Hello,
please help me. For days, I have been drawing various layouts, thinking I found a solution, only to discard it again. This is driving me crazy.
I want built-in walk-in showers in both bathrooms, completely without doors.
In the master bathroom, a small bathtub is planned, as well as a comfortably sized walk-in shower and, if possible, a double sink.
You will find the architect’s proposal attached.
I find the shower partition in the children’s bathroom not long enough, but it seems it cannot be made longer because of the window.
In the master bathroom, the toilet is too close to the shower entrance. Perhaps the shower wall could be shortened.
Do you have any ideas?
The two drawings are mine.
Windows are not fixed and can be changed freely.
The drawing with the washing machine + dryer is the children’s bathroom.
Thanks in advance!



please help me. For days, I have been drawing various layouts, thinking I found a solution, only to discard it again. This is driving me crazy.
I want built-in walk-in showers in both bathrooms, completely without doors.
In the master bathroom, a small bathtub is planned, as well as a comfortably sized walk-in shower and, if possible, a double sink.
You will find the architect’s proposal attached.
I find the shower partition in the children’s bathroom not long enough, but it seems it cannot be made longer because of the window.
In the master bathroom, the toilet is too close to the shower entrance. Perhaps the shower wall could be shortened.
Do you have any ideas?
The two drawings are mine.
Windows are not fixed and can be changed freely.
The drawing with the washing machine + dryer is the children’s bathroom.
Thanks in advance!
Avoid the pointless separation of parents and children in the bathroom. Without the unnecessary wall, you can use the total bathroom area to create a small room for the washing machine, dryer, and a utility sink, and still have space for a bidet. Then a double vanity makes sense, otherwise not: shaving or applying makeup simultaneously is mostly done only by honeymooners; in daily life, one person fits their toothbrushing into the time slot when the other is showering. In practice, this works perfectly with spontaneous and flexible organization, without any Erlang or Kendall.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
11ant schrieb:
Avoid the useless separation of parents and children in the bathroom. Instead of a pointless wall, you can use that bathroom space to create a small room for the washing machine, dryer, and extra toilet, and still have room for a bidet. Then a double vanity makes sense; otherwise, it’s not necessary. Synchronous shaving or applying makeup really only happens for honeymooners—usually one person fits their teeth brushing into the other’s shower time. In practice, this works perfectly as a chaotic, spontaneous arrangement without Erlang or Kendall. We definitely need 2 shower options at the same time. My 2 children are almost the same age. One bathroom is not enough for us. I already canceled the shower on the ground floor.
Shiny86 schrieb:
We absolutely need two shower options at the same time. My two kids are almost the same age. People with one shower and triplets will find this hilarious.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
Shiny86 schrieb:
Thanks, but the measurements are actually reversed in the main bathroom. I must have written them wrong. You should swap 3.1 m and 3.55 m (10 ft 2 in and 11 ft 8 in). But then, wouldn’t the space between the sink and the bathtub be quite tight? Oh, in that case, rotate it:
Edit: had already shown something similar, matte.
11ant schrieb:
People with one shower and triplets are laughing their heads off when they read this.Alright. But I’m building new and I can make that decision.
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