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Wood Shower

5/25/16       
Mark

Was finishing up some work at a customers house when she asked me about using wood to cover the walls in her shower instead of tile.

My first thought was hell no, but said I would give it some thought. Figured I would get some opinions here. Tell me if this is an awful idea.

Was thinking of using Ipe, with the boards running top to bottom, and a ship lap or tongue and groove joint between. Would fasten the boards along the center with a water proof construction adhesive, and use a clear waterproof silicone in all of the joints, and to seal the perimeter. Should allow expansion and contraction.

Everything would be pre-finished, front and back, with an epoxy and spar varnish, essentially like finishing a boat. The varnish would need to be touched up every once in a while, but I think it would otherwise be pretty resilient.

Thoughts?

5/25/16       #2: Wood Shower ...
Jared Emery

I've seen wood bathtubs, but they were wetted out with fiberglass. If they can be done, why not a shower? Although I can hear Jeff Goldblum now: "they were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn't stop to think if they should."

5/25/16       #3: Wood Shower ...
rich c.

Do they have hard water? I see a disaster trying to remove lime and soap scum off of wood. I sure wouldn't do it in my house. I hate cleaning the shower way too much to think about making that more difficult! Also the way wood works when it gets wet all the time, is to incorporate a way for it to dry out. Design a way for air to get all around it. Only expose it on one surface, and attempt to seal it, and somewhere water gets behind it and makes a mess.

5/26/16       #4: Wood Shower ...
Adam

Perfect project for faux wood grain solid surface

5/28/16       #5: Wood Shower ...
peTe Anderson

Website: http://petesfloors.wordpress.com

I have a wood shower that our family has been using for the past 30 years. I used a polyester/fiberglass pan. I pre-finished three sheets of one-half inch luan plywood
for the walls by staining with spice brown
Duraseal stain and three coats of moisture-cure poly-urethane. Installed the panels and used an inside corner mold in the back two corners, with a natural colored quarter ply ceiling. I have a fan/infra-red light/incandescent light fixture on the ceiling.
I have a Koa Jamb that mounts a glass door. After each shower the walls and floor are squeegeed, so no water spots, even though our water has 29 grains and 10 grains is considered hard.
The caulking for sealer is NP-1, at joints and behind the corner mould.
Some hard water/soap scum removers can damage the finish. Don't use a cleaner with carbolic acid , or phosphoric acid to remove scum.
Mc poly is extremely abrasion resistant, and water-proof. Water-proof silicone will prevent any type of finish from sticking if you ever need to add more coats of finish.

7/26/16       #6: Wood Shower ...
Mark  Member

I did a couple of showers in cypress some years ago, they sprayed a penetrating waterproofing on the walls and the owners seemed happy with the results

7/1/21       #7: Wood Shower ...
RobHRN

We did a lot of wood walls in bathrooms. Due to our practice, it's really hard to make high-quality waterproofing, depends on sort of wood first of all

7/2/21       #9: Wood Shower ...
RobHRN

Website: https://yournewtubs.com/

If you got any related questions, feel free to contact me anytime

9/19/21       #11: Wood Shower ...
SharpFrank Member

Hey, I understand what you feel. To my mind, using wood walls in a shower looks like madness. It's really hard to find a decent water-resistant wood. Another thing, it's impossible to clean it completely using a basic showerhead. In modern systems, high pressure is generally not available. So the option is to replace it to high-pressure showerheads. Review is below

https://bathroomer.org/best-high-pressure-shower-head/


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