Help- jack and Jill bathroom, remove wall separating toilet?
4 years ago
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- 4 years ago
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Bedroom/Bathroom Layout Help! Jack & Jill or Not?
Comments (28)our new build is incorporating a J&J for the kids also. Here's the space from our drawings I don't know how it translates to the space you have, but hopefully it helps. I wanted the kids to have the ability to go to the bathroom/brush their teeth/get ready if someone else was in the shower. Plus the privacy, etc. etc. We had the ability to accommodate two full baths, but found the extra cost to be unnecessary (it was a few thousand in extra plumbing, fixtures, materials). It also meant that each would be a smaller bathroom, versus a nice size J&J. I'm really happy with the decision so far!...See MoreConverting Jack n Jill bathroom to two private en suite bathrooms
Comments (20)I'm assuming from what the OP said that they don't want or need hall access to a bathroom that one of the bedrooms isn't going to be used as a bedroom. I also LOL at how home builders are so overspecific in naming the rooms on their floorplans. Like everyone wants a game room in the middle of all the bedrooms and home office, just the thing to ensure a good night's rest or undistracted working at a desk. One small item I find really irksome in this floorplan: the door to the master bathroom toilet room is ideally positioned to (a) block the entry from the bedroom when open, which it assumedly would be when not in use, and (b) whack the person using the sink when unexpectedly opened from inside. Also, that door to the upper left bedroom is a weird one. Perhaps to keep it from blocking access to the J&J bathroom when open, it's hinged on what would otherwise be the wrong side. As it is, especially since the bedroom closet extends further than the door opening, the door must be opened an awkward 180 degrees to enter the bedroom from the hallway. Another reason that favors making the upper right and lower left bedrooms the two en suites. This post was edited by lee676 on Wed, Jan 21, 15 at 15:32...See MoreHELP WITH JACK AND JILL BATHROOM
Comments (69)It closes into a recess that has the same effect as a door jamb. Sounds awesome to me! My builder-grade hollow-core doors all permit light and noise to come through. I never really noticed until my daughter complained of light penetration into her bedroom (from the hall) at nighttime. Sure enough, I go in there when everything's dark, shut the door, and it glows. Maybe you have better trim/jambs/doors than I do? lol I've never lived with pocket doors -- doubt I ever will because I hate doors on tracks -- and the ones I've seen are from a few decades ago, but are your tracks on the ceiling or the floor? If on the floor, are they a pain to clean? Tracks on the floor would be another reason for me to dislike pockets. ;-)...See MoreJack and Jill or two small bathrooms???
Comments (20)In response to saving money with a J&J. You will save on the cost of one toilet and one tub and tub/shower fixtures...that might be $1000 depending on grade plus installation and a little extra plumbing. Floor tile is probably a wash because the area covered really hasn't decreased. There's a little less wall tile from removing a tub (or even less cost saved with a fully fiberglass unit). Wall framing and drywall might see a slight increase, and you may have 2 extra doors if the vanity areas also had doors. So all in you might be looking at something like $3000 to exchange two bathrooms for a J&J. So while it is true that they could save "thousands" it's a drop in the bucket compared to the full cost of a house to have it put ahead of function. But coming back to the original question, it sounds like the poster is largely thinking about the two bathrooms for resale if the bonus room were to become another bedroom, not necessarily because they ever plan to use it themselves. In that case I would first check local real estate and see whether it is essential in your area that all bedrooms have their own bath. In a really high end area that might be the case, but most anywhere else as long as a bedroom has access to a bathroom on the same floor, that will be good enough. If it were my house I would do a single hall bath in that area with an extra door leading into bedroom 3, That way that child has direct access to their bathroom and will keep the door to the hallway locked at all times. But when you go to sell, you can still count the bonus room as a bedroom because it has hall access to bedroom 3's bathroom. You can save the money from a 6th bathroom and get a larger playroom....See MoreRelated Professionals
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