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Obsidian-Vault/Personal/Areas/Home improvement/Bathroom - Codex recommendations.md
2026-03-07 11:51:57 +01:00

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# Bathroom - Codex recommendations
> Created: 2026-03-07
> Purpose: Separate scratch note with Codex recommendations, inspiration directions, and source links.
---
## Context
This note is separate from `Bathroom.md`.
It is based on:
- ![[Bathroom Blueprint.svg]]
- The current draft layout shown there
- Current bath design and technical guidance reviewed on 2026-03-07
---
## My Read of the Room
- The footprint is compact but not tiny: about `4.9 m2`.
- The stepped top-right corner is useful, not awkward. It gives you a natural shower zone.
- The outward-opening door is good because it preserves usable floor area.
- The room can probably support `bath + shower + toilet + vanity`, but only if you are disciplined about fixture sizes and storage.
- The largest unresolved planning item is still the toilet position. That decision drives plumbing complexity, clearances, and whether the bath remains worth keeping.
---
## My Strongest Recommendations
### 1. Keep the shower in the existing nook
- The `~1000 x 1000` shower nook is one of the best things about this layout.
- It already creates a wet zone without needing a complicated enclosure.
- If you want a cleaner look, use a fixed glass panel or very minimal enclosure rather than a visually heavy shower cabin.
### 2. Decide whether the bathtub is truly essential
- If the bathtub is a real use case, keep it and make it deliberate.
- If the bathtub is mostly hypothetical, removing it is probably the single biggest upgrade to practicality.
- A tub removal would likely buy you some combination of:
- easier toilet placement
- larger vanity
- better circulation
- calmer sightlines
- more useful storage
### 3. Use a wall-hung vanity with drawers
- In a room this size, drawers are materially better than doors.
- A wall-hung vanity keeps more floor visible and makes cleaning easier.
- If possible, pair it with a mirrored cabinet rather than only a flat mirror.
### 4. Keep the finish palette calm
- This room will benefit more from visual calm than from lots of feature moments.
- Use fewer finish changes than your first instinct suggests.
- Aim for:
- one main tile family
- one vanity material
- one metal finish
- one restrained accent color
### 5. Spend money on invisible performance before visible styling
- Prioritize ventilation, waterproofing, drainage, lighting, and storage planning before decorative upgrades.
- Bathrooms punish bad hidden decisions much harder than most other rooms.
---
## Design Directions I Think Fit This Room
### Warm spa
- Large-format matte porcelain in warm off-white, sand, or light taupe
- Oak or walnut vanity
- Brushed nickel or stainless taps
- Soft integrated mirror lighting
- Sage or clay accents
Why it fits:
- Works well in a compact room
- Feels calm rather than cold
- Ages better than trend-heavy contrast schemes
### Quiet hotel
- Seamless floor-to-wall tile palette
- Floating vanity
- Frameless or near-frameless shower glass
- Recessed niche
- Very low-contrast grout
Why it fits:
- Makes the room feel larger
- Gives the bath and shower a more intentional feel
- Works especially well if you want the room to feel expensive without adding visual noise
### Vintage modern
- More character in the floor tile
- Vanity with more furniture presence
- Framed mirror
- Decorative sconces or warmer vanity lighting
- Brushed brass or aged metal accents
Why it fits:
- Good if you want something less generic
- Pairs well with older building character
- Needs discipline so it does not become busy
---
## What I Would Probably Do
If the bathtub must stay:
- Keep the shower in the nook
- Keep the outward-opening door
- Use a compact wall-hung vanity with drawers
- Use a mirrored cabinet
- Reassess the radiator position early
- Use large matte tile and keep the palette light and warm
If the bathtub is optional:
- Remove the tub
- Keep and improve the shower zone
- Spend the gained flexibility on toilet placement, vanity width, and storage
- Consider underfloor heating plus a smaller towel radiator instead of letting the radiator dictate the plan
---
## Things To Lock Before You Shop
- Toilet position
- Existing drain and supply locations
- Whether the bath stays
- Radiator strategy
- Vanity width and depth
- Door clearance around all fixtures
- Fan position and duct route
- Lighting layout
- Whether the shower will be curbed, low-threshold, or fully curbless
Do not buy taps, mirrors, or tile before those decisions are stable.
---
## Practical Guidance I Would Follow
### Ventilation
- For bathrooms up to `100 sq ft`, Home Ventilating Institute guidance is `1 CFM per sq ft`, with a minimum of `50 CFM`.
- Your draft room is about `53 sq ft`, so the baseline is roughly `53 CFM`.
- In practice, I would treat that as a floor, not a target. Long duct runs, bends, and quiet operation requirements usually justify going above the minimum.
- A humidity sensor and run-on timer are worth it.
### Flooring and slip resistance
- Do not pick polished floor tile for this room.
- Confirm the manufacturer classifies the tile for `Interior, Wet (IW)` use under `ANSI A326.3`.
- For the shower floor, be even more conservative.
### Waterproofing
- Treat the shower waterproofing system as a system, not as a pile of compatible-looking parts.
- Keep it simple enough that the installer cannot improvise critical details.
- Flood-test the shower before tile goes in.
### Lighting
- Use layered lighting:
- general ceiling light
- mirror task lighting
- shower light if needed
- optional low-level night lighting
- A backlit mirror looks good, but it should not be the only useful light at the vanity.
### Storage
- Plan storage for boring items, not aspirational styling:
- toilet paper
- spare toiletries
- cleaning supplies
- hair tools
- medicine
- laundry overflow
- Recessed shower niches are usually worth it if planned early.
---
## Common Failure Modes
- Keeping the tub by default and regretting the loss of space every day
- Choosing floor tile for appearance first and wet performance second
- Treating the fan as a checkbox instead of a real moisture-control system
- Buying a flat mirror when a mirrored cabinet would solve actual storage pressure
- Letting the radiator location stay unchallenged
- Overusing feature tiles, contrasting grout, and multiple finishes in a compact footprint
- Solving aesthetics before plumbing reality
---
## Current Design Signals Worth Paying Attention To
- `Houzz 2025 Bathroom Trends` reports wet rooms at `16%` of renovated bathrooms, with half of those homeowners saying the choice helped them use space better.
- The same Houzz study says `36%` of renovated bathrooms include wellness-oriented features, led by upgraded lighting at `30%`.
- `NKBA 2026 Bath Trends` points toward light neutrals, large-format flooring, wood-faced vanities, matte or brushed faucet finishes, larger showers, and layered lighting.
- Houzz search data in 2025 also points toward more interest in white oak bathroom vanities, vintage bathroom vanities, and warm metal accents.
My interpretation:
- The safe center of the market is moving warmer, calmer, and more natural.
- That aligns well with your room.
- I would avoid cold gray, polished chrome everywhere, and busy patterned surfaces unless you want a more stylized result on purpose.
---
## Source List
### Technical and planning
- Home Ventilating Institute: bathroom ventilation sizing
- https://www.hvi.org/resources/publications/bathroom-ventilation/
- Home Ventilating Institute: certified products directory
- https://www.hvi.org/hvi-certified-products-directory/
- Tile Council of North America: `ANSI A326.3` product use classifications
- https://tcnatile.com/national-standard-ansi-a326-3-now-requires-hard-surface-flooring-manufacturers-to-provide-product-use-classifications-based-on-their-slip-resistance-properties/
- Schluter: shower system installation guidance and water testing reference
- https://www.schluter.com/schluter-us/en_US/kerdi-shower-kit-installation-instructions
- Schluter: shower system installation handbook PDF
- https://assets.schluter.com/asset/570120892212/document_i2tt9fh4sp2n562jmirhppbv4o/Shower%20System%20Installation%20Handbook.pdf
### Trend and inspiration
- Houzz: 2025 U.S. Bathroom Trends Study
- https://www.houzz.com/magazine/2025-u-s-houzz-bathroom-trends-study-stsetivw-vs~183227801
- NKBA: 2026 Bath Trends Report announcement
- https://nkba.org/press/nkba-kbis-releases-annual-2026-bath-trends-report/
- NKBA: 2026 Bath Trends Report overview
- https://kb.nkba.org/research/nkba-kbis-2026-bath-trends-report/
- Houzz: 2025 emerging summer trends report
- https://blog.houzz.com/2025-u-s-houzz-emerging-summer-trends-report/
---
## Use This Note For
- Deciding whether the bathtub stays
- Narrowing the aesthetic direction
- Building a shortlist for tile, vanity, lighting, and ventilation
- Sanity-checking contractor proposals
Do not use this note as a substitute for verifying actual plumbing constraints, local electrical rules, waterproofing details, or fixture dimensions.