# What Wet Works Renovation Involves | Guan Heng

> Wet works renovation combines plumbing, waterproofing, screeding and tiling. Learn what it covers, where it applies, and why integrated trades matter.

URL: https://plumberkotadamansara.my/guide/what-wet-works-renovation-involves/
Last-Modified: 2026-06-04

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# What Wet Works Renovation Involves

Wet works renovation combines plumbing, waterproofing, screeding and tiling. Learn what it covers, where it applies, and why integrated trades matter.

![Bathroom mid-renovation showing screed, membrane and tiling](/images/featured/bathroom-mid-renovation-showing-screed-waterproof-.webp)

## Why the term exists

In Malaysian construction, “wet works” is shorthand for the trades that involve water and cement together — primarily plumbing, waterproofing, screeding, and tiling. Renovating a bathroom or kitchen properly means all four happening in coordinated sequence.

The reason the term gets used as one thing rather than four separate things is because the sequence matters. Getting it wrong is what causes leaks, not picking bad materials. For 

wet works renovation

[/bathroom-kitchen-renovation/ →](/bathroom-kitchen-renovation/)

, the coordination is the work.

## The four trades involved

### Plumbing

Rough-in plumbing is the supply and drain pipework that feeds the future fixtures. It goes in early — once tiling is down, changing plumbing means hacking and re-doing the surface above it.

This includes hot and cold supply lines, drain lines, vents, and any pipework for water heater or filtration if those are part of the scope.

### Waterproofing

![Worker laying waterproof membrane before tiling](/images/content/worker-laying-waterproof-membrane-before-tiling-a-.webp)

The waterproof membrane that goes between the structural floor/walls and the finished tile. It’s what stops water that gets through grout, around fixtures, or behind tiles from soaking into the structure or leaking through to rooms below.

Membrane is applied after screeding and before tiling. It needs to cure fully before tile goes on top.

### Screeding

The cement screed that levels the floor and sets the falls — the slight slope that drains water to the floor drain or floor waste. Wet-area floors must have correct falls; standing water in a bathroom is both annoying and a long-term waterproofing risk.

### Tiling

Ceramic or porcelain tile applied over the cured waterproof membrane. The tiling is the visible finish, but it’s not waterproof on its own — grout absorbs water over time. The waterproof layer underneath is what actually keeps water out.

## Why integration matters

If a homeowner hires a plumber, a tiler, and a separate waterproofer, the sequencing often slips:

-   The plumber finishes before waterproofing is properly considered
-   The tiler is keen to start before membrane has fully cured
-   The waterproofer is treated as an optional extra rather than a critical step

When any of these slip, the result is a bathroom that leaks within a year or two — water finds the weak point in the sequence.

A coordinated wet-works team manages the sequence as one workflow. Plumbing happens, screed goes in, membrane gets applied and properly cured, then tiling, then fixtures fitted, then commissioning. Each step happens when the previous is ready.

## Where wet works applies

The obvious cases are bathrooms and kitchens. Both have water connections, drains, and tiled wet floors that need the full sequence.

Less obvious but equally important:

-   **Balconies and yards** with floor drains — these need waterproofing and tiling sequence just like indoor wet areas
-   **Laundry rooms** with washing machine drains and water supply
-   **Storage rooms** sometimes contain water heater or pump installations that need wet-area treatment

Any room that combines water plumbing and a tiled floor benefits from wet-works coordination.

## What goes wrong without coordination

The classic failure modes we get called to fix:

-   **No waterproof membrane** — someone skipped it to save cost or time, and now water seeps through grout to the room below
-   **Membrane applied over tile** — wrong sequence; the membrane should be below, not above
-   **Tile laid before membrane cured** — adhesion fails at the membrane boundary
-   **Wrong falls** — water pools in the wrong spot, sometimes against a wall, leading to localised damage

All of these are avoidable with the right sequence. Our 

waterproofing and tiling sequence

[/guide/waterproofing-and-tiling-sequence-for-wet-areas/ →](/guide/waterproofing-and-tiling-sequence-for-wet-areas/)

 guide covers the order in detail.

## Frequently asked questions

What does 'wet works' actually mean in renovation?

It's the trades involving water and cement — plumbing, waterproofing, screeding, and tiling — done together as a coordinated job rather than separate scopes.

Why do wet works need one coordinated team?

Getting the sequence right between plumbing, waterproofing, and tiling is what prevents future leaks. When trades are split between separate contractors, the sequence often slips.

Which rooms in a home need wet works?

Bathrooms and kitchens are the main wet-works areas. Balconies, yard areas, and laundry rooms often need wet-works treatment too — anywhere with water that needs waterproofing and tiling.

## Related guides

### Renovating a Terrace House Bathroom: What to Budget

What drives bathroom renovation cost in a Malaysian terrace house — scope, sanitary ware tier and tiling — plus how quotes are scoped on site.

[Renovating a Terrace House Bathroom: What to Budget →](/guide/renovating-a-terrace-house-bathroom-what-to-budget/)

### Waterproofing and Tiling Sequence for Wet Areas

The right sequence — screed, waterproof membrane, then tiling — is what stops bathroom leaks. Learn the correct order and why it matters.

[Waterproofing and Tiling Sequence for Wet Areas →](/guide/waterproofing-and-tiling-sequence-for-wet-areas/)

## Need wet works help in PJ?

We're a local Saujana Damansara team covering Petaling Jaya and Selangor.

Learn about wet works

[/bathroom-kitchen-renovation/ →](/bathroom-kitchen-renovation/)

 

Call 012-219 8185

[tel:+60122198185 →](tel:+60122198185)
