Where to put seat in Master shower?
5 years ago
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- 5 years ago
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Help with MB Layout, Where to Put Shower Door?
Comments (1)Expanding the shower won't really work in your situation with you squaring off the vanity. While you can stand in front of a vanity with only 30' clearance, it isn't at all a pleasant experience. Not "master bathy" at all. You need to mock this up with a tall cabinet with only 30" of room between it and your sink. You will find it claustrophobic. It might be better to keep the current shower size and focus on adding a second sink on the shower run and still moving the corner sink to where you'd like it on the other run. And look at what's in the other direction of the shower. A tub? You might be able to expand in that direction. None of this will be cheap though. Moving around plumbing is pretty expensive and master bath remodels already run around 20K average just to replace what's there. Your layout of the space is impossibly tiny. Do you have something at least 600 pixels wide that we can see?...See MoreNeo Angle Full Frameless Shower Where to Put the Door?
Comments (1)I think it depends where your shower heads are. Our shower is a little larger (66x66 with walls at about 39") and we have the door on the neo angle. We have only used it once so far, but no leaks (but the door glass has sweeps)....See Moreputting a wood floor in master bath
Comments (12)So here I am...about 2 weeks away from the one year point of the start of my build...hours and hours and hours of research and planning every detail...I'm at the final stretch...and for the first time ever the concept of wood floors in the master bath enters my mind with this thread. This is a log house. Tongue and groove on almost all ceilings and some interior walls. Hardwood floors every where but the baths and laundry room. NEVER OCCURRED TO ME to put hardwoods in the master bath (or any bath). What a wonderful idea!!! It would look better...I wouldn't have to worry about putting in those electric warming mats...it should be cheaper than tile. *beats head for a moment* I have a hardwood floor in my current kitchen and I splash more water on it than I do in my bathroom with no problems. The exception being when I step out of the shower so I do have one question. If I put hardwoods in the bath and a basic/fluffy bath rug beside the the shower to step onto, will that be a problem? Would the bath rug need to be hung up each day somehow? Or is this where the 'tile rug' comes into play? This proves one constant about building...it doesn't matter how much you plan there will always be something you missed!...See MoreNeed help with master bathroom layout, hard to put shower & storage
Comments (17)Thanks everyone for the suggestions! There are good points in all the options. I think it over and over, even though I like the previous option #1 a lot, I realized the TV wall is a concrete wall, so cannot move the door open that way. I try to be more realist, like you said budget-wise and if I sell this unit in the future, they are likely don't need a hug amount of closet space. So I think I will make the shower room bigger and make lots of movable wardrobe units. I'm not sure what would be the best way to fit the pink wardrobe unit in the image below, I don't want the room to feel smell or separated: Option A - I feel the bed is close to the pink wardrobe might make it feel close to the wall, but the good thing is the room doesn't feel separated. Option B - The bed doesn't feel very close to the wall but the room feels separated with the pink wardrobe and created hallway which I feel it waste the space. Any other potential options? I like @damiarain 's idea of making it a big single sink and some draws on the side - I want to have a one piece vanity top with sink (not undercount), seems hard to find people to make it. @Flo Mangan I was looking for those closet lift, they all seem to be manual (could be quite heavy) on the market, do you know if there is an automate one?...See More- 5 years ago
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