Bathroom planning 3.51m x 3.51m - Idea search

  • Erstellt am 2015-01-28 20:22:11

Jochen104

2015-01-28 20:22:11
  • #1
Hello everyone,

I am looking for a good solution for our master bathroom. We have been planning with a T-layout all the time, but I am not so sure anymore if this represents the optimum.

Attached I have shown the planned T-layout and an alternative.

Following info about the room:

    [*]Dimensions: 3.51m x 3.51m
    [*]Door: must be on the left wall, position is still variable
    [*]Window below: Width: 2.01m, Height 88.5m, Sill height 118m, single-leaf, only tilt
    [*]Window on the right: Width: 0.76m, Height 120m, Sill height 86.5m, not a must, but I think it’s good for ventilation

Content:

    [*]walk-in, floor-level shower
    [*]WC
    [*]bathtub
    [*]washbasin, width 1.30m
    [*]cabinet, width 0.70m
    [*]towel radiator

Unfortunately, the bathroom planner wasn’t very creative. Do you have any good ideas?

Thank you very much in advance!

Edit: No sloping walls in the room, all walls full room height.
 

Bautraum2015

2015-01-28 21:26:22
  • #2
I think this T-solution is good. The space is used optimally and zoned from my perspective. Possibly I would swap the WC and the shower so that the WC is closer to the "fresh air" (window).
 

ypg

2015-01-28 22:28:30
  • #3


... and then you can also look outside - it won't be so boring then
 

Jochen104

2015-01-29 07:45:50
  • #4
Good morning, thank you for your feedback. We had the same consideration before. However, it was more important to me that when airing out, the moisture from the shower gets out so that mold doesn’t start to grow in the joints there. I personally had some concerns if airing is done "around the corner." What do you think about that? The partition walls should not be room height either. Do you have any experience with that (2m)?
 

RFR

2015-01-29 08:05:07
  • #5
We solved it with a 2.20 m high partition wall between the sink and the shower. However, we have a 1.30 m sink and not a small one as shown. The exhaust air from the controlled residential ventilation is located next to the bathtub in the installation wall (in the picture at the bottom left). We have no moisture problems in the bathroom or shower because of it.
 

Bautraum2015

2015-01-29 09:28:40
  • #6
Do you have underfloor heating? I wouldn't worry too much about moisture with that. The t-wall is also not built up to the ceiling, so water vapor can escape at the top.
 

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