Our work, unfiltered.
Most plumbing galleries on the internet are stock photography: rented models, borrowed bathrooms, wrenches held the wrong way. This page is the opposite. Every photo here came off a Panda phone on a Panda job, shot between tasks in real homes around the east Portland metro. Nothing is staged, nothing is licensed from a photo library, and nobody tidied a jobsite beyond how we actually leave them. If a picture shows a shower, we set that valve. If it shows an open trench, one of us dug it.
We publish our work because the standard behind it holds up to zoom. Panda Plumbing is veteran owned and licensed, bonded, and insured under CCB 227340 and PB2288, with a BuildZoom score of 115 that ranks in the top 2% of Oregon’s 62,000+ licensed contractors. More than 50 permitted projects sit behind these images, each one scoped to an exact written price before work began and backed by our workmanship warranty after.
As you browse, watch for the small tells that separate careful plumbing from fast plumbing: hand-labeled pipe runs, flanges set dead level with the tile, straight escutcheons, plywood over the grass, clean caulk lines. Those details are not decoration. A labeled manifold turns a future repair into a thirty-second shutoff instead of a whole-house guessing game, and a flange set flush with the finished floor is the difference between a toilet that stays put and one that rocks loose early.
The photos are grouped three ways. The bathrooms and kitchens show the finish work clients hire us to make beautiful. The last group shows what they are really paying for: the systems behind the walls and under the street that decide how a house runs for decades. Click any photo to enlarge it, and if something here looks like the project on your list, call or text (503) 830-6400 for a free consultation. We are happy to talk through how a similar scope would land at your place.
Bathrooms & remodels
Finished bathrooms are the closest plumbing gets to portfolio art, and they are also the most demanding rooms we plumb: relocated drains, curbless pans, floor-mounted tub fillers, in-wall carriers, and valves that have to land dead center in a tile layout. Most of the rooms below ran through our bathroom remodel plumbing service, working alongside owners, designers, and general contractors from rough-in through trim-out.
Double walk-in shower: navy wave tile, twin square rain heads, and a pebble floor draining to a brushed gold grate.
Primary bath rebuild: double vanity with matte black widespread faucets and a freestanding soaker under the skylight.
First fill: a freestanding slipper tub running off its new brushed gold floor-mount filler.
A forest green clawfoot back in service with a chrome riser and wall-mount faucet over patterned tile.
Curbless wet room: gray-veined hex mosaic on every surface and an exposed chrome rain column.
Walk-in shower in large-format greige tile with a mosaic pan, recessed niche, and glass slider.
Tub and shower combo in stacked slate blue tile with a chrome slide-bar hand shower and tiled window ledge.
The details that sell it: double niches framed in gold and matched brushed gold shower hardware.
A carved antique-style vanity plumbed with a polished gold swan-neck faucet and cross handles.
Craftsman bath: period-style column faucets on a marble-topped washstand beneath a stained glass window.
Mid-project: jetted tub set and tiled in a retro multicolor palette, valve and spout trim still to come.
Install day: glass slider hung over a low-threshold pan before baseboard and touch-up paint.
Vessel bowl and tall chrome mixer set on a butcher block top, supplies and trap trimmed below.
Full remodel: subway shower behind a black-framed slider, hex tile floor, and a black vanity under a mirrored cabinet.
Kitchens & fixtures
Not every good job fills a weekend. Sinks, faucets, disposals, toilets, and traps are the everyday calls that keep a house civilized, and they get the same square, level, no-drip standard as a full remodel. Each one is also a checkup on everything upstream: when a simple swap reveals corroded galvanized pipe behind the wall, we say so plainly. That honest look is how many whole-house repipes actually begin.
Black composite basin, stainless pull-down faucet, and new disposal dropped into an existing tile counter.
Matched widespread sets with porcelain cross handles on twin Toto lavatories, fresh off the wrench.
When the underside shows, it should look this clean: chrome bottle trap and trimmed supply stops.
Wall-hung toilet on a concealed in-wall tank; the floor underneath stays open and easy to clean.
The part you never see: a new flange set dead level with the finished tile before the bowl goes on.
Classic subway surround trimmed in matte black, with a framed niche where the shampoo actually fits.
Behind the walls & under the street
This is the work that never makes a mood board and matters more than everything above it: labeled repipe manifolds, tankless conversions, carriers set level in open framing, and trenchless main water line replacements bored under lawns instead of trenched through them. It is also where our site protection habits show, from plywood underfoot to the notice sign we post before a shovel touches dirt.
A repipe you can read: copper trunks and hand-labeled PEX home runs for every fixture in the house.
Trenchless main water line: the directional drill pulls new pipe under the yard instead of trenching through it.
The launch pit: spoil kept to one tidy pile and plywood down to save the lawn while the rig bores from the street.
Taped, coned, and posted: a new water service dig with our CCB number on the notice and plywood saving the grass.
A water line trench threading past a shingled cabin in the trees, with snow still on the ground.
Rough-in done right: a Toto in-wall carrier set plumb and level in open framing before drywall closes it up.
A three-heater A.O. Smith bank, numbered, vented, and tied into a common manifold in a mechanical room.
Tankless conversion: wall-hung Noritz with service valves, fresh venting, and the EnergyGuide tag still on.
Inside the truck: shelving and parts bins organized so the right fitting comes out on the first trip.
Concierge site protection in the wild: cones, tape, plywood underfoot, and the notice posted before digging.