Master Bathroom - can this layout be improved?
21 days ago
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- 21 days ago
- 21 days ago
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Bathroom layout idea with 2 small bathrooms - including measurements
Comments (19)The "regular" bath layout that jensbride posted first is very similar to what our DD & DS shared for years and worked very well. The door, however, was a pocket style and placed directly across from the toilet. This allowed the vanity to be scooted around the corner to take up the whole wall. It leaves the toilet close to the tub, but with lots of elbow room. Our kids just learned to keep the door partially closed when the bath wasn't in use due to the "view"....See MoreMaster Bathroom layout help
Comments (34)Thank you cpartist & suzanne_m I went to my architect and moving the entrance to my MBR is a no go at this point. She was impressed with the MBA design to square off the wall and move my bathroom fixtures around. I totally understand about the towers taking over and I like the look but I'm only going to do a six foot run with two sinks so I think it would be too cramped to have one in the center. I also plan on doing a frosted glass door in WC for some natural light. She suggested I do a a small tray ceiling in bath to match the bedroom since it's easy enough to do since this part is an extension. My Hall bathroom I will have the shower on the back wall with the sink and toilet on one side and some storage on the opposite side. Although she forgot and drew the door too far over. But I can handle that with the contractor. Thanks again I have attached a photo. Kind of hard to see fixtures on it....See MoreMaster bathroom layout
Comments (4)Are you remodeling and buying all new, or looking to keep the same tub? Do you use the tub, and if you don't is there another tub in the house? How committed are you to having the toilet in its own room - or would a half wall with a Toto washlet seat with deodorizer (which really does work!) be enough to suffice? What do you do with the space behind the closet door, where the toilet room ends? Could you just put the shower in the space of the toilet room and extend it to the HVAC duct and put the toilet where the shower is? I would put a half wall at the end of the tub and face the toilet out toward the door. Then have the door open from the other door jamb. You can keep the toilet room wall as the end of the shower, widen the door and put in a glass door, and have a shower that is about 36" wide and quite long. It will be tiled walls, no glass ones, but will be comfortably long. Or you could remove the side wall to the toilet room, so you have glass walls for that corner, and maybe scooch the room door to the left a bit, to give the toilet more room. Of course, if you don't use the tub, and there is another nearby, you can simply be rid of it and make a larger shower in the space where the shower and tub are, widening it to the 40" you have if you put the door on the other door jamb. Take the shower up to the window. Get a wider vanity, leaving the space under or in front of the window to have a towel ladder or wall towel rack/dryer. Or a big plant. Plants love bathrooms....See Moremaster bedroom and bathroom layout
Comments (26)What you've done here is cut down a good-sized bathroom into two small, uncomfortable spaces -- with this much space, you shouldn't have to settle for minimal sized facilities, which is what happens when you chop it up into smaller rooms. As you've drawn it here, the toilet is in a scrunchy-small spot, and if you're going to have a shower-only in a master bath, it needs to be a showstopper of a shower -- not something reminiscent of summer camp. My thoughts: - Get rid of the two-room concept. - Simplify the layout. - This shower is 3-4' wide, making it large and luxurious. At 8' long, you could have a large bench and a second shower head for sit-down showers on the end near the bedroom ... or you could shorten it to 6' (still large) and use that space for a second, small closet opening into the bedroom. - Place the toilet behind a small pony wall. This will set it apart a bit without hampering the room with a wall /will let the room feel larger. Since you're so concerned about smells (which dissipate very quickly), you could keep a candle on the pony wall. - This gives you a 6-7' vanity for the sink, which will allow a single sink centered in the middle and a luxurious 24-30" drawer stack on each side, providing each spouse with ample at-the-sink storage. Don't fall for the idea of duplicate sinks, which would eliminate most of that drawer space and leave you with toothbrushes and razors living on the countertop. - Build in a low, shallow cabinet across from the toilet and sink. This will give you massive storage for towels, toiletries, etc. and display space on top....See MoreRelated Professionals
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