Looking for Advice: Primary Bathroom Remodel – Keep Granite or Go Kit?
22 days ago
last modified: 22 days ago
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Looking for advice on classic bathroom renovation!
Comments (11)I don't think I would scale down the vanity if this is your main/only bath. You need the storage. Consider a vanity that involves more drawers, which make more efficient use of the under-counter space than cabinets do, but otherwise just get lots of organizers. I would not keep the black top with your new color scheme; many vanities come with tops anyway... https://www.houzz.com/products/eleanor-bathroom-vanity-with-carrara-top-charcoal-gray-30-prvw-vr~46313451 https://www.houzz.com/products/sheffield-30-single-vanity-white-white-carrera-top-undermount-square-sink-prvw-vr~50578811 https://www.houzz.com/products/30-single-bathroom-vanitygreywhite-polymarble-topsquare-sinkfaucetmirror-prvw-vr~28553083 https://www.houzz.com/products/zola-vanity-base-white-with-mirror-top-ceramic-faucet-polished-chrome-prvw-vr~28557438 https://www.houzz.com/products/modetti-provence-cottage-bathroom-sink-vanity-and-mirror-setlight-blue-34-prvw-vr~78795471https://www.houzz.com/products/fresca-livello-30-teak-modern-bathroom-vanity-with-medicine-cabinet-prvw-vr~86624448 https://www.houzz.com/products/fresca-torino-30-light-oak-modern-bathroom-vanity-integrated-sink-prvw-vr~99355302 You need to decide on your vanity style and color before picking the countertop -- do you want it to blend (gray or white) or contrast (colored paint or natural wood); do you want really modern, or just a little trendy feeling, etc. I gave you a range to help you brainstorm. Hope this helps!...See MoreBathroom remodel ready to reveal! Laundry too!
Comments (52)Thanks @jejvtr It's the Miele W1/T1 combo with the 4" stacking kit accessory drawer. They have very good dimensioned drawings on their website. And thank you Waverley66! I didn't hate the slate, until I decided on something new. And taking it out was not easy. Shed a tear for the poor tilesetter who carried it out of here in buckets. Ouch! It's really not a great choice for a shower floor. It was flaking off and never really felt clean. The people who owned the house before me had done it, and they were enthusiastic amateurs, I'd say. The pan was done right, but there was little finesse to the whole thing, and the sharp edges used to bug me. The liner was intact below the mud-set pan, but if the material you put on top isn't going to last 20 years, that's a pity. There's a reason I picked a new material literally made from recycled windshield glass. It's tough! Hah! You kind of just described my kitchen, btw. I've got a Bertazzoni range that's "out and proud" with no cabinetry/"tutu" around it at all. It's partly a function of the awkward layout, but I like the more European look of a beautiful range with little embellishment. I even think the way the pressure regulator was plumbed is attractive, so no need to hide it, IMO. The porcelain tile is Cornerstone Slate Grey 12 x 24. It also comes in black, which is pictured in my detail of the tile samples. I almost did the black, but backed off and went with the safer grey. I use it in a lot of projects: it's perfectly neutral and very forgiving in terms of maintenance. Cheap, too ;-) As for the heat of the dryer, I might have mentioned that I did place a thermometer-hygrometer next to the machines. I don't see or feel any significant change, but it is winter here. From what I understand, the heat pump takes care of the humidity. One of the things that helped to persuade me was hearing from someone here who put in a heat pump water heater. Crazy, right? He said his basement has never been so dry! We live in a humid area, and the last thing I'd want is to add to that problem. So far, so good! Thanks again for your kind words. And good luck!...See MoreHelp with primary suite layout - bathroom + closet
Comments (10)I think you're showing the old and the new on the same drawing? As others have said, this is confusing. But the new master suite is a simple layout with a closet-bath-bedroom? Okay, if I'm reading this correctly, here are my specific thoughts: - Simple layouts are always best. Thumbs-up. - The hallway to the bedroom will make things private. But the hallway is something like 10' long and dull ... on the positive side, you'll be walking towards a door with natural light /makes for a good focal point. I'd like to see low-wattage motion-sensored lights in this hallway to make it pleasant at night ... if you place two lights midway in this hallway, the light won't spill onto the bed and disturb a sleeper. How wide is this hallway? I hope no less than 42" ... personally, I'd steal a foot from the ample bath and closet and add a set of built-in bookshelves into this hallway. I'd love to see it maybe 48" high with space above for artwork or display items. A 42" hallway with a half-high bookshelf on the left wall would feel luxuriously wide. This would give you a ton of storage and would create a more pleasant walk than an empty hallway. Imagine 10' of this: - I would definitely flip-flop the closet and the bathroom. Why? Because "as shown", you have the toilet sharing a wall with the bedroom, which can be noisy. In contrast, the closet is a quiet space. It also means when you want to use your own bathroom during the day, you're a step closer. - After making this flip-flop, keep the water items on the wall shared with the closet. This will mean more quiet for the secondary bedroom on the other side ... and if (when) you someday need service of some sort to the bathroom, a worker would be able to break through your closet wall, which means preserving your expensive tile. You could even ask for access doors to be left in the closet, which would allow you to reach the water works simply by moving the clothing out. - I'd definitely want a window in the bathroom, even if it's a small one up high over the tub. - Is that an open shower next to the tub? Eh, okay but not great. Personally, given that you have a very large closet right next door, I think I'd keep the tub at the end of the bathroom and create a shower that kinda "dips into" /steals space from the closet. I'd be willing to steal a bit from the large bedroom to make this happen. - In designing the bathroom, don't forget to plan where your towels will hang. - I don't know where you stand on closets-opening-from-bathrooms, but I think I might be tempted to close off the closet-door-from-the-hallway and open the closet from the middle of the bathroom ... meaning you'd enter the middle of the closet instead of the end. Maybe. - I note that you don't have a linen closet IN the bathroom, and that's something I really like. If you open the clothing closet into the bathroom, you'd be able to use that space for bathroom storage too. - I like the door in the master bedroom (fire safety), but I'd like to see a few more windows. The best rooms have windows on two sides to allow natural light from two different directions. - This is a fairly large bedroom, and you're showing only a bed in it. What do you plan to do with the rest of this space? My old bedroom was roughly this size (13' wide) and a king bed with two nice-sized night stands fit nicely on the short wall, but I was always a little irritated by the wasted space at the foot of the bed. - Where is your laundry? Ideally it'd be near the master bedroom as a step-saver. Your closet is large ... could you have a small stack-up unit in the closet?...See MorePrimary Bathroom: Toilet or Vanity in Front of Door?
Comments (53)When debating the size of the shower, make sure that you know the actual finished interior dimensions of the space. Things like any pony walls or newly created alcoves will eat away considerable inches of the finished interior shower space. My shower in the master is approx. 36 x 48. It's fine. Not too big and not too small. Long cold winters here in Wisconsin--I would not a larger shower (cold/ drafty) in this climate! (8' ceilings, too, vs a potentially drafty shower with your 10' ceiling.) IMO, two sinks in a 60" vanity is one too many. You give up counter space and, more significantly, cabinet space below. The supply lines, the drain and the bowl will reduce the usable space underneath the sink by at least half. Two people using sinks at the same time is a crowd. Worse in a small bathroom when the person using a sink nearest the door has to move to allow the other exit or entrance. Double the plumbing cost, double the cleaning required, double the potential plumbing problems and, twice as many faucets to replace if one goes bad or if you just want to change the look. With another bathroom down the halls, I would absolutely use only one sink in this bathroom. Two sinks make sense in huge bathrooms but preferably in two separate vanities with lots of space between....See MoreRelated Professionals
Parkland Home Remodeling · Broadview Heights General Contractors · Dorchester Center General Contractors · Linton Hall General Contractors · Seal Beach General Contractors · North Bergen Architects & Building Designers · Ronkonkoma Architects & Building Designers · Southampton Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · St. Louis Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Camarillo Furniture & Accessories · Fort Wayne Furniture & Accessories · Memphis Furniture & Accessories · Carpinteria Furniture & Accessories · Longview General Contractors · Fort Myers Glass & Shower Door Dealers- 21 days agolast modified: 21 days ago
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