Bathroom renovation / Complete refurbishment - Layout optimization

  • Erstellt am 2021-03-22 19:55:49

Myrna_Loy

2021-03-23 12:27:03
  • #1
So? There are really beautiful showers under the sloping roof.
 

icandoit

2021-03-23 12:31:09
  • #2
Let's see what the OP makes of it.
 

Myrna_Loy

2021-03-23 12:35:32
  • #3
And the entrance to the shower like this.
 

LeBruece

2021-03-23 13:00:09
  • #4
Wow, so many posts :oops: I was only away for 2 hours :D
So, I’ll try to sort it out and evaluate it for myself:
Basically, I like the idea of placing the bathtub under the sloping roof because the limited height due to the slope above the tub doesn’t bother you. The knee wall is also quite high at 1.57m – a platform could possibly give the room some structure here and bring the tub into focus without the height being a problem – a platform height of about 15 - 20 cm is certainly sufficient.
The bathtub is supposed to have a little distance from the wall on both sides due to its design and stand with its back against the pre-wall or the knee wall. Therefore, your suggestion, , is unfortunately not an option.
By the way, the slope of the roof is 45°.


Regarding getting cold in the shower if there is no door, we actually have no experience and haven’t really thought about it... Could that really be a problem? Then a smaller shower (e.g. 90 x 100 or 90 x 120) including a door would certainly be more sensible. I don’t quite understand the pushing past part :)
We also briefly considered the shower under the sloping roof but then discarded it because we couldn’t use the space behind the door sensibly otherwise.
If you place the shower as drawn in the top left, you could still install a towel radiator on the wall at the “exit.”

By the way, the window opens to the “left,” I updated that in the latest plan.

The easiest way to accommodate the toilet would presumably also be at the knee wall, since the cistern and the connection to the waste pipe can be implemented most easily here. Alternatively, I can create a projection on the wall at the top of the plan.

Thanks a lot for the great contributions!!
Moritz

 

Myrna_Loy

2021-03-23 13:13:49
  • #5
Stand sideways in front of a window at a distance of 50 cm from the wall – for the eyes this is quite tiring, since you are looking against the glare but fixating on a darker wall/ mirror. You always have to light the mirrors well to see properly. Placing a toilet so close to the tub also feels unnecessarily cramped and not very spacious.
 

icandoit

2021-03-23 13:15:11
  • #6
partly furnished.



or like this:
 

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