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8 x 10 bathroom layout ideas1/22/2024 But here you can see how they were able to incorporate about 1 ½ feet from the left side to create a bench and squeeze in an armoire.Ĭost: Although Conroy says he isn’t able to share all costs associated with this project, he offered the following breakdown. ![]() Layout: Since Conroy and the homeowners decided not to move any plumbing fixtures to save on cost, the components remained in the same place. “If you take the care to have cabinetry relate to other pieces within the space, to talk to one another, it gives a serene, spa-like feeling.”įaucets and shower fixtures: Grohe tub and sinks: Kohler “It helps make it look not like you’ve gone to a big-box department store and bought pieces of millwork,” he says. “Adding those jewel-like elements in spare places makes the bathroom feel more opulent,” he says.ĭesign feature: The tub surround wraps around to become the countertop, while the wood planes on the cabinetry above wrap around to form a lighting shelf. “Plus, you’re not bending way down to get into the cabinets,” he says.Īccent tile: Conroy splurged on onyx field tile at $30 per square foot for the vanity wall and back wall near the shower. Vanity: Conroy likes using floating vanities in midsize bathroom spaces because they help give the appearance of more room, and it’s easy to clean underneath. Plywood veneers and mitered corners give the units the appearance of solid pieces of wood. Neat idea: A walnut-fronted recessed medicine cabinet at the end of the vanity creates a beautiful design feature.Ĭabinets: The cabinets are cherry with a rosewood stain. “When you walk in and there’s a tub, the open volume of space above it makes the room feel more spacious.”Ī custom floating walnut vanity also helps free up space.īathtub: A 5 ½-foot-long built-in soaking tub features a Caesarstone tub deck. “If you put a full-height volume, something that goes floor-to-ceiling, at the entry, it’s going to make the space feel more confined,” she says. Space savings: Leritz says she chose this arrangement because the larger shower volume made sense at the far end, rather than at the entrance to the room. The homeowners didn’t want to do a huge addition, so once they settled on a size of about 500 square feet total, designer Risa Boyer Leritz began looking at how much space to allot for the bathroom. The backstory: This bathroom was part of a new-addition master suite. Size: About 122 square feet (11.3 square meters) 9 feet 4 inches by 10 feet 10 inches, plus a water closet that’s 7 by 3 feetĭesigner: Risa Boyer Leritz of Risa Boyer Architecture Paint: Pure White, Sherwin-Williams (walls in flat, trim in semigloss) sconces: Kichler sinks: Decolav The rest of the floor is ceramic tile digitally printed to look like hardwood. Tile: In the shower, white subway wall tile (with charcoal-gray grout) contrasts with black hexagonal floor tile for a graphic visual statement. Vanity: Gill had vessel sinks installed on a large dresser for a vintage, eclectic double vanity. Solution: Designer Amy Gill relocated a door and removed an odd half wall to streamline the layout, which made room for a double vanity, a walk-in shower under the sloping roofline and a stand-alone tub on the opposite side of the room. The backstory: A leaky bathtub and a less-than-desirable chopped-up floor plan set off the transformation of this bathroom inside a Tudor-style home. Size: About 110 square feet (10.2 square meters)ĭesigner: Amy Gill of Gill Design & Construction Shower and tub filler: Hansgrohe faucets: Newport Brass lighting: Hudson Valley Lighting paint: Apparition and Simply White, Benjamin Moore b athtub: Caicos, Aquabrassģ. Shower and tub: A curbless shower, separated from the rest of the room by just a single piece of glass, gives the impression of more space - visually and physically - and makes way for a freestanding tub. Vanity: A large furniture-style vanity in a rustic wood offers a nice counterpoint in tone and texture to the expanses of white-and-gray marble. A mix of patterns - arabesque on one wall, brick on another and large format on the floor - gives dynamic character to the space. Tile: Carrara marble tiles cover the floors and walls, creating an elegant, spa-like feel. Then a modern palette of white and gray with lots of marble created a refreshing atmosphere. They had to rebuild the floor due to water damage, reinsulate the walls, put up drywall and waterproof everything. ![]() Solution: Designer Lindsay Chambers and Hazel Wood Group builders completely gutted the room. The backstory: A top-to-bottom Mediterranean style didn’t suit the character of the 1919 Craftsman home, which was renovated in 2014.
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