Caesarstone alternatives for the kitchen and bathroom?
Christie
5 years ago
last modified: 5 years ago
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Which plan do you like better? Narrow kitchen or no bathroom window?
Comments (5)See below the plan of the house as I bought it: Practically I have removed the partition walls as I wanted to open the space up and the wall between the bath and the kitchen as it was affected by damp. Here is how it looks now: I can play around only this space as the other walls are load bearing. One of the builders assured me we can chase the drain pipes without much hassle. The hallway would have some light through the kitchen door and its transom with the larger kitchen option. In case of the smaller kitchen, there would be plenty of light in the hallway from the bathroom and kitchen as I considered glass between kitchen and hallway. Thanks...See MoreHelp with kitchen - dining - bathroom layout
Comments (4)How about changing it into a long thin room - approx 1.4m wide and the length of the kitchen units (up to the entrance into the extension). You could then have the toilet on the back wall near the waste stack with another door into the toilet and then a small utility in front. There will be a small corridor at the bottom of your plan between the kitchen and dining room. You could put a sliding door at the end of the corridor that enters into the dining room. Hopefully the corridor would end just before the patio doors. Your dining room would be quite narrow still but if you used a bench on one side of the table against the wall it might work? Not sure if it would work once you measure everything out but maybe worth exploring?...See MoreWhat do you think of this new bathroom layout?
Comments (58)You made me laugh out loud there rinq! Yeah...that one's been ruled out already :-) Here's a pic as it is at the mo: We did half an update around 10 years ago - new bath/screen/sink/taps/cupboard doors/floor - but our budget didn't stretch to retiling. The main drivers today are: to get a toilet in here new tiles (wall & floor and U/F heating) TBH, I want it to look more modern and I want a toilet. If we have to do without the separate shower, so be it....See MoreHelp: advice on moving bathroom in bungalow
Comments (3)Hi John, I have made some assumptions: - You do not want to extend the house - You don't want open plan - You don't want a bigger kitchen So firstly going for a pee at night from the master bedroom to the bathroom must be a real journey!... Bedroom to hall, to lounge, to kitchen, to porch, to bathroom! And then all the way back again! So the first thing I did was give the master bedroom an en-suite. This would be done by moving the bedroom door towards the front. The remaining space would become a wardrobe. I think your idea of putting the bathroom between the bedrooms works well. I don't however think adding an "L" to the corridor would be a good use of space. I would use a pocket door as a space saving solution. I would recommend moving the dividing wall so that the space is shared equally between the two rooms. The remaining space again used for built in wardrobes. In the kitchen I would extend the boiler cupboard to create a utility space and where the bathroom was I would create a new dining area with a generous sized dining table. You could also use bench seating along the wall for even more seating. I have shown swinging doors, for example for the utility room and the en-suite, but pocket/ sliding doors offer great space saving solutions....See MoreChristie
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