

This type of bathroom is ideal for spaces where square footage comes at a premium. This third design is a classic model with a single environment. A shower door that pivots can be a problem because you won't have a lot of space a shower door that is bypass would not leave a lot of room to enter or exist the shower enclosure. Modulation: 2.30 feet to 26.25 feet between each piece. Shower curtains don't normally come in 4' widths. 4) Shower stall or bathtub? I have a 4' tub. Insert a piece of plywood in the pocket door channel so you can hang a towel bar or towel rings on that wall. These are available but hard to find nice tops at that size since the stanard size is for a 21" deep vanity. Go with a 24" long X 18" deep vanity (the top will be 25"X19". Try to find a skirted toilet because they have less crevices to clean. Use of a shower instead of a tub retains enough space for a cabinet. The layout provides room for the door to swing open. The careful arrangement prevents the toilet from facing the doorway. Shower sized at 36 inches by 36 inches visually balances the vanity. Villeroy & Boch sell a small round one (24.5" deep). Wide 36-inch vanity provides ample counter space. I too have a 1100 sqft house and a bathroom that is 4'X7'2". I know this was posted 1 month ago, but feel that I have some experience here to offer. I'm an experienced DIYer and budget is not really an issue with this project. Here are our 20 simple and modern small bathroom designs with images. I'm already thinking wall-mounted toilet and I have space in the floor to do a zero threshold shower.


I don't need a tub, so I'd keep it to a shower, vanity, and toilet. It is around 40 square feet (5’ x 8’) and here are the typical rules of thumb for how it works. From my rough drawings, I think all of the clearances would be fine, but it would be tight. This is the good old three-in-a-row bathroom we’ve all seen. I think my question really comes down to whether 4' really is too narrow. I've tried looking online to see some opinions about adding such a narrow bath, but I don't find much (mostly just long-dead threads on questionable forums.) In using the available space, I only have to bring down one wall and it is not load bearing. One of the short walls would be an external wall, but I'm in a temperate climate that never freezes. The maximum footprint I can make is approximately 8' long by 4' wide with a pocket door on one of the long walls. I can take up to 3.5'x8 from a wasted part of my living room and I can steal 1'x8' from my master bedroom, but absolutely no more in there. I can carve out a relatively small footprint for a bathroom from my current floor plan. I would like to add a second bathroom without building an addition. The current bathroom is shared by all three rooms and is on the small side - 7'6" long by 5'4" wide. This Bathroom Floor Plan provides you with a 3/4 bathroom that works well even in a small area. Some background: I own 1100 square foot ranch home with three bedrooms and one bathroom. A shower bath works well in a small bathroom layout. I wanted to have some DIYers weigh in on my idea.
