Communal showers and the wet corridors connecting changing rooms to pool decks are the most consistently wet, soap-contaminated and barefoot environments in any UK pool installation. They are also among the most consistently underspecified at procurement — tile selected for visual finish rather than wet performance is a recurring finding in pendulum testing of UK leisure showers.
UK public-pool communal showers operate under a particularly demanding profile:
| Zone | Target wet PTV (Slider 55) |
|---|---|
| Communal shower main floor | 40+ |
| Shower cubicle floor | 40+ |
| Shower entrance/exit threshold | 40+ |
| Drain grate / drain channel surface | 40+ |
| Shower-to-changing-room transition corridor | 40+ |
The 40+ baseline reflects that showers are the highest-foreseeable-contamination zone in the changing-room environment.
Drain grates and channel surfaces in shower areas are themselves test zones. They:
We test grate-cover and channel-cover surfaces as part of standard shower-zone testing, not as an afterthought.
Where shower fittings drip between users, the drip pattern produces localised wet zones that may be in the user's transit path on entry to the cubicle. This is often a maintenance issue rather than a flooring issue, but it manifests as a slip-risk pattern that the pendulum captures — localised low PTV in the drip zone, normal PTV elsewhere in the cubicle. The report identifies the pattern; the operator addresses the maintenance.
Sex-segregated and family-changing shower zones have different operational profiles:
Each variant carries its own working PTV target and we test each separately in mixed-facility installations.
Where shower-zone surfaces are being replaced as part of a refurbishment programme, we deliver:
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