jarbroen said:
Hide my throne? Never!
Sorry I've been quiet... I've been working on the design a bit more and have some new ideas to share:
View attachment 1 View attachment 2 View attachment 3 View attachment 4
View attachment 5 View attachment 6 View attachment 7
Thanks for all the great design ideas. In general, we're sticking with the idea of a walk-in shower (replacing the current tub/shower combo) and adding the soaking tub on the opposite wall. Adding the tub here because our long-term plan is to also renovate our master bathroom, removing the tub/shower combo in that bathroom with another full-size walk-in shower. So this will be the only tub in the house. Both bathrooms are only 4'11" wide which in my chubbie opinion isn't comfortable (length-wise) for a bath. That's why we're blowing out the wall... I want to have some elbow and headroom when I'm pondering the birth of the universe and what happened before the Big Bang.
I think my one concern with the design as I have it now: serviceability of the tub plumbing if anything bad happens. I'm envisioning the vanity being tight up against that tub, but that also blocks access through the front facade. Thinking about how I can make the vanity removable while retaining the nice quartz skirt off the right of the vanity. Any ideas?
I'm still totally confused on the permitting front. Since we're moving a wall (for the soaking bath, pushing out the wall about a foot into the walkway), I'm still not sure if I need a building permit even though I had a structural engineering company come out and verify none of the walls on this level of the home are load-bearing (and I have the letter). I know this will require plumbing and electrical permits, but not sure if I need to obtain those separately or if they are a "rider" to the building permit. Permitting offices are difficult to impossible to reach right now and not set up for DIY'ers. [member=65755]jarbroen[/member] - Interested in how you navigated this process since you're also in Washington state.
From an electrical standpoint, this bathroom contains the main GFCI outlet for all three bathrooms in the house. But, I want to move it to the location shown in the renderings (just left of the vanity). Also, I'm planning either to make my own recessed vanity with storage and an electrical outlet inside it,
or purchase one off the shelf. Also adding an additional outlet off the GFCI to the left of the toilet for the eventual
Toto washlet. I say "eventual" because it's a $1,000 toilet lid that's heated, auto-rises, and auto-cleans (both you and itself). Not really in my $10K budget for this reno, but maybe in the future. [tongue] [member=65755]jarbroen[/member] - What will I need to show for the electrical permit? And can I move that GFCI to the opposite wall without having to have a junction box with a blank plate in the old spot?
From a plumbing standpoint, the current combo tub/shower becomes a dedicated shower; the toilet moves to the right about 6-12 inches, the sink is moving to the back wall, and the soaking tub is the big net-new. I can sweat my own copper and would prefer to keep it copper behind the walls, but I know the plumbing permit is going to require a plumbing design. [member=65755]jarbroen[/member] - Did you have to create your own design? How comprehensive was it?