Bathroom in Basement Plumbing Installation near Bayside, WI
Over 40 years combined experience!
Why choose us for your bathroom in basement plumbing installation project?
We have years of experience installing bathrooms in basements. Here’s the process:
- Layout the design of your new bathroom.
- Submit the permit application.
- Put up plastic sheeting to contain dust.
- Remove concrete.
- Excavate trenches.
- Install plumbing.
- Pressure test plumbing for leaks.
- Call for inspection.
- Backfill trenches.
- Remove excess concrete debris out of basement.
- Pour concrete and finish.
- Clean up basement.
- (rough carpentry framing)
- Install rough plumbing.
- Inspection.
- (drywall/finish carpentry/painting/electrical)
- Install finish plumbing.
- Final inspection . . . & Job well done!
We have installed more bathrooms in basements than we can even remember! And we have never had a call back telling us the plumbing isn’t working! That’s a perfect record! Knock on wood. When you hire us, you’re hiring experienced professional plumbers. We’re not learning on your job, we’ve already done it. Check out all our 5-star reviews.
Frequently Asked Questions – Plumbing Bathroom in Basement FAQs:
Can you install underfloor plumbing to a bathroom in my basement before the rough framing?
Yes, the best way to build your new basement bathroom is to determine the fixture locations and lay out the future walls. Once the general layout of the bathroom design is confirmed, the plumber will open up the floor and connect drain plumbing to the existing building drain plumbing of your house.
Do I need to increase the water piping size if I add a bathroom to my basement?
It depends on the size of your existing plumbing water distribution system. Sometimes adding a bathroom increases demand that will exceed the limitations of the plumbing code and it will be necessary to increase the size of your water pipes to account for the increase water supply fixture unit demand on your plumbing pipes. If you have a recently build home and future bathroom plumbing has already been installed, the original plumbing company should have accounted for the additional bathroom and the additional demand on the water supply system that will happen at some future time. If you live in an older house, you may need to increase the size of your main water line from ¾" to 1" in order to maintain pressure and gallons per minute flow rate necessary to have functional plumbing fixtures.
Do we need to hire a concrete installer to re-pour the concrete after the plumbing is installed?
No, our team of skilled employees has the ability and motivation to repair the floor to its original level and do a nice, neat and clean job so your floor installer won’t run into any problems. At Glacier Hills Plumbing we know the importance of teamwork.