2 bathroom plans by architects and installer

  • Erstellt am 2016-07-04 00:02:36

alter0029

2016-07-04 00:02:36
  • #1
Hello everyone,
we have two proposals for our bathroom upstairs. The first one comes from the architect, it is pretty standard, the second proposal I received from the plumber. I like it better, but I wonder how it looks when you have the shower immediately to the left when entering the bathroom. ....für sachdienliche Hinweise......
 

Jochen104

2016-07-04 09:10:00
  • #2
Hello, this is really a big bathroom, but unfortunately I don't have such a stunning idea either. However, a few tips for optimizing the 2nd variant:
    [*]Change door hinge [*]Showerhead on the front side of the shower with ceiling mounting at the 2.30m line [*]Use the empty space behind the shower for a storage niche in the shower.
By mirroring the whole solution, you would have solved the entrance problem with the shower, but then you would only look against walls from the bathtub :(
 

ypg

2016-07-04 12:04:18
  • #3
For the 2nd drawing and future designs, please correct the dimensions of the tub. It seems too narrow to me.
 

alter0029

2016-07-04 12:26:50
  • #4
The door hinge must of course be changed. That was a stroke of genius by the architect, which we have been annoyed about all along anyway.
 

Joda

2016-07-04 16:23:28
  • #5
This is what our planning looks like. Walk-in, however, only 140cm.
 

Climbee

2016-07-05 11:02:10
  • #6
I’m not a big fan of these bathtubs positioned diagonally... It takes up a lot of space and I always claim that anyone who plans something like this has never cleaned a bathroom: have you ever thought about how impractical it is to clean that dead corner behind the tub?

I’m not quite sure how low your knee wall is. In the second draft, this empty, unused strip on the knee wall bothers me. If it’s not just 1.2m, I’m personally a fan of relocating the toilet there, because even the most stubborn standing urinators would be forced to sit down *harharhar*, otherwise you can also put the bathtub there nicely, since you don’t need that much headroom there. At least I don’t stand in the tub, I lie down ;)

Maybe you could also plan the skylight a bit bigger? Then the bathtub with the foot end towards the knee wall (if it’s rather low), possibly you can put the bathtub directly against the knee wall. If there’s a big skylight above it, that’s really nice. The architect planned the toilet closer to the wall as well, so it should fit height-wise, right?

The opening to the outside is also a door, isn’t it? And the door swing, definitely the other way around. This way it’s just stupid.
 

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