Powder Room Design Ideas with a Two-piece Toilet and Concrete Floors

Powder Bathroom Addition- Studio City, California
Powder Bathroom Addition- Studio City, California
designstilesdesignstiles
Powder Room Addition with custom vanity. Photo Credit: Amy Bartlam
Little Rock Custom Home
Little Rock Custom Home
Parkinson Building GroupParkinson Building Group
Custom home by Parkinson Building Group in Little Rock, AR.
Bungalow Cottage Home
Bungalow Cottage Home
DK HomesDK Homes
We had the opportunity to come alongside this homeowner and demo an old cottage and rebuild this new year-round home for them. We worked hard to keep an authentic feel to the lake and fit the home nicely to the space. ​ We focused on a small footprint and, through specific design choices, achieved a layout the homeowner loved. A major goal was to have the kitchen, dining, and living all walk out at the lake level. We also managed to sneak a master suite into this level (check out that ceiling!).
Powder Room
Powder Room
Designer's TouchDesigner's Touch
This fun gray 3D floral unique wallpaper and wild art transformed this historical house powder room into exiting and vibrant bathroom!!
Crook | Cup | Bow | Twist
Crook | Cup | Bow | Twist
Schwartz and ArchitectureSchwartz and Architecture
This 27 square foot powder room is by far the smallest space in this 3,200 square foot home in Nicasio CA. Where some might restrain themselves from highlighting such a utilitarian space, we elevated this tiny room to one of the most unique spaces in the home. The powder room sits behind a board-formed concrete wall adjacent to the front door of the home. In conjunction with our structural engineer and a master-mason, we developed a way to embed ¾” planks of acrylic into the South facing concrete wall. During the day, the acrylic captures the intense sun (while the concrete keeps the space temperate) creating a vibrant and entirely unexpected light show when one opens the powder room door. From the outside though, the acrylic planks appear simply as dark striations in the concrete. At night though, a timed light inside the bathroom illuminates the backside of the wall and creates a glowing nightlight at the front door. The constraints of board-formed concrete and the sequencing of this type of construction determined a pattern that could both retain the material integrity of the concrete while pushing its limits. In addition, the requirements for the vertical members of rebar created a staggered pattern that suggests a sense of movement; a theme that is carried throughout the project. After several experimental concrete pours, the final detail turned a typical powder room into a design feature that pushes the limits of material and construction and jolts our preconceptions of what lies behind a simple bathroom door. The wall appears to transform -- from solid to penetrable, from tame to wild, from utilitarian to spectacle, from dark and stoic to light-filled and poetic. Bruce Damonte

Powder Room Design Ideas with a Two-piece Toilet and Concrete Floors

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