Bathroom Design Ideas with a Wall-mount Toilet and Cement Tile
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Streamline Development
Modern Master Bathroom with custom concrete Mexican tiles, floating teak bench in steam room with seamless indoor outdoor flow to outside shower and indoor shower
VORBILD Architecture
A contemporary penthouse apartment in St John's Wood in a converted church. Right next to the famous Beatles crossing next to the Abbey Road.
Concrete clad bathrooms with a fully lit ceiling made of plexiglass panels. The walls and flooring is made of real concrete panels, which give a very cool effect. While underfloor heating keeps these spaces warm, the panels themselves seem to emanate a cooling feeling. Both the ventilation and lighting is hidden above, and the ceiling also allows us to integrate the overhead shower.
Integrated washing machine within a beautifully detailed walnut joinery.
Alamay Constructions Pty Ltd
This room has a seperate Shower and Toilet spaces and a Huge open area for Free standing bath under wide skylight that lets in bright sunlight all day.
Minosa | Design Life Better
Project Description
Set on the 2nd floor of a 1950’s modernist apartment building in the sought after Sydney Lower North Shore suburb of Mosman, this apartments only bathroom was in dire need of a lift. The building itself well kept with features of oversized windows/sliding doors overlooking lovely gardens, concrete slab cantilevers, great orientation for capturing the sun and those sleek 50’s modern lines.
It is home to Stephen & Karen, a professional couple who renovated the interior of the apartment except for the lone, very outdated bathroom. That was still stuck in the 50’s – they saved the best till last.
Structural Challenges
Very small room - 3.5 sq. metres;
Door, window and wall placement fixed;
Plumbing constraints due to single skin brick walls and outdated pipes;
Low ceiling,
Inadequate lighting &
Poor fixture placement.
Client Requirements
Modern updated bathroom;
NO BATH required;
Clean lines reflecting the modernist architecture
Easy to clean, minimal grout;
Maximize storage, niche and
Good lighting
Design Statement
You could not swing a cat in there! Function and efficiency of flow is paramount with small spaces and ensuring there was a single transition area was on top of the designer’s mind. The bathroom had to be easy to use, and the lines had to be clean and minimal to compliment the 1950’s architecture (and to make this tiny space feel bigger than it actual was). As the bath was not used regularly, it was the first item to be removed. This freed up floor space and enhanced the flow as considered above.
Due to the thin nature of the walls and plumbing constraints, the designer built up the wall (basin elevation) in parts to allow the plumbing to be reconfigured. This added depth also allowed for ample recessed overhead mirrored wall storage and a niche to be built into the shower. As the overhead units provided enough storage the basin was wall hung with no storage under. This coupled with the large format light coloured tiles gave the small room the feeling of space it required. The oversized tiles are effortless to clean, as is the solid surface material of the washbasin. The lighting is also enhanced by these materials and therefore kept quite simple. LEDS are fixed above and below the joinery and also a sensor activated LED light was added under the basin to offer a touch a tech to the owners. The renovation of this bathroom is the final piece to complete this apartment reno, and as such this 50’s wonder is ready to live on in true modern style.
Minosa | Design Life Better
Project Description
Set on the 2nd floor of a 1950’s modernist apartment building in the sought after Sydney Lower North Shore suburb of Mosman, this apartments only bathroom was in dire need of a lift. The building itself well kept with features of oversized windows/sliding doors overlooking lovely gardens, concrete slab cantilevers, great orientation for capturing the sun and those sleek 50’s modern lines.
It is home to Stephen & Karen, a professional couple who renovated the interior of the apartment except for the lone, very outdated bathroom. That was still stuck in the 50’s – they saved the best till last.
Structural Challenges
Very small room - 3.5 sq. metres;
Door, window and wall placement fixed;
Plumbing constraints due to single skin brick walls and outdated pipes;
Low ceiling,
Inadequate lighting &
Poor fixture placement.
Client Requirements
Modern updated bathroom;
NO BATH required;
Clean lines reflecting the modernist architecture
Easy to clean, minimal grout;
Maximize storage, niche and
Good lighting
Design Statement
You could not swing a cat in there! Function and efficiency of flow is paramount with small spaces and ensuring there was a single transition area was on top of the designer’s mind. The bathroom had to be easy to use, and the lines had to be clean and minimal to compliment the 1950’s architecture (and to make this tiny space feel bigger than it actual was). As the bath was not used regularly, it was the first item to be removed. This freed up floor space and enhanced the flow as considered above.
Due to the thin nature of the walls and plumbing constraints, the designer built up the wall (basin elevation) in parts to allow the plumbing to be reconfigured. This added depth also allowed for ample recessed overhead mirrored wall storage and a niche to be built into the shower. As the overhead units provided enough storage the basin was wall hung with no storage under. This coupled with the large format light coloured tiles gave the small room the feeling of space it required. The oversized tiles are effortless to clean, as is the solid surface material of the washbasin. The lighting is also enhanced by these materials and therefore kept quite simple. LEDS are fixed above and below the joinery and also a sensor activated LED light was added under the basin to offer a touch a tech to the owners. The renovation of this bathroom is the final piece to complete this apartment reno, and as such this 50’s wonder is ready to live on in true modern style.
Chiara Costa + Claudia Ponti Architetti
Bagno in stile moderno con grande specchio nel quale si riflettono le cementine decorate sulla parete di fondo della doccia
Bathroom Design Ideas with a Wall-mount Toilet and Cement Tile
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