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01-06-2025 09:01 PM
I am seeing a lot of bathroom configurations with what seems to be called wet rooms or large walk in showers. Family members also searching for home so am Also looking at real estate listings. I am really surprised how many primary bathrooms have the toilet open or behind partial wall to the rest of the room. I believe in togetherness but..... Our bathroom has a pocket door between sinks and shower \ toilet area. Not as spacious as those online but practical. I wonder hos this became popular or is it just easier for builder?
01-06-2025 09:07 PM
@Twins Mom. Are you speaking of a bath where the toilet is with the shower so it gets soaking wet? I've used one of those and never again.
01-06-2025 10:08 PM
I have seen shows on HGTV where they put a tub inside a large shower because there's not enough room for both in the bathroom.
I don't like them. If I'm taking a shower I don't want to dry down the tub & shower both when I get finished? I don't want a toilet in my shower either. Never seen that.
01-07-2025 01:11 AM
Not crazy about open concept bathrooms either.
We have a WC - water closet with a toilet and a door, prefer that.
Crazy how house trends swing.
01-07-2025 05:13 AM
I know no one whose bathroom has a separate room for the toilet. My bathrooms aren't big enough for that. Where I lived prior to where I am now my ex and I built a new home and there was the toilet and separate shower with a door to separate it from the double sink and tub. That's been over 30 years ago.
01-07-2025 05:31 AM
We have a pony wall next to the toilet in our master. Never thought twice about its functionality. It's just fine for me.
01-07-2025 07:54 AM
How much space there is in most homes depends upon the cost for land where that home is located. Find the cost of that land as well as the cost of the house when it was designed and built to know whether it made financial sense to design for the kind of privacy separating the toilet behind a wall delivers.
In my older home, the bathrooms could have been designed for privacy IF each were designed with much smaller counters. That's in homes which already have limited counter space as well as the storage space beneath those counters. Apparently lots of buyers are okay without the privacy. Even owners who have done very expensive remodeling haven't added it!
01-07-2025 08:18 AM
I guess Im old school. When anyone is using the bathroom its off limits to others, thats why they have doors on bathrooms.
01-07-2025 08:57 AM
Tucking the toilet into a very small room was pretty trendy for a while but in terms of cost per square foot, it quickly becomes the most expensive room in the house. It's also not especially practical. If you need to work on the toilet there's very little room to do so. And every toilet will need work done on it from time to time. And cleaning around a toilet in a small enclosed space is not easy. You're better off with the toilet exposed in the bathroom.
There was a house plan a few years back that drove me crazy. The master bedroom was at the head of the second stairs on the right, and at the top of the stairs was an entrance into the master bath. You open that door and there's a big tub in the middle of the floor with a big window behind it and eight doors around it. One door led to the master bedroom. One to a linen closet. One to a cleaning closet filled with cleaning supplies. One led to his dressing room and one to her dressing room. One led to the vanities/sinks. One led to a utility room with water shutoff and circuit breakers for the second floor and one led to the toilet. All eight doors looked the same. If you were a guest and wanted to use the toilet and they sent you upstairs, you'd be playing "guess what's behind door number one" as you frantically looked for the toilet. And then after using the toilet if you were the sort to wash your hands, you'd be playing the game all over again to find the sinks. Or you could just wash them in the tub. This was a multi-million dollar house also.
01-07-2025 10:44 AM
When we visited Greece, the finer hotels we stayed at had open bathrooms.
IMO, it was creepy. I need a bathroom door...a solid one, not a glass enclosure.
I have seen this concept here in US homes, mostly newer ones. I can't see this concept catching on. It looks beautiful, especially if glass enclosed, but there is no privacy. Yuck!
I don't want to share a bathroom. I prefer not just to block off the toilet area from the sinks, tub or shower. Lucky we have more than one bathroom, so we don't have to share.
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