This is the bathroom that began our nightmare. The original story can be seen
here. In November 2006 I was taking a shower and noticed some dark blotches on several parts of the freshly painted ceiling and wall. Now I didn’t have my glasses on and wasn’t sure, but I was afraid it might be an issue. The biggest issue for us is that if they had been honest and disclosed the mold as they were supposed to by law, we would
NOT have put a bid on this house because of my immune deficiency due Systemic Lupus wjicj I have battled for better than 20 years.
We took a sharp knife and peeled back part of the paint near one of the blotches and discovered our worst nightmare, black mold. Every spot we checked was the same. We took out an entire wall near the toilet and found it encased in mold.
We immediately called the Realtor to no avail so started by hiring another large dumpster (the first dumpster we had to hire to remove all the broken furniture and miscellaneous trash that they left behind in the barn, garage, house and basement (we had called the realtor about this, but were told they only left behind the things we would need for the house so we were on our own – yeah like I needed old wet moldy invoices from THEIR old business or 50 old gallon milk cartons or 4 broken hat racks or a broken vacuum from the early 1900’s or a broken high chair or the 40 cans of oil based paint that I couldn’t even get hazardous waste to take it was so old – I must have spent a small fortune on kitty litter and saved every newspaper in town and spent 2 weeks pouring old paint, letting It dry and than just tossing it as advised by waste management) or the 30 pounds of plastic sheeting cut into small unusaeable pieces or …
We began the arduous task of tearing out the bathroom walls. We found what we believe 3 separate sources of the mold. Source number 1 was behind the shower head wall. Now this is the biggest reason in the world not to use on of those over the shower head hanging caddies for shampoo and such. We found that pipe that goes to the shower head had bent and cracked. They had tied a pair of red stripe cotton capris around the leak and left it. It evidently continued to leak into the wall for an extended amount of time.


Behind the fiberglass shower walls was a thick layer of solid mold. That wall backed up to the kitchen which would need to be removed also, but I’m getting ahead of myself. In this same bathroom they had repaired a corroded sink pipe with electrical tape and just left it to continue rotting, so here is source number 2. Source number 3 was on that same sink where the pipes went through the floor to the basement and here we found the matching top to the capris tied around an old leak.
So before it was over, the only things left standing in this room were the bathtub and structural 2x4s (and even some of these had to be replaced). This room has all new plumbing and fixtures as well as walls, floor, ceiling and paint. This was a blessing in disguise because we also found all the faulty electrical (you know where they just twisted the wires together, cut off the ground and threw them into the wall behind a ‘new’ switch) and hired a reputable electrician to bring the entire house to code.
Since we had to do it anyway we decided to use bead board and old fashioned ceiling tiles to enhance the character of this old house.
It’s a hard room to photograph, but here’s the new bathroom:

I had painted the sub floor in the interim – what a relief to finally have a finished bathroom with “REAL” floor.
It’s Laura Ashley laminate in oiled teakwood and it is made in the USA!! And on sale is actually less expensive than the made in China stuff. It also a much superior quality.
