With a tile shower, it’s customary to demolish the whole thing rather than attempt a surgical repair. I noticed a distinct lack of information on how to surgically demolish only part of a shower, so am documenting my learnings, as well as my mistakes.
Speaking of mistakes, here were my two biggest ones:
Fixing the plumbing by busting through the tile side of the wall. The shower was leaking into the wall, so I wasn’t thinking carefully. In retrospect, I should have gone through the stucco on the exterior of the house. That’s a LOT easier to repair than a tile shower
After messily punching through the tile to fix the plumbing, I asked professionals whether they would repair the hole I made, or even demolish the whole shower so that I could install a standard molded acrylic shower myself. No one wanted the job. They would only demolish the shower if they got to put in a new one, for about $5000 (back in 2017). I tried a place that makes custom shower liners (might have been Bath Fitter – anyway, a place like that). They wouldn’t even estimate over the phone, and made me sit through the whole 2-hour presentation, when all I wanted was the estimate. It wreaked of a scam. Yup, $5000 again, for basically some pieces of plastic. At that point, my best move probably would have been to demolish the whole thing myself, and install an off-the-shelf shower. But no, I decided I was going to surgically repair only what was necessary.
1970’s shower construction has an ordinary (but possibly water-resistant) drywall, except that there is tar paper behind it to shed water into the shower pan, should the tile ever leak. On top of the drywall was wallpaper, just the same as any other room in the era. Chicken wire was stapled to that, and then the mortar spread and tile mounted. So the only thing holding the mortar and tile to the drywall is these little staples – easily pried sideways. That’s the reason for cutting shallow – so that the drywall will stay in place and not mess up the edge I want to keep.
Note that if this was a full demolition, there would be no need to exercise such care. I could just make a bunch of non-precision cuts and pry, or maybe just wail on it with a sledgehammer.
That was the demolition. More articles will follow on this project, but the rest is standard stuff that is well-covered on the internet.