Bathroom design - We stick with the T-solution

  • Erstellt am 2017-11-27 12:56:30

Ibdk14

2017-11-28 17:41:42
  • #1
All good and well, but which rooms are at the bottom and top of the plan, directly adjacent? If these are children's rooms/bedrooms, I would never plan a toilet or a shower there. Despite good sound insulation, you can hear everyone who uses the toilet at night or showers early. Those would be my first considerations. I just have to briefly mention this here, because it seemed to me that no one has considered this yet with the nice plans and ideas.
 

ypg

2017-11-28 23:05:04
  • #2


The door should be reversed: view towards the washbasin

Shower: this would be (with wall) the version where the wall should be at least 130 cm long. Passage into the shower at least 70 cm. Shower fittings on the left wall in the plan, then it should work so that the bathroom does not get flooded.

Kaho's version without wall: I think then with a 1.30 m wall you stand too openly in the shower, so it feels less comfortable.
One could build this wall to the bathtub with frosted glass or something like that, possibly only up to 160 cm height?! I don't know [emoji848]

Alternatively: there are oval asymmetrical bathtubs, legs approx. 90 x 160 with the same comfort as a 180 x 80 (shorter but deeper, however narrower at the foot, so like an egg... super stylish, if you like it) 90 cm to the exterior wall, narrowing towards the top wall in the plan, then a shower entrance from the right side of the plan fits with a 180 cm wall.

Anyway: make sure that window and bathtub do not overlap
 

toxicmolotof

2017-11-29 00:15:19
  • #3


These bathtubs were also among our selections, but with the ballroom it almost calls for a "great" bathtub. These narrowing bathtubs are more made for space savers.

Here you could even go wild with a 180x180 or a 215 bathtub.
 

ypg

2017-11-29 08:53:22
  • #4
So, I really like these for example from Kaldewei

We had them ourselves, nice elegant shape, extra deep, (if necessary) two can fit in.
This would at least allow for a longer shower wall and an entry into it without a corner getting in the way

 

kaho674

2017-11-29 09:14:11
  • #5
Perfect, that's how I would do it too. We manage very well with a 1.40m shower screen. Nothing splashes out.
 

NanDe

2017-11-29 11:18:56
  • #6


Of course, the bedrooms are directly adjacent there. You also don’t want to have too far to walk to the bathroom. The solution would be that the early risers shower in the guest bathroom.



Unfortunately, in the planner I could not rotate the door opening or rather, I do not know how.

Good tip about the bathtub. We have to check it out live. Although these are probably more expensive...
 

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