Waterproofing done right
Pan, curb, and wall membrane installed before tile — the one place we never cut corners, because that's where leaks start.
Parker, CO bathroom contractor
Full and cosmetic bathroom remodels done right behind the tile — proper waterproofing, clean finishes, and fixtures set to last in a Front Range home.
Mountain Ridge Renovations LLC remodels bathrooms across Parker, Douglas County, and the south Denver metro. Rudy Rincon runs every job directly, so the person quoting your shower is the same one making sure the pan is waterproofed correctly before a single tile goes up. We handle everything from a same-layout refresh to a full down-to-the-studs remodel.
A bathroom takes daily moisture, traffic, and cleaning, and the finish is only as good as the prep behind it. Leaks don't show up on day one — they show up two years later as a soft subfloor or a stain on the ceiling below. That's why waterproofing, ventilation, and clean tile work matter more than any single fixture you pick.
Pan, curb, and wall membrane installed before tile — the one place we never cut corners, because that's where leaks start.
Durable porcelain tile or warm, waterproof LVP — with clean transitions, level prep, and tidy caulk lines that read as finished.
Much of the south metro has hard water, so we plan glass, fixtures, and finishes that stay easy to clean over time.
Before and after
A real Parker-area bathroom stripped back to framing and rough plumbing, then rebuilt with new waterproofing, tile, vanity, and fixtures.
Down to the studs, re-waterproofed, and finished with new tile, vanity, and fixtures.
What's included
Here's what a bathroom remodel can cover, honest planning ranges for the Parker market, and the step-by-step process from first call to final walkthrough.
There are really two kinds of bathroom projects. A cosmetic refresh keeps the existing layout and updates the visible surfaces — flooring, vanity, paint, trim, fixtures, and lighting. A full remodel takes the room down further: new shower pan and waterproofing, tile, and sometimes moving plumbing or a wall. Keeping the fixtures where they are is the single biggest way to protect a budget, since moving a drain is far more expensive than keeping it.
As general planning ranges — not a quote — a cosmetic refresh runs about $5,000–$12,000, a full mid-range remodel about $12,000–$25,000, and a large or high-end remodel $25,000 and up. Waterproof LVP flooring runs roughly $4–$9 per square foot installed. The final number depends on room size, whether plumbing moves, and material tier — the only accurate figure is an on-site estimate. For a deeper walkthrough, see our bathroom remodel planning guide.
Send photos or book a 30-minute estimate — a wide shot, close-ups of tile and fixtures, and anything that's bugging you about the room.
We define the scope, help you select tile, flooring, and fixtures, and order long-lead items before demo.
Old surfaces come out, and the shower pan, curb, and walls are waterproofed before any tile goes up.
Tile is set and grouted with proper cure time, then the vanity, flooring, lighting, and fixtures go in.
We review the finished bathroom together, check caulk lines and function, and handle any punch-list items.
Common questions
As a general planning range, a cosmetic refresh runs about $5,000–$12,000, a full mid-range remodel about $12,000–$25,000, and a large or high-end remodel $25,000 and up. The final number depends on room size, whether the plumbing layout moves, and materials. These are general ranges, not a quote — an on-site estimate is the only accurate figure.
Most single-bathroom remodels take about two to four weeks of active work once materials are on hand. Tile, mortar, and grout need cure time that can't be rushed, and special-order tile, glass, or vanities can add lead time before the job starts.
A like-for-like cosmetic update often doesn't require a permit, but moving plumbing or electrical, changing the layout, or altering framing typically does. Confirm the scope with the Town of Parker or Douglas County building division before work begins.
Both work well. Porcelain tile is the most water-resistant and durable; quality waterproof LVP is warmer, faster to install, and budget-friendly at roughly $4–$9 per square foot installed. The right choice depends on the look, the subfloor, and your budget.
Free estimates
Book a 30-minute estimate with Rudy or call (303) 961-6094. Related reading: our bathroom remodel guide and LVP flooring guide, or explore home remodeling.