $2300 quote) would use to build the curb and install the shower pan, and he described the process as follows:
    – The PLUMBER usually builds the shower pan and curb. The curb is built with treated 2×4’s, 2×6’s, etc. stacked on the flat to whatever spec the homeowner desires. The plumber then lines the concrete floor with the rubber membrane which goes up the studs about a foot and is secured there. Then mud is applied to build the slope / shower floor. Then tile goes directly on top of the mud. This made me uneasy having read through your waterproofing manual and just having looked at your instructions of building a shower curb using bricks if on concrete. I’m not clear on whether the cost for the pan / curb was included in the $2300 or not — waiting for an answer on that.
    – For walls, the cement backerboard can be run down to the shower floor and then tile can be installed directly to that using typical tiling methods. He said in his personal shower, he had it built using wire mesh and cement and then the tile installed directly on top of that — no membrane. This also made me uneasy.
    – For the general bathroom floor, my contractor’s tile guy said that he would need to use floor leveling compound to make the basement floor level before tiling the rest of the bathroom. The other contractors said that wouldn’t be necessary. There’s not a huge pitch to my basement floor, but there is some. And there is some unevenness to the floor because of the floor break we had to do to install rough plumbing. I’m not sure the leveling step is necessary, and I was thinking we could just install the tile directly over the concrete, using the thinset to even out any unevenness from the floor break. — But then I saw something on your site about needed to have an underlayment even on a concrete floor, so now I wonder if leveling compound would be the right choice.
    – I guess I always thought it was safe to assume that contractors (especially the one I know personally) know what they’re doing since they do this stuff all of the time, but now I’m swinging back the pendulum to “Should I just do it myself?” I am very meticulous and detailed, but I don’t know if I have the time to get this done before baby #4 comes and insanity ensues. :dance:

    3) In looking through your post on shower benches, I didn’t see any description of how to build a triangular corner shower bench over a concrete floor. I saw the description of a regular rectangular bench, but I’m wondering what material you’d suggest if we want to do a small corner bench. I assume cinder blocks would not be ideal in that case. Maybe just a small square-ish bench would be easier than a triangular one.

    Anyway, that’s my novel. Sorry it’s so long, but hopefully it helps give you some context of the things I’m thinking through. I really appreciate any input you can give. Thanks!

    • Roger

      Hi Stephen,

      1. The transition and use of fabric reinforcement depends on the particular membrane you are using – some require it, some do not. It is covered in the manual.

      2. There are two red flags with his shower floor method – pressure treated wood should NEVER be used beneath a shower curb, it will dry out and warp / twist, and there is absolutely no mention of a preslope (and that the plumber does it, but that’s code in certain areas – they rarely do it correctly). No waterproofing method on the walls (backerboard is not waterproof). If he has mud walls there is (supposed to be) roofing felt or tar paper behind it – that is both a cleavage membrane and a waterproofing element in mud walls. I always use an underlayment to separate the tile from the underlying structure – concrete included. I normally use ditra, it has many more advantages than just slc. Your floor, however, does not necessarily need to be LEVEL, just FLAT. Some variation can be compensated for as the tile is set.

      I wish all contractors knew what they were doing. I try to keep an open mind and just convince myself that most were simply not trained correctly.

      3. You can build a triangular corner bench out of cinder blocks (standing upright) and filling in the gaps from the edge of the block to the wall with wall mud (deck mud with lime in it to make it sticky).

      After the 2nd kid there is no new insanity, it’s just the same insanity repeated. :D

  • Jeff

    Roger,
    This is great information – thanks
    Question – I am installing a wooden bench / seat in my shower stall that will be tiled like the rest of the floor and shower. when is the best point to build the bench? After putting down the pre-sloped mud ?

    • Roger

      Hi Jeff,

      It is always easier to build it first, then do the floor up to the face of it. Treat the front of the bench just like the shower wall.

  • Dave McLachlna

    Roger, we bought your Kerdi waterproofing kit. We are using mosaic shiny river rock for the floor. What is your recommended thinset, and grout for this product over kerdi.

    Thanks

    Dave

    • Roger

      Hi Dave,

      I prefer Laticrete 317, but any really good unmodified will work fine. Whatever grout you’re using on the walls will also work fine. One caveat on the grout, though, you WILL use FOUR TO FIVE times the amount of grout for the same size area of 12×12 tile.