ᐅ Bathroom Design: Combining a Guest Bathroom with a Children's Bathroom?
Created on: 6 Dec 2019 12:00
M
micric3
Hello,
some of you may have followed the planning thread. Since we don’t want the guest toilet to be a walkthrough to the utility room, nor place an unused circulation space between the utility room and the guest toilet, we will access the utility room in the traditional way through the kitchen or net floor area.
This provides a bit more space for the bathroom layout, but it’s not entirely clear how it can be best used. We initially planned the guest toilet rather simply and minimally as an internal bathroom. Now we are considering using the space to plan the guest toilet as a separate children’s bathroom.
The rough dimensions of the children’s bathroom would be 1.70 m (5 feet 7 inches) wide—as it is currently in our apartment—and the master bathroom would be 2.20 m (7 feet 3 inches) wide (you can compare this room width to Horbach’s sample bathroom Samoa). Both rooms would be 3.70 m (12 feet 2 inches) long.
The children’s bathroom will have a space-saving bathtub installed “slightly angled,” while the master bathroom will feature only a walk-in shower.
Would this concept be feasible?
Good luck
micric3


some of you may have followed the planning thread. Since we don’t want the guest toilet to be a walkthrough to the utility room, nor place an unused circulation space between the utility room and the guest toilet, we will access the utility room in the traditional way through the kitchen or net floor area.
This provides a bit more space for the bathroom layout, but it’s not entirely clear how it can be best used. We initially planned the guest toilet rather simply and minimally as an internal bathroom. Now we are considering using the space to plan the guest toilet as a separate children’s bathroom.
The rough dimensions of the children’s bathroom would be 1.70 m (5 feet 7 inches) wide—as it is currently in our apartment—and the master bathroom would be 2.20 m (7 feet 3 inches) wide (you can compare this room width to Horbach’s sample bathroom Samoa). Both rooms would be 3.70 m (12 feet 2 inches) long.
The children’s bathroom will have a space-saving bathtub installed “slightly angled,” while the master bathroom will feature only a walk-in shower.
Would this concept be feasible?
Good luck
micric3
The design shows the creativity of its designer, but why do the doors overwhelm the person sitting on the toilet? (Why is that person sitting in the dark while the person showering is fumbling in front of the window? Why is there extra space reserved at the front of the guest bathroom? And why choose the longest route for the wastewater plumbing?
Sorry, I’m reading it carefully. This would be my critique, although the layout confuses me, as mentioned above.
Sorry, I’m reading it carefully. This would be my critique, although the layout confuses me, as mentioned above.
micric3 schrieb:
To return from the off-topic discussion back to bathroom planning. The realization that you are trying to mask resistance to advice with detailed questions is not "off topic," but the actual diagnosis.
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