Bathroom Ideas and Designs
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Tracy Holliday Interiors
Ensuite bathroom with brass sanitaryware
Design ideas for a contemporary grey and white half tiled bathroom in London with flat-panel cabinets, grey cabinets, grey tiles, porcelain tiles, grey walls, porcelain flooring, engineered stone worktops, grey floors, a hinged door, white worktops, feature lighting, a single sink, a floating vanity unit, a submerged bath, a corner shower and a submerged sink.
Design ideas for a contemporary grey and white half tiled bathroom in London with flat-panel cabinets, grey cabinets, grey tiles, porcelain tiles, grey walls, porcelain flooring, engineered stone worktops, grey floors, a hinged door, white worktops, feature lighting, a single sink, a floating vanity unit, a submerged bath, a corner shower and a submerged sink.
User
This suite of bathrooms was created as part of a larger full-home renovation to fit in with a basement level home pilates studio. Eighty2 designer Tim was tasked with taking disused spaces and transforming them into a functional and relaxing wellness suite. The completed designs show the potential in even the smallest space with an intimate spa room and a luxurious steam room.
Find the right local pro for your project
This is an example of a medium sized victorian ensuite bathroom in Other with a claw-foot bath, a one-piece toilet, brown walls, dark hardwood flooring and panelled walls.
Balance Interior Design
Pops of fun were added to this project through coloured geometric floor tiles and a soft pink vanity unit.
This is an example of a medium sized contemporary ensuite bathroom in Other with white worktops.
This is an example of a medium sized contemporary ensuite bathroom in Other with white worktops.
Kia Designs
Inspiration for a medium sized contemporary cream and black family bathroom in London with blue cabinets, a freestanding bath, a walk-in shower, white walls, a built-in sink, multi-coloured floors, a hinged door, white worktops, a single sink, a built in vanity unit and a coffered ceiling.
DHV Architects
DHV Architects have designed the new second floor at this large detached house in Henleaze, Bristol. The brief was to fit a generous master bedroom and a high end bathroom into the loft space. Crittall style glazing combined with mono chromatic colours create a sleek contemporary feel. A large rear dormer with an oversized window make the bedroom light and airy.
Zoe Willis Design
MAKING A STATEMENT
Victorian terraced house in Southfields, London. With neutral tones throughout, the family bathroom and downstairs WC were designed to stand out. Vintage inspired suite and hardware butt heads with slick modern lighting and high impact marble effect porcelain tiles.
Polished brass hardware packs a punch against delicious blue and grey veined oversized tiles that encase the bath and shower area.Tom Dixon marble and glass feature lighting, illuminate the moody blue period panelled walls of this downstairs WC.
Margot Tsim Interiors
Traditional ensuite bathroom in London with recessed-panel cabinets, beige cabinets, a built-in bath, a corner shower, beige tiles, porcelain tiles, beige walls, porcelain flooring, a built-in sink, marble worktops, beige floors, a hinged door, white worktops, an enclosed toilet, double sinks and a built in vanity unit.
Liane Ryan Photography
Photo of a contemporary bathroom in Essex with flat-panel cabinets, medium wood cabinets, a freestanding bath, a built-in shower, an integrated sink, white floors, an open shower, white worktops, a single sink and a floating vanity unit.
YARD Architects
A playful re-imagining of a Victorian terrace with a large rear extension.
The project started as a problem solving exercise – the owner of the house was very tall and he had never been able to have a shower in the pokey outrigger bathroom, there was simply not enough ceiling height. The lower ground floor kitchen also suffered from low ceilings and was dark and uninviting. There was very little connection to the garden, surrounded by trees, which felt like a lost opportunity. The whole house needed rethinking.
The solution we proposed was to extend into the generous garden at the rear and reconstruct the existing outrigger with an extra storey. We used the outrigger to relocate the staircase to the lower ground floor, moving it from the centre of the house into a double height space in the extension. This gave the house a very generous sense of height and space and allows light to flood into the kitchen and hall from high level windows. These provide glances of the surrounding tress as you descent to the dining room.
The extension allows the kitchen and dining room to push further into the garden, making the most of the views and light. A strip rooflight over the kitchen wall units brings light deep into the space and washes the kitchen with sunlight during the day. Behind the kitchen, where there was no access to natural light, we tucked a utility room and shower room, with a second sitting room at the front of the house. The extension has a green sedum roof to ensure it feels like part of the garden when seen from the upper floors of the house. We used a pale white and yellow brick to complement the colour of the London stock brickwork, but maintain a contemporary aesthetic. Oak windows and sliding door add a warmth to the extension and tie in with the materials we used internally.
Internally there is a palette of bold colours to define the living spaces, including an entirely yellow corridor the client has named ‘The Yolky Way’ leading from the kitchen to the front reception room, complete with hidden yellow doors. These are offset against more natural materials such as the oak batten cladding, which define the dining space and also line the back wall of the kitchen concealing the fridge door and larder units. A bespoke terrazzo counter unites the colours of the floor, oak cladding and cupboard doors and the tiled floor leads seamlessly to the outside patio, leading the eye back into the garden.
A new bathroom with a generous ceiling height was placed in the reconstructed outrigger, with triple aspect windows, including a picture window at the end of the bath framing views of the trees in the garden.
Upstairs we kept the traditional Victorian layout, refurbished the windows and shutters, reinstating cornice and ceiling roses to the principal rooms. At every point in the project the ergonomics of the house were considered, tall doors, very high kitchen worktops and always maximising ceiling heights, ensuring the house was more suited to its tall owner.
Bathroom Ideas and Designs
Goldstone Interiors
This is an example of a bathroom in London with a freestanding bath and green walls.
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