Browse Forums Interior Decorating Lounge 1 Jun 01, 2010 8:03 pm Okay, I purchased some stacked stone tiles recently with the intent of making a feature wall in a recessed area in the hallway of our new house. I bought some fibre cement sheets and was going to glue this to the gyprock and then screw this into the wall studs before applying the glue etc and laying the stack stone up the wall. After speaking with some friends about my idea, they have planted the seed of a water wall instead. This would obviously involve a similar process except I would need waterproofing measures in place. I was thinking of feeding a pipe up behind the wall and having it come out at the top in a T formation with a series of holes drilled in the T, smaller initially, before getting larger the further the holes are from the centre of the T to allow a more even flow of water (if that makes sense). Has anyone tried such a project? Does anyone know of any good links that I could have a look at? Any advice on which way I should proceed? Do I go the water wall or stick with the dry feature wall? Re: Indoor water wall...thoughts/advice/help? 2Jun 01, 2010 8:51 pm I believe for this sort of thing indoors you need to be careful about bacteria as any sort of splashing can make bugs airborne... so some sort of chlorination needs to be thought about. Re: Indoor water wall...thoughts/advice/help? 4Jun 02, 2010 6:30 pm the area is in the hallway which is tiled. As I probably wouldn't have the water feature on all the time regular top ups would be needed before I was about use it. I would also use chlorine to maintain water clarity if I went the water option thanks. the above one is white Mat tiles and have gripness so going for this Mat tiles for both indoor and outdoor. Beaumont told it can be used in both indoor and… 2 10226 Hi all. We recently chose and ordered a tile to use indoor, and were then advised that the indoor variant wasn’t available, but it would be fine to use the outdoor one… 0 3709 Versaloc is a mortarless besser block system that still needs a properly engineered footing. If you just do a 400x200 footing it will fail in time. At 17m long you need it… 1 32765 |