The Foundation of Every Shower
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shower failures when built our way

We waterproof every single shower.
No exceptions.

Waterproofing is not a feature — it's a requirement. It's what separates a 25-year shower from one that fails in five.

Get a Waterproofing Quote Full Shower Renovations

Most Shower Failures Start with Waterproofing

Water doesn't care that the tile looks nice. If the substrate isn't sealed properly — at the corners, joints, curb, and floor-to-wall transition — it will migrate behind the tile and into the structure. By the time you notice discolouration, loose tile, or a musty smell, significant damage has usually already occurred.

We've seen showers that lasted 3 years and showers that lasted 30. The difference is almost always the waterproofing layer.

Protects structural framing from rot and mouldWood framing behind a poorly waterproofed shower can deteriorate in as little as 2–3 years of daily use.
Prevents tile failure and grout crackingWater that gets behind tiles causes the bond to fail, leading to hollow sounds, cracked grout, and loose tile.
Meets insurance and building code expectationsProper waterproofing documentation protects you in the event of water damage claims.
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Our Waterproofing Commitment

Every tiled shower we build — whether it's a $7,000 alcove update or an $18,000 custom walk-in — receives the same waterproofing standard. No exceptions. No upsell. It's built in.

We will not install tile in a shower without first waterproofing it properly.

How We Waterproof

Sheet Membrane or Liquid — We Do Both

We choose the system based on your substrate, shower type, and tile. Both methods are fully code-compliant and proven over decades of use. We'll tell you which one is right for your project.

Sheet Membrane

Schluter KERDI / Sheet Membrane

A thin polyethylene sheet bonded to the substrate with unmodified thin-set. Fabric fleece on both sides creates a mechanical key for the tile mortar. Every joint, corner, and curb gets a dedicated KERDI-BAND strip — no brushing, no drying time between coats.

  • Immediate, consistent coverage — no missed spots
  • Ideal for steam showers and all tile sizes
  • Integrated system — board, membrane, drain flange
  • No cure wait — tile can go down same day
Best for: steam showers, custom builds, large-format tile
Liquid Membrane

Liquid Membrane (RedGard / AquaDefense)

Rolled or brushed directly onto cement board. Applied in two coats on floors and one to two coats on walls, with fabric-reinforced corners at every seam and change of plane. The product dries to a continuous, seamless film with no gaps or overlaps to manage.

  • Seamless — conforms to any shape or surface
  • Excellent for alcove, walk-in, and curbless showers
  • Compatible with mortar pre-slope systems
  • Most cost-effective option for standard showers
Best for: alcove showers, walk-ins, curbless/barrier-free
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Not sure which one? We'll assess your substrate, shower size, and tile selection and recommend the right system when we come out for your estimate. Both methods carry the same waterproofing standard — zero tolerance for shortcuts.

How a Properly Waterproofed Shower Is Built

Each layer has a job. Together they create a system that reliably keeps water where it belongs — in the drain.

Solid, flat structural substrate — no flex, no bounce
Cement board screwed with correct fastener spacing
Alkaline-resistant mesh tape at seams and corners
Waterproofing membrane — sheet or liquid, applied to all wet surfaces
Fabric-reinforced corners at every inside joint
Drain collar integrated and sealed to the membrane
Tile set in correct polymer-modified mortar for full coverage
Silicone (not grout) at all change-of-plane joints
Shower Wall Cross-Section — Our Standard Build
▓▓ Porcelain or ceramic tile
Polymer-modified tile mortar (full coverage)
▓ Waterproofing membrane — liquid (RedGard) or sheet (Kerdi)
▓▓ ½" cement board (Durock, HardieBacker, or equal)
Mesh tape embedded at seams + corners
Wood stud framing — inspected for rot/damage
✓ Change-of-plane joints: silicone caulk — never grout

The Silicone Rule

Grout cracks at movement joints. Every inside corner and floor-to-wall joint in a shower is a movement joint. We always use siliconized caulk at these joints, matched to the grout colour. Grout at movement joints is one of the most common causes of shower leaks in otherwise well-built showers.

What Goes Wrong

Common Waterproofing Failures We See

We're often called in when something goes wrong with another contractor's shower. Here's what we find most often.

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Grout Used at All Corners

Grout shrinks and cracks when corners move. Once a corner opens, water wicks behind the wall every day.

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Membrane Only on the Floor

Water doesn't only come from the floor — it splashes onto walls, wicks into unsealed corners, and migrates at the curb.

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OSB or Drywall Substrate

Standard drywall and OSB swell, delaminate, and rot when wet. Cement board is required for shower walls and floors.

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No Pre-Slope on the Floor

Standing water on the shower floor means improper slope. Every floor needs a slope of ¼" per foot toward the drain.

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Unsealed Drain Collar

The drain collar must be fully integrated with the waterproofing membrane. A drain that isn't properly sealed is an open path for water to reach the subfloor beneath.

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Low Mortar Coverage Under Tile

Tile set with less than 95% back coverage (in wet areas) creates voids where water collects, causing freeze-thaw damage and eventual failure.

Get It Right the First Time

Every Shower We Build Is Waterproofed to Last

Whether you're building a new shower or concerned about an existing one, we can assess the situation and give you an honest recommendation.