New bathroom planning 10.8m² - How to use it optimally?

  • Erstellt am 2016-11-20 10:04:22

ypg

2016-11-21 23:41:19
  • #1


The drainage permit was attached to our building permit. It specifies from where to drain to the outside. In this respect, as far as I know, you can’t just move the toilet from the top right to the bottom left. If a design exists, then with a wastewater shaft inside the building. I’m asking where the shaft is located – especially important with floor-to-ceiling windows?!?

Regards
 

kbt09

2016-11-22 05:57:21
  • #2
The variants shown in post 10 are not acceptable at all. Either because of the sink position or because of boredom ;).

What exactly is the problem with the original variant? However, I would have the door hinged the other way. And below the door on the plan side, only allow a maximum of 50 cm. That is enough for the usual bathroom cabinets, which usually have a maximum depth of 40 cm.


2 to 3 ceiling spots with the shower, ideally switchable separately from the rest of the lighting, and the shower is also bright. Limit the partition wall to 210 cm height, then the water vapor can also escape towards the window.

You could also half-wall the right wall and cover the rest upwards with glass.
 

Climbee

2016-11-22 11:41:17
  • #3


That is not a dealbreaker for it:
 

305er

2016-11-22 11:58:17
  • #4
Then the neighbor can watch every time while bathing
 

kbt09

2016-11-22 13:00:27
  • #5
Therefore, when it comes to bathrooms built in houses that are themselves constructed in dense areas, one should think very carefully about installing a [floor-to-ceiling window]. Because even if you walk around naked in the bathroom, the neighbor is watching. So you will close this [floor-to-ceiling window] again with a [pleated blind] etc. ;) ;).
 

Climbee

2016-11-22 13:22:09
  • #6
If the window is planned to be so "public," he can do that with everything else as well... for me, that would be a fundamental consideration about what I do there. Because I personally do hop around naked in my bathroom sometimes. Whether the tub is by the window or not. The neighbor would probably see more then than if I’m lying in the tub.

So I would basically consider some sort of privacy screen (window at the bottom, for example, frosted glass or pleated blinds to pull up) and then the tub wouldn’t be a no-go anymore.

By the way, this is the arrangement I suggested: the tub in front of the window, the shower with the opening towards the window. You can’t see it in this photo, but that’s the way into the shower.

What I’ve also seen: a long, wide strip window starting roughly at shoulder height and fairly wide, for example, over the entire length of the tub. That also lets in light and the neighbor would see at most the heads.
 

Similar topics
26.06.2015Floor plan question, stairs, window, orientation12
24.09.2015Which windows and doors are recommended?21
10.11.2015Single-family house floor plan planned, we like the windows43
21.02.2016Secure windows/front door for edge location34
22.01.2016Kitchen planning with island and floor-to-ceiling windows12
11.02.2016Windows / Doors / Wardrobe13
13.03.2016Change roof tile color to anthracite windows16
31.07.2016Electrical inspection, Q2, bathroom tiles, knee wall, floor-to-ceiling windows23
06.06.2016How much light does a window let in?17
14.11.2016Soundproofing - weakest link? (Windows?)26
03.12.2019Additional costs due to incorrectly planned ventilation system + floor-to-ceiling windows?50
08.04.2017Burglary protection - Upgrade windows from WK2 to WK3 - Alarm system?65
07.01.2018Practical size for windows and roller shutters13
29.12.2018Renovation tips for a very small bathroom with a shower instead of a bathtub36
20.11.2020Walk-in shower / Your tips and ideas18
20.12.2020Smallest possible window for ventilation in utility room22
10.07.2022Bathroom planning 14m², new build, square, two windows70
05.01.2023Bathroom layout 8.7 sqm, with shower and bathtub16
14.05.2024Window drive for tilt-and-turn windows or manual?11

Oben