Hi,
I have already read a few threads, but I still have a question.
We are getting a guest toilet in our new home, and we are adding a shower to it. The guest toilet will have about 3 square meters (32 square feet) of floor space and will have underfloor heating (like all rooms). According to the construction company, because of the shower, we now have to install a towel radiator. I assume this is related to the heat demand calculation. But is that really the case? Can they require this, or can I insist that the underfloor heating in the small bathroom is just laid more densely? It is also not yet decided whether the radiator will be electric or connected to the underfloor heating system. The latter doesn’t seem to make much sense either.
Best regards
Sebastian
I have already read a few threads, but I still have a question.
We are getting a guest toilet in our new home, and we are adding a shower to it. The guest toilet will have about 3 square meters (32 square feet) of floor space and will have underfloor heating (like all rooms). According to the construction company, because of the shower, we now have to install a towel radiator. I assume this is related to the heat demand calculation. But is that really the case? Can they require this, or can I insist that the underfloor heating in the small bathroom is just laid more densely? It is also not yet decided whether the radiator will be electric or connected to the underfloor heating system. The latter doesn’t seem to make much sense either.
Best regards
Sebastian
N
nordanney15 Jan 2016 08:51With a 3 sq m (32 sq ft) bathroom, it gets as warm as a sauna after just 30 seconds of showering, even without additional heating – keep this in mind before preheating the bathroom.
But taking a cold shower is not very appealing.
P
Peanuts7415 Jan 2016 08:55nordanney schrieb:
With a 3 sqm (32 sq ft) bathroom, it gets as warm as a sauna after about 30 seconds of showering without any additional heating – keep that in mind before preheating the bathroom.It always depends on how hot you shower; maybe he takes cold showers.
Peanuts74 schrieb:
It always depends on how warm you shower, maybe he prefers cold showers N
nordanney15 Jan 2016 09:11EveundGerd schrieb:
But taking a cold shower is not very appealing. Well, at around 22°C (72°F) inside the house, you rarely feel cold, but for women, it might be a different story.
An alternative to an additional wall heating system could be an infrared heater.
Towel warmers cannot replace a heater anyway; as the name suggests, they only warm the towel.
There is, of course, no requirement to have additional devices.
Our approximately 5m² (54 sq ft) room has a floor-level shower with heating coils. Thermostat set to 1-2, comfortably warm.
Towel warmers cannot replace a heater anyway; as the name suggests, they only warm the towel.
There is, of course, no requirement to have additional devices.
Our approximately 5m² (54 sq ft) room has a floor-level shower with heating coils. Thermostat set to 1-2, comfortably warm.
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