How To Maximize Space In A Small Bathroom
90The Challenge
One of the biggest home renovation challenges can be creating space in a small, main bath where no space actually exsists.
The main bath of our 1940s, lath-and-plaster home has several problems, only one of which is storage. The plumbing is stacked with the downstairs bathroom, and eventually, we will have to do a full gut and re-build. The main bath is only used as a guest bathroom right now. We use the downstairs bathroom – the one with the shower – for our bathroom, so we decided to keep the fixture placement until we are ready to renovate the basement.
Maintaining the same footprint allows us to make some necessary, but largely cosmetic changes right now, and leave re-plumbing the room for the future.
The main bath sports the requisite toilet and a sink with a very large built-in vanity. The bathtub, with its hand-held shower, takes up the end of the room, under a pebble glass, sliding window. The room is tiled all round to with subway tile and bull-nose topper to about a three foot height – very clean and quite modern looking.
After deciding to leave the tiles in place, the next step we took was to rip out the wall cupboard and too-large vanity.
Yes, I did say that we removed cupboards. Let me explain. Badly placed cupboards can be as big a problem as no cupboards at all. In fact, they are more of a problem, because now you have to remove them before you can begin anything else.
As well, the wall cupboard, built to house the towel overflow from the small hallway linen closet, overhangs the bathtub. For practical reasons alone, that cupboard had to go. We wanted to be able to stand up in the tub, and take a shower without worrying about spraying water into the towel cupboard.
We decided on a retro look for the shower curtain, and found exactly what we were looking for on-line - the kind of rounded-rectangle track you see in old-fashioned, claw-foot tubs where the curtain draws all the way around the inside of the tub. This allowed us to keep the window for added ventilation while protecting the original plaster walls.
After the hanging cupboard came down – not without a struggle as it had been built to last – we had to make some repairs to the plaster work. Fortunately, the cupboard had been built right onto the wall, so with the exception of some screw holes, the damage was relatively minor and easily patched…then sanded…then re-patched and re-sanded until it was finally ready to repaint.
The vanity created a few more problems as it butted up against the tub - and, again, had been built to last. We were initially concerned we might have to refinish the outside of the tub as there were some marks left by removing the vanity, but after consulting our local hardware-store guru, we were able to apply a patching medium for a seamless finish.
It had been a lot of work, but, with the addition of a new pedestal sink and low profile, double flush toilet, we were finally ready to start creating useable storage in our now spacious-looking bathroom. It is truly amazing how much bigger it appears without a cupboard overhanging the now sparkling tub, and an over-large vanity crowded against it.
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The Redo
The new, water-resistant paint was barely dry on the end walls before we started on the next phase.
Our shopping research had paid off big-time. We found two narrow shelving units at IKEA. They were just the right width to fit between the wall studs, at 12" on center, and were 12" deep, affording lots of storage space for the towels and toiletries needed in a guest bathroom. The etched glass doors worked perfectly with the look we were going for, and beautifully complemented the existing tiles.
In the adjacent office, we removed the wall board from the wall that backs on the bathroom, and found the center stud in the span of the wall. Then, with a reciprocating saw, we carefully removed the lathe and plaster from the bathroom wall, across the width of the center stud to the next stud on either side.
Next, we built a platform for the shelving units to sit on, so that the bottom of the glass doors would sit just above the top of the baseboards. Our IKEA finds slid into place, fitting perfectly between the studs.
We anchored the shelving units in place and trimmed around the cupboards on the bathroom side, painted the trim to match the baseboards, and mounted the glass doors.Then we reattached the baseboard and touched up the few, small scuffs and nail holes.
From the bathroom side, the effect is wonderful. The new pedestal sink and low-profile toilet are the perfect scale for a small bathroom. We are also quite excited about the double-flush toilet for its promised savings in both water and our energy bill - two budget-wise reasons to "go green".
The etched mirror of the doors reflects lots of light and makes the bathroom look even larger, while the new white-figured, semi-opaque material of the shower curtain lends an airy feel to the renewed space.
We are totally thrilled with our new guest bath. We were able to re-purpose two lovely, antique metal wall sconces that used to inhabit our hallway, just at head-bonking height. They now gracefully shed their light from either side of the built in medicine cabinet set cleverly into the wall above the pedestal sink. Part of the original fixtures, this clever cabinet was the jumping off point for our new, built-in wall units.
...and the office? Well, that will be the topic for another hub - on built-in bookcases.
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Thanks for the article - I was thinking about my small bathroom last night-I bought a "cabin in the woods" and it is not really mean't for living 24/7. Barely fits me and one dog at a time and usually 4 follow me around everywhere. lol Thanks again
Thanks, Candie V, I love to admire the high-end offerings, too. They are totally gorgeous.
My shadow is a small, but persistent feline, FORGET-ME-NOT, but even she can take up way too much space sometimes. Thanks for stopping by. I have to smile when I think of your tiny bathroom full of one person and four dogs, lol.
I love to window shop too...you certainly have some beautiful exhibits! Love to think how they would look in my small bathroom...or should I say water closet LOL...if you turn around, there's one too many in it!
I know what you mean, Enelle. The last apartment I lived in had a bathroom was so small you had to step outside to change your mind, lol.
Bathrooms are so much more important than we think; I often tell people that the secret of my successful marriage is that the husband and I have have separate bathrooms :)
Too true, Reena! I currently use the upstairs "guest" bath and the freeing up the downstairs bath (by the bedroom) for "others". Saves so much time and trouble in the mornings...
I agree with the separate bathroom theory. Once you have one of your own its hard to share!
Thanks so much for stopping by, GW. No there is no going back once you have had your own, lol.















Candie V says:
5 months ago
Living in an apartment, I don't get to do these great things..sigh. My folks used to have a high-end bathroom remodeling business..cost not an issue for most of their clients, so I got to look at the best of the best in catalogs and man, some of these you show, are just plain 'art work' beautiful.. You don't see these in the local home depot! Thank you! Great Hub!