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Most Common Waterproofing Mistake in Showers
Most common waterproofing mistake I still see in showers It’s not the tiles. It’s not the grout. It’s what’s hidden behind them. The mistake: 👉 treating waterproofing like a “layer”, not a system. No proper corner detailing. No continuity behind benches and niches. No understanding where the water actually goes. Result: Looks perfect for 6 months. Then comes the smell, mold, and leaks. Question for you: What’s the most common waterproofing mistake you still see on jobs? Post a photo or describe it.
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Welcome to Bathrooms Without Failures
This is not a course. This is not theory. And it’s definitely not Instagram tiling. This community exists for one reason: to prevent bathroom failures that cost time, money, and reputation. Here we talk about: waterproofing details that actually matter material choices and why some systems fail common mistakes that lead to leaks, cracks, and callbacks real job-site decisions, not perfect lab conditions You won’t find: beginner tutorials “just trust the system” advice shortcuts that look good for six months If you’re here, you probably already know that details decide everything. How this community works Ask real questions from real jobs Share photos, even when something goes wrong Learn from mistakes before they become expensive I’ll regularly post: on-site examples failures I’ve seen (and fixed) decisions that separate clean work from future problems If you want perfect photos, go to Instagram. If you want bathrooms that last, stay here.
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Bathrooms Without Failures
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fewer callbacks
fewer arguments with clients
and work that survives time, water, and use
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