Launch Slideshow

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Back-to-Back

Back-to-Back

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    Steve Glass

    The bathroom entry is visible in this before view of the main living area.

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    Steve Glass

    The original bathroom was small and cramped and has a single vanity.

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    Steve Glass

    The shower has a pebble floor that echoes the rustic look of the stone wall.

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    Steve Glass

    The two-sided mirror unit is suspended from stainless steel cables attached to the ceiling and a wall that separates the vanities. The cables and hardware are from Arakawa Hanging Systems (http://arakawagrip.com).

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    Steve Glass

    Designer Rich Norman of Kitchen & Bath Design Center (http://www.kitchenbathdesignctr.com). The storage unit along the wall was made to match the Ronbow (www.ronbow.com) vanities. They are made by Custom Wood Products (http://www.cwponline.com). A second storage unit is located on the opposite wall.

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    Steve Glass

    The bathroom is located in a small city loft above a retail space and used by the owners of the building when they are visiting.

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    The Kitchen & Bath Design Center’s loft design makes efficient use of the third floor space.

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    Head Room The shower is tucked under a sloped ceiling behind the pebble mosaic wall, . The back-toback vanities are ideal for the large area in the center of the space where the roof peaks.

The owners of a retail building wanted to renovate the loft apartment on the top floor, which was located under the roof rafters. Rich Norman, owner of Kitchen & Bath Design Center, in Fort Collins, Colo., had a 130-square-foot area for the bathroom. However, the sloped roof meant that only the center of the room offered sufficient head room. A vanity along the stone wall would not have been wide enough to accommodate the two sinks the client had requested. Norman’s solution: place back-to-back Ronbow  vanities in the middle of the room.

A local glass shop cut two mirrors, glued them together, and drilled holes for the hardware. Stainless steel cables and hardware from Arakawa Hanging Systems  are anchored to the ceiling and wall between the vanities, providing bracing. Norman worked with HighCraft Builders’  construction crew on the apartment. He says that the mirror was heavy and that it was difficult to accurately drill the holes for the anchors in the ceiling.

The designer points out that back-to-back vanities like this require a large space because “you need to leave the space behind the user open for maneuvering.” Although he has proposed this design to other clients, most bathroom plans are too linear, and since most clients want both a tub and a shower, the remaining space is not large enough for this configuration.

Nina Patel, senior editor, REMODELING.