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jags
4th July 2007, 07:14 PM
Hi All

I'm about to commence a small bathroom reno and was after a few peoples opinions and ideas .
Firstly
the bathroom is 2300 long and 1650 wide the layout currently is as show in the pic

my plan is to put the bath /shower along the short wall it is 1650 long and 750 wide

then next to the bath put the toilet in the gap of 650 this would allow a minimum of 150 either side of the toilet

then the 900 by 350 recessed vanity which i think will help not box the toilet in because of it's shallow depth .

Do you think this is doable .

i am adding the toilet so any advise on how one would do this would also be helpfull . I was planning on tapping into the other tiolet pipe in the adjoining room if possible .i have the plumber coming on saturday and am not looking forward to the quote .

thanks
Rob

juan
4th July 2007, 11:57 PM
Hi Rob,

I assume the door is on the short wall opposite where u plan to put the bath. It is very similar in size to our existing bathroom and layout is also very similar except the vanity and toilet are swapped. It worked well for 90 years in this house but I just wanted to get an upgrade and a separate shower.
I like the layout for a small bathroom and with some nice modern fixtures it should look great.

Cheers
Juan

arms
5th July 2007, 08:58 AM
Hi All

I'm about to commence a small bathroom reno and was after a few peoples opinions and ideas .
Firstly
the bathroom is 2300 long and 1650 wide the layout currently is as show in the pic

my plan is to put the bath /shower along the short wall it is 1650 long and 750 wide

then next to the bath put the toilet in the gap of 650 this would allow a minimum of 150 either side of the toilet

then the 900 by 350 recessed vanity which i think will help not box the toilet in because of it's shallow depth .

Do you think this is doable .

i am adding the toilet so any advise on how one would do this would also be helpfull . I was planning on tapping into the other tiolet pipe in the adjoining room if possible .i have the plumber coming on saturday and am not looking forward to the quote .

thanks
Rob


personally i would have the vanity parallel with the bath to give you more usable floor space

Rossluck
5th July 2007, 04:01 PM
Try this, Rob. We just did up a bathroom and this planner was very useful. Be prepared for a big job....:(

http://www.tradelink.com.au/consumer/designyourown/

Mcblurter
6th July 2007, 03:05 PM
We have a similar size bathroom and have had the same issues. Our bath has a small shelf at the end wall so we are making this into a larger shelf (300 wide, 300 high. Top of shelf is width of bath plus 300mm and we will put a cube basin (300x300) in. So similar to yours but toilet on other side and don't have a vanity (will upgrade the old recessed wall cabinet). Both builder and draftsman have doubts if it will work but after many calculations, and discussions on this forum, it is the cheapest and most practical, especially as we have two young children and use the bath a lot. Let us know how it goes and I'll do the same.
Cheers
McBlurter

jags
9th July 2007, 02:51 PM
Hi all

Thanks for the replies

Well had the plumber come over on saturday and he said my layout and to add the new toilet is possible but i will have to remove the slab set out all the waste pipes and then replace the slab .
I have tried to get under the house to see if the slab is suspended but can not see as the room seems to be boxed in with limstone foundations .

My plan to remove the slab was to start at the door with a jack hammer and work my way to the far wall . i was thinking of cutting down the side of each wall with a angle grinder or similar to free up the wall from the concrete floor .
Is this advisable or is there a better way ?

thanks again for all the help it is greatly appriciated

I will attach some pics as i progress .

rob

jags
3rd August 2007, 01:03 PM
hi all , thanks again for the comments .

The bathroom is coming along well . I was able to remove only one half of the concrete slab so i can now use the other half to get my levels when i reconcrete the floor .

I have been going over the floor plan in my head as the plumber is coming to lay the pipe work on Monday and due to the amount that the toilet will stick into the room . I now think that putting the toilet in the corner is the better option (is this what you ment arms ) as the vanity is only 35cm deep and the tiolet will be 665 cm .

What is the minimun distance i can get away with on each side of the toilet ???

Taking into consideration that on the vanity side your knees should be unintruded because of the shallow depth of the vanity .

If possible i would like to make the vanity a little bigger than 900cm ?

thanks again

Mcblurter
3rd August 2007, 02:41 PM
We are doing a similar layout.
I had planned for 180mm from the outside of the rim to the wall, but will turn out to be around 135mm and this doesn't feel too cramped. I'm 6 feet tall and it feels fine, mind you I'm not of the beefy variety! Mind you we have only just over 1000mm to work with, hence a small basin 325x325. Although the plumber is thinking we could go a little larger. Both builder and plumber were initially sceptical but now our old vanity is out and the toilet can be placed in the space, that it actually works okay.
Cheers
McBlurter

jags
3rd August 2007, 03:40 PM
Thanks Mc blurter hope your bathroom is all going to plan ...

it' funny the things you will do to see if a plan works ..I've just been sitting on the crapper for the last 5min with a tackle box that is 350cm long and i but it at 900cm high ....

i think it is doable but the shoulders and elbows might get a little bruised from time to time think i will stick with a 900cm wide vanity ..

i also looked at the small basin but sometime treat the basin as the shower so went agaist the idea ...

rob

peter_sm
3rd August 2007, 06:57 PM
I like the idea of moving the toilet away from the bath. They don't make for good scenery when having a soak.

jags
13th August 2007, 07:01 PM
well when you think all is going well something always comes and smacks you in the back of the head .

i was going to put a bath /shower in that was 750 wide but have been rethinking this after seeing how thin it is . There is another bath that will fit that is 820 and because we will be using the shower on a daily basis i think this is now a better option . But the bathroom will be even tighter now .

Also i have been told that rather than leaving half the floor slab to use as a guide i should remove it because if the new slab moves /drops it will put a nice crack line in the tiles. This is something that i had not throught of but make a lot of sense.

has anyone experienced either problem .
Thanks
Rob

Dirty Doogie
15th August 2007, 07:44 PM
Hey Jags,

I've done a few patched slabs - they don't usually drop or move if done correctly , but it is common that a small crack opens between the old and new concrete as it shrinks.

If you are tiling over the jointed slab just run a length of duct tape over the concrete join then cover the duct tape with the waterproofing membrane. this way the tile wont actually be fixed to the concrete slab and won't crack.

I've tiled over 12 mm wide cracks in concrete slabs this way (the cracks were filled with sikaflex first) - 10 years later no damaged tiles whatsoever!

Re your fitout design --- Do you really need a bath tub? I think the room would look and feel much bigger with just a shower head on a hose and a floor outlet. and maybe a sheet of glass.

Doog

totoblue
16th August 2007, 02:00 PM
i was going to put a bath /shower in that was 750 wide but have been rethinking this after seeing how thin it is . There is another bath that will fit that is 820 and because we will be using the shower on a daily basis i think this is now a better option . But the bathroom will be even tighter now.

We have a show over the bath and I've just measured it at 730 wide (so adding in the thickness of the tiles, it's probably 750 wide). I think it is fine. Our bathroom is 1850 x 2700 and the bath is along one long side and the twin basin vanity on the other long side. What we find (1 couple household) is that the limiting factor is the space between the vanity and the bath when there are two people in the bathroom (particularly when the dog wants to come in as well:~). The space between the basins and the bath is 580 or 800 from the vanity to the bath (the basin's are oval and stick out further than the vanity).

Our other bathroom has a 800x800 shower with preformed shower and that doesn't really feel any bigger because it's square (in the bath, you get less width and more length).

Get a bath with a flat bottom. I don't know if they still sell baths that don't but I've used bathrooms with showers over old baths with round bottoms and it feels like it would be easy to fall over if you weren't 100% with it.

A pocket sliding door would probably be good (which we don't have).
Some cabinets in the wall cavity are good (which we do have:U).

You could have a 900x900 shower in the corner opposite the loo and have a longer vanity for more storage (unless you absolutely need a bath).

Yumbo
16th August 2007, 03:03 PM
Hi Rob,

Not sure how far into it you are but why do you need the toilet in the bathroom if you already have a main seperate toilet? Is this bathroom an ensuite?

I am about 3/4 of the way through my own bathroom reno (1700mm x 2600mm - my first ever DIY, what to way to begin!! It is very similar to your first design; 1400mm x 820mm bath along end, in the space where your toilet was to go I am placing a shower head on hose with floor waste, 800mm then a glass screen seperating the wet area from a 900mm vanity. (I know , I know it doesn't all quite add up)

We're keeping our toilet seperate toilet. To be honest I've never understood what it is with Aussies and dunnies in the bathroom.

Good luck and I hope it all comes together for you.

jags
16th August 2007, 03:42 PM
hi all

Thanks for the continued replies i will update this thread till the reno is finished because im finding out more helpful information as i go and hopefully it will get done quicker ..

the bath debate comes down to the misses wanting one and resale and the size issue is that i feel that 750 would be a little cramped if you use it every day and im not the smallest person 10 cm either side of the shoulders is a bit tight .

Adding a toilet is for conveniece and resale the bathroom is next to the bedrooms ....and two is always better than one .

As the plumber is coming tomorrow i had to deside on the taps and placement after about 3 hours of pissing off the guy in the shop i bought the bath spout and then went next door and brought the rest. He wanted $420 for the bath...

i went for

a phoenix vivid mixer for the shower $179

a wattle ceb H/ shower $140

a vessel wall swivel bath spout $85

a phoeenix vivid mixer for the bath $179

a phoenix vivid basin mixer $179

a decina prima 1650x 820 bath $365


i thought the mixing for the bath was a great idea and easier to use than taps and by using the old vanity hot and cold pipes and seperating the bath water from the shower i can easily reach the the mixer to fill the bath . the bath spout is on a swival so that when you use the shower you will not hit it with your leg .

The other thing i found out was that the grip thing on an acrylic bath is a bit of a myth and you do not need it and makes the bath harder to clean .

im sure this will bore some people but it maybe useful to other .

Rob .

Dirty Doogie
16th August 2007, 11:53 PM
Well done Rob,

One thing you may notice in the fine print in the bath and tapware installation and warranty papers is the common condition that warranty is void if water temperature exceeds 70 c or something similiar.

Here in QLD we have a (another useless) regulation that states you have to fit a tempering valve into the hot water line to bathrooms. Its job is to prevent hot water from the tap exceeding 50c . Supposedly this stops kiddies getting scalded - but it also stops rubber seals swelling and crumbling in modern bathroom mixer taps (although I've never seen it happen). I'm told kitchen mixer taps are designed with parts to handle hotter water.

Your plumber will know about this if its applicable where you live. You've probably already got one. If not they are about $145 and take about 1.5 hours to install (unless it takes longer - LoL)

Anyway hope it goes smooth for you

Doog

jags
27th August 2007, 05:48 PM
As the plumbing has been finished i thought i would add some pics .

I'm hopefully going to lay the slab this weekend .getting there slowly

i am planing on building a recessed shelf below the window and would like some suggestions on how to do this, would it be adequate building a box out of blue board or villa board and inserting it into the wall .
Insted of using bricks and rendering the back wall of the shelf . It will all be waterproofed and tiled over anyway .

So any suggestions on the easiest way to do this would be appreciated .

rob

macca2
24th October 2007, 02:34 PM
Hi Yumbo, I am about to get some renovations done to our bathroom and would very interested if you could give me the brand name of the 1400mm bath you mentioned in your post.

Thanks macca

jags
23rd April 2008, 06:19 PM
hi all as a lot of people seem to be doing a small bathroom reno i thought that rather than making detailed coments on each thread i would finish this one .

in finishing the reno i would suggest the following .
before you start if the room is brick and a lot of pipe work is going to be done remove all the plaster from the wall/walls in question it will be easier in the long run than to patch the wall
if you are going to have a shower bath get one that is 820 not 750 and try not to use a plastic one .
the raised bumps on fiberglass shower /baths are not needed .

if you are going to use a glass screen and can afford the extra $200 get a two piece frameless one with square edges .

And vanity with two deep draws is better than three shallow ones .
a big vanity in a small space looks bad in the end i used a 750 hayman and it works great .

try and wall mount the vanity if you can not see the legs the room will look bigger .

mount the vanity above 900cm in hight unless you are short ...

matt large 600 x 300 white tiles will make the room look a lot bigger

put the feature striping up the wall not around it as one's eye is drawn to it .
use a close coupled toilet they will not stick out as far and look great .

lastly although space was an issue adding the second toilet was a great idea we now have two each in different parts of the house and from what i have heard an extra toilet will add thousands at resale .

p.s if it is a double brick wall and you can do a cut out over the bath it is worth the effort /

this is just my opinion .

thank to everybody that help with out you i would not have been able to do it and i think the concrete slab would have cracked by now .
regards
rob

Dirty Doogie
25th April 2008, 03:48 PM
Hey rob (jags) ...Excellent job - For such a small room it looks a million bucks!

I really like the niche under the window - it was worth the little extra work IMO. I like your taste in vanity and finish. Bet your glad that it is done now!!