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From YouTube: HRA Seminar: Bath Remodeling (2015)
Description
Lynn Monson, Owner of DreamMaker Bath and Kitchen, will discuss cost effective updates for your bathroom. View "before" and "after" pictures and learn about the latest products, trends and technologies in bath remodeling.
A
Welcome
everybody
to
our
summer
this
evening
on
bath
remodeling,
we
have
Lynn
Munson
from
three
maker
bath
and
kitchen
easy
to
be
our
prize
speaker
here
tonight
and
he's
going
to
have
a
lot
of
great
information
for
everybody.
The
city
of
Bloomington
has
a
housing
and
redevelopment
authority,
that's
where
I
work
and
we
offer
rehabilitation
loans
to
homeowners
in
the
city
of
Bloomington
and
those
are
free.
A
That
should
say
they're
inter
deferred
loans,
which
means
that
they
are
no.
There
are
no
payments
on
those
loans.
Why
you
live
in
my
house?
It
does
charge
four
percent
interest
on
those
loans,
but
they
are
available
to
income
qualified
people
throughout
the
city.
So
I
encourage
you
to
take
a
look
at
the
information
there's
a
postcard
that
advertises
those
at
the
front
entry.
Also,
if
you
go
to
the
city's
website,
bloomington
MN,
gov,
search
for
rehab
loans,
you
can
find
out
more
information,
so
linds
gabby
here
for
about
about
an
hour,
not.
B
Brian
well,
thank
you
very
much
for
coming
out
everybody,
especially
in
the
rain,
so
that
was
very
nice.
What
we'd
like
to
do
here
is
this
is
not
any
super
formal
situation
if,
as
I'm
going
through
here,
what
we're
going
to
talk
about
is
bath
remodeling
from
very
simple
innovations
which
are
very
simple
or
more
cosmetic
kinds
of
things.
B
You
can
do
to
to
fix
up
your
bathroom
very
inexpensively
to
progressively
more
and
more
intricate
and
detailed
and
a
larger,
larger
and
larger
remodels,
so
you're
going
to
see
a
progression
of
these
kinds
of
projects
all
the
way
through
this
presentation,
I'm
going
to
show
you
a
lot
of
before-and-after
photos
and
we're
going
to
talk
a
lot
about
a
different
ideas
and
products
and
reasons
why
certain
things
are
going
to
debt.
We're
done
we're
going
to
also
talk
about
accessible
design
as
well,
and
so
is
we're
going
through
this.
B
If
you
have
a
question
about
something
just
holler
out
and
we'll
address
it
right
there,
otherwise
I've
got
about
45
minutes
of
a
presentation
here
and
I'll
also
try
to
leave
time.
Then,
at
the
end,
for
more
questions.
So
it's
a
pretty
informal
that
way
just
holler
out,
okay,
so
we're
going
to
talk
about
some
of
the
trends
and
bath
remodeling
is
the
bath?
Is
the
last
private
sanctuary
where
you
can
escape
and
totally
pamper
yourself.
Trends
to
larger
bags,
especially
master
bath,
was
separate
his
and
her
spaces.
B
There's
a
trend
towards
separate
newer,
whirlpool
tubs
and
great
shower
systems
and
lots
of
creature
comforts
such
as
in-floor
heat,
TVs,
bidets,
anti-fog
mirrors,
coffee
bars
in
your
bathroom.
We
can
pamper
you
to
death
if
you
like,
so
we're
going
to
look
at
some
simple
innovations,
we're
going
to
look
at
some
cost
effective
ways
to
change
a
bath
without
breaking
the
bank,
we're
going
to
use
the
simple
use
of
color
and
how
it
can
change
the
character
of
the
room.
B
B
Excuse
me:
evolution
of
the
Whirlpool
to
include
air
Jets,
aromatherapy,
chromotherapy,
infrared
and
sonic
wave
technology
and
evolution
of
the
water
closet
and
a
bday,
and
then
we're
also
going
to
talk
about
aging
in
place
in
green
design.
What
can
we
do
to
allow
you
to
live
in
as
long
as
you
want
in
your
home
with
dignity,
we're
going
to
apply
universal
design
principles
for
all
occupants
and
install
Aging
in
Place
projects,
products
to
assist
everyone
who
lives
in
the
home?
B
So
if
this
is
your
bathroom
and
you
have
creatively
cut
the
door
around
the
toilet,
so
you
can
get
in
the
room.
Help
is
on
the
way.
Okay,
that
was
the
coolest
picture
when
I
walk
in
I
saw
that
I
got
now.
That's
that's
creative,
so
I'm,
an
interior
designer
by
training
in
a
kitchen
and
bath
specialist,
but
that
okay,
we're
going
to
talk
about
very
simple
things.
This
is
not
a
bad-looking
bathroom,
the
it's
a
really
beautiful
tile
on
the
floor
and
the
marble.
B
The
vanity
is
just
pretty
basic,
it's
kind
of
sterile
and
how
can
we
just
add
a
little
bit
of
pizzazz
to
this
bathroom?
Well,
these
are
some
of
the
cosmetic
things
we're
going
to
be
talking
about.
So
one
idea
is:
this
is
what
you
could
do
with
it.
You
notice
in
that
mirror
on
the
top
there's
a
picture
reflected
in
that
mirror.
That
was
hanging
in
that
bathroom,
and
that
was
a
piece
of
art
that
was
important
to
them
and
notice
the
color
scheme.
That's
in
there
lots
of
Reds.
B
If
you
want
a
retrofit
and
raise
the
hype
up
so
now
that
gets
you
closer
to
the
sink
and
it
has
a
nice
aesthetic
to
it.
This
was
a
turn-of-the-century
home
on
Summit,
Avenue,
insane
Paul,
and
it
had
the
old
mosaic
tile
on
the
floor,
but
had
gone
through
a
pretty
bad
remodel
in
the
70s
and
it
sure
looked
like
it
and
yet
the
rest
of
the
home
was
this
absolutely
gorgeous
turn
the
century
mansion.
So
how
do
you
take
a
room
like
this
and
kind
of
bring
it
back
into
the
character
of
the
home?
B
So
one
way
is
you'll
see
that
tile
floor.
That's
the
original
tile
floor.
We
just
cleaned
it
all
up
and
we
did
the
grout
on
it
and
there
was
this
beautiful
marble
pattern
all
the
way
in
other
areas
of
the
house.
So
we
just
brought
tile
marble
tiles
and
and
create
in
that
pattern
that
we
had
seen
in
other
areas
of
the
home
and
carried
that
through
and
instead
of
doing
some
kind
of
a
blind
or
window
treatment.
Minneapolis
st.
B
B
So
it
gives
you
total
privacy,
but
yet
lets
light
in
and
creates
a
bit
of
an
art
effect
and
those
are
very
simple,
Matt,
terribly
expensive
things
to
do,
and
then
the
the
pedestal
sink
was
salvaged
from
a
salvage
yard
and
just
reglazed,
and
we
thought
this
looked
much
more
in
character
with
it.
What
the
original
home
would
have
been.
Yes,.
B
C
B
Has
how
we
cleaned
up
the
tile
yeah,
it's
a
mosaic
tile!
Those
and
these
older
mosaic
tiles
they're,
actually
fairly
easy.
You
can
use
there's
different
types
of
tile
cleaners
that
will
clean
it.
It
can
be
as
the
worst-case
scenarios
you
can
use
almost
like
a
muriatic
acid
on
it
and
clean
it
that
way,
but
generally
it
doesn't
take
quite
that
much
work.
There
are
different
if
you
go
to
any
good
tile
shop.
They'll
have
different
types
of
cleaners
that
will
get
down
and
grind
that
out.
So,
but
that's
all
we
did.
B
C
B
You
are
a
key
I,
see.
You're,
add
T
I,
see
your
attic.
Ok,
this
is
just
this
nice
little
alcove
where
the
tub
is.
But
the
idea
here
is
this
was
fronting
on
to
a
lake
area.
So
you
can
pull
the
blue
of
the
water
in
in
a
really
simple
little
mosaic
tile
and
create
almost
a
little
simple
alcove
like
that.
That's
how
you
can
use
color
or
texture
or
pattern
just
to
create
interesting
little
niches
in
a
home.
This
was
a
typical
little
tiny
powder
room.
It
was
kind
of
a
done
in
the
70s.
B
It
kind
of
looks
like
with
some
pretty
ugly
wallpaper
now
at
the
time
that
was
the
bee's
knees
at
wallpaper.
I'll
tell
you
because
I
was
still
selling
it
back
then
so
I'm
still
right
long
enough
now,
I
get
to
tear
all
that
stuff
out.
Do
it
over
again,
it's
kind
of
fun
so,
but
they
came
to
me
and
they
said
you
know,
we
really
want
this
to
be
like
a
Tuscan
look.
B
So
this
is
about
as
far
away
from
that
as
you
can,
but
you
can
do
that
very
simply
by
just
changing
the
tile
pattern
around
the
vanity
is
actually
a
wall
base
cabinet
the
stock
wall
base
cabinet.
You
can
pick
it
up
at
any
lumberyard
or
any
home
center
and
by
doing
that,
it's
only
12
inches
deep
and
one
of
the
tricks
there
is
making
small
spaces
bigger
is
trying
to
play
with
the
floor
space.
So
by
making
that
a
wall
cabinet
it's
only
12
inches
deep.
B
C
C
B
Really
because
if
you
go
back
there,
question
was
it's
less
storage,
but
let's
look
at
it.
If
you
go
back,
this
is
a
full
depth
of
vanity,
but
I
will
guarantee
you.
If
you
open
up
those
two
doors.
That's
in
there
there's
no
drawers
in
there.
It's
just
a
big
open
cabinet
and
its
really
junky.
The
thing
about
it
is
is,
if
you
go
to
a
12
inch
deep
cabinet
like
this,
it's
still
kind
of
junky,
but
it's
all
right
there
in
front
of
you.
B
It's
only
12
inches
deep,
so
everything's
right
in
front,
so
you
know
it
doesn't
get
lost
behind
it.
So
I
don't
know
that
you
rent
not
much
it's
just
the
plumbing,
just
the
trap.
Yeah
you'd
have
some.
You
know
it's
not
perfect.
In
remodeling
you
have
to
make
compromises
sometimes,
and
that's
what
you're
seeing
here
most
of
these
are
going
to
be
remodels.
So
this
is
a
very
standard.
Five
by
nine
bathroom,
you
walk
in
with
the
oak
vanity
a
vinyl
floor
kind
of
nondescript.
B
It's
not
it's
fine,
but
how
can
we
make
that
more
interesting
and
also
more
like
the
owner
of
the
company
or
the
home?
Excuse
me:
well
it's
this
idea.
Again.
You
see
those
three
pieces
of
art
hanging
on
the
wall,
though
there
were
hey,
they
were
hanging
in
the
hallway
outside
the
bathroom.
These
were
important
to
her,
so
we
brought
them
in
there
and
we
pulled
the
colors
out
of
there
and
found
that
nice
red
light
fixture
and
this
floor
is
a
it's
a
red
floor.
B
It's
not
for
everybody,
but
it's
a
new
version
of
the
old
linoleum.
It's
called
more
marmoleum
by
phorbol,
it's
an
all-natural
product
made
out
of
linseed
oil
and
flax,
it's
extremely
strong
where
and
it's
rated
for
commercial.
Where
and
the
beauty
of
that
in
bathrooms,
especially,
is
you
know
if
you
see
sheet
vinyl
floors,
they
have
a
very
high
kind
of
a
plastic.
Look
to
them
are
very
high
shine
and
they
tend
to
look
a
little
bit
plastic.
This
is
a
very
matte
finish,
an
all
natural
look
and
just
an
overall
marbleized
pattern.
B
So
it
really
creates
a
background,
but
you
can
do
it
in
colors.
This
comes
in
a
180,
different
colors
and
it's
not
any
more
expensive
than
most
sheet
vinyls.
Yes,
sir
marmoleum
ma
r
mo
le
yep
from
for
bo.
It's
is
the
manufacturer.
This
has
been
in
Europe
for
many
many
years.
It's
it's!
Now.
It's
been
in
the
States
for
quite
a
while,
but
it
just
hasn't
gotten
the
widespread
use
that
it
has
over
in
Europe,
but
it's
a
terrific
product
and
it
cleans
the
beauty
of
it.
B
You
can
get
linoleum
still,
yes,
very,
very
expensive.
This
is
not
and
then
the
cabinets
here
again
our
stock
cabinets,
it's
just
as
you're
just
taking
wall,
cabinets
and
different
shapes
and
sizes
of
cabinets
and
putting
them
together
in
interesting
ways.
There's
no
rule
that
says
they
all
have
to
be
one
size,
so
just
a
different
way
of
doing
it.
We
do
a
lot
of
work
in
condominiums
too.
B
B
Okay,
so
let's
see
what
we
can
do
there,
so
we
just
we
replace
the
vanity
with
a
darker
vanity
added
a
granite
top,
but
then
you
can
take
the
same
mirror
and
just
put
a
wood
frame
around
the
existing
mirror
that
matches
the
vanity
very
simple
to
do
not
terribly
expensive.
They
had
a
piece
of
art,
we
brought
it
in
painted
the
wall
and
that
my
client
provided
the
furry
toilet
cover.
This
home
was
done
in
the
70s.
B
It
was
out
in
a
wooded
area,
so
they
were
trying
to
bring
that
wooded
motif
him
by
the
painting.
Nicely
done,
painting
work
for
the
time,
but
look
at
the
tile
work
at
the
time.
That
was
great
tile
work,
but
now
see
how
busy
that
is.
The
idea
here
is
when
you,
when
you
take
a
tile
like
that
and
if
you,
if
it's
small
mosaic
tile,
one
of
the
kind
of
design
tricks,
is
the
smaller
the
tile
and
a
bathroom
the
busier.
It
looks
in
the
more
crowded
the
room
feels.
B
So
if
you
want
a
room
to
look
la
room
like
a
bathroom
to
look
larger,
go
to
larger
format
tile
in
big
spaces,
so
the
room
bigger
so
just
by
changing
the
tile
here,
you
can
also
get
rid
of
the
busyness,
which
is
visually
disruptive,
and
so
we
wanted
to
create
a
bit
of
a
furniture
look
to
this
too.
So
this
is
the
way
you
can
do
that
again.
B
Three
standard
stock
cabinets
just
screwed
together
and
we
you
can
buy
these
metal
legs
at
a
cabinet
supply
shop
and
put
the
the
legs
on
it,
and
it
makes
it
look
like
a
piece
of
furniture
that
you've
brought
in
and
maybe
passed
on
in
your
family,
and
then
you
can
see
now
how
that
larger
tile
on
the
floor.
Doesn't
that
room
feel
bigger
and
then
the
vessel
Bowl
is
just
a
way
to
raise
the
height,
and
then
the
mirror
is
just
something
we
found
on
the
internet
with
that
kind
of
interesting.
B
Stick
pattern
around
it
to
kind
of
bring
the
outside
in
lots
of
old
mud
bed
set
tile
and
very
busy.
You
had
the
old
radiator
in
here
we're
going
to
keep
the
radiator,
but
how
do
we
make
the
radio
hopefully
kind
of
disappear
and
give
this
a
quick
update
and
kind
of
clean
it
up?
This
is
one
way
to
do
that.
You
see
the
great
over
the
radiator
helps
hide
that
and
again
it's
very
simple
white
tile.
Everything
is
white
on
white
on
white,
except
for
the
glass
tile
in
sets.
B
So
that's
another
way
you
can
just
do
simple
little
in
sets
of
color,
and
that
way
you
probably
won't
get
tired
of
it
as
easily
over
a
long
period
of
time.
So
what
do
you
think
1950s
early
60s,
maybe
very
typical?
These
tiles
are
set
in
what
we
call
mud
bed,
meaning
there's
about
three
quarters
of
an
inch
of
cement
behind
it.
It's
there
they're
in
there
to
stay
there
and
there's
usually
nothing
wrong
with
them
other
than
you've.
Just
gotten
tired
of
the
look
of
it.
B
They
don't
really
necessarily
wear
out
too
much
if
you
don't
meet,
unless
you
don't
maintain
the
grout,
but
if
you
maintain
the
grout,
these
will
last
a
hundred
more
years,
but
the
thing
of
it
is
you
know
it's.
How
do
you
change
it?
Well,
one
way
to
do
this.
Is
you
can
take
a
tile
like
this
and
you
can
have
it
reglazed
where
they
come
in
and
h
it
and
spray
it,
and
that
will
that
will
work
and
that
will
last
10
to
15
years?
B
If
you
don't
use
any
thing
abrasive
on
it
and
that's
a
good
solution,
you
can
also,
instead
of
tearing
it
out
completely,
you
can
go
right
over
it
with
other
panel
materials
that
we're
going
to
look
at
a
little
bit
later
or
you
can
tear
it
out
completely
and
start
all
over.
But
when
you
do
go
to
tear
these
kinds
of
bathrooms,
out,
you're
going
to
end
up
going
down
to
the
studs
and
starting
completely
over.
B
So
those
are
different
levels
of
remodeling
that
you
can
do
so
here
we
tore
it
out
and
we
just
replaced
it
with
that
same
white
tile
that
you
saw
on
the
other
side
of
the
room,
but
adding
the
little
glass
mosaic
in
there
gives
the
room
a
bit
of
interest.
But
yet
the
room
is
still
white
and
it
keeps
it
as
big
and
open
looking
as
possible
and
I
think
very
much
more
classic.
It
won't
age
or
look
trendy
in
years
time.
B
How
many
have
carpets,
still
in
their
bathroom
so
and
you've
got
the
tub
with
the
window
in
it,
and
when
these
were
done,
you
know
we
didn't
have
showers,
then
so
that
was
okay
to
put
the
tub
there.
But
now,
since
these
were
built
now,
you've
added
showers
into
these
areas
and
the
window
being
in
the
shower
area
is
always
a
problem
of
water
getting
into
your
walls.
And
how
do
we
update
this?
B
So
this
is
a
little
more
extensive,
but
I
will-
and
this
is
the
other
side
of
that
with
the
cultured
marble
and
the
tile
and
the
wallpaper
one
way
to
do
this
is
here
we
put
a
new
tub
in
a
deeper
soaking
tub
because
that's
what
they
wanted,
but
you'll
see
what
we
did
with
the
window.
We
kept
the
window
frame
in,
but
we
just
took
the
bottom
sash
out
and
you
can.
We
were
able
to
salvage
some
siding,
so
we
could
patch
that.
B
So,
if
I
go
back,
you'll
see
that's
a
it's
actually
a
double
okay
and
then
that
window
is
still
there.
But
what
we've
done
is
put
frost
a
glass
panel
over
and
sealed
it,
so
you
can
still
get
light
through
it
because
it's
frosted,
it's
still
private
and
it's
up
high
enough.
It's
well
above
your
shoulders,
and
yet
you
don't
have
to
worry
that
about
putting
something
over
that
to
protect
it
from
water
getting
into
the
wall,
and
these
are
these
panel
systems.
I
was
talking
about
this
happens
to
be
an
acrylic
panel.
B
It
looks
like
stone,
but
these
acrylic
panels
now
come
they're
just
that
thin
and
you've
seen
acrylic
panels
rather
inexpensive
kind
of
cheap,
looking
ones
and
many
of
the
home
centers.
But
a
lot
of
these
now
come
in
many
many
colors
that
look
like
Granite's.
You
can
get
them
to
look
like
a
subway
tile
like
this.
C
B
B
Society
be
used
to
cover
yeah,
we
took,
we
took
the
bottom
sash
out
completely
filled
in
the
wall
and
patched
the
outside
siding.
So
there's
just
that
much
silly
on
the
outside
too.
You
could
do
that
to
you,
could
just
leave
the
window
as
well.
This
is
a
in
that
same
project.
This
is
a
shower.
That's
in
the
basement
and
I
run
into
this.
Quite
often,
this
is
an
example
of
where
they've
had
mud
bed
tile,
and
then
it's
been
that
they've
done
a
really
bad
reglazing
attempt
on
it.
B
Can
we
it's
sealed
on
there
with
glue
and
that's
never
going
to
wear
out
that'll,
be
there
20
years
from
now,
and
then
the
walls
of
that
shower
are
the
same
acrylic
panels
instead
of
this
pattern.
But
it's
a
just
acrylic
panel,
like
this:
that's
done
in
kind
of
a
marbleized
pattern
that
goes
right
over
the
existing
tile
and
just
cleans
it
right
up
and
again
no
grout
to
deal
with
nice
cleaned
up
and
for
a
basement
shower
that
worked
out
really
well
and
you
didn't
have
to
spend
a
ton
of
money.
B
Another
option
of
that
kind
of
system
is
these
are
lucite
panels
and
again
it's
that
idea.
One
panel
on
each
wall
with
no
grout
goes
right
over
everything.
This
is
an
example
of
that
lucite
panel
that
you're
seeing
here
it's
that
thin
and
it
looks
like
glass,
but
it's
a
lucite
material,
so
very
easy
to
clean,
relatively
inexpensive,
not
much
more
than
the
cost
of
the
acrylic
products.
And
again
it
can
go
right
over
everything.
B
B
Luc
ite,
this
is
one
of
the
smallest
bathrooms
I've
ever
done
this.
This
bathroom
is
five
feet
wide
and
six
and
a
half
feet
long
I
mean
you
can
almost
turn
around
in
here,
and
the
problem
with
that
is
a
lot
of
stuff
doesn't
meet
code
because
it's
just
too
tight.
So
we
had
a
challenge.
We
had
to
take
this
shower.
You
can
see
here
when
you
are
remodeling.
B
B
So
how
can
you
get
that
to
work
without
expanding
the
room
and
then,
in
addition
to
that,
they
had
the
same
issue
of
the
window
over
the
shower
yeah
nice
creative,
looked
at
a
shower
curtain
on
the
back
wall
and
a
shower
curtain
on
the
front,
so
it
works
not
terribly
attractive,
but
it
works.
So
the
challenge
was
to
take
this
bathroom.
She
was
going
on
vacation
for
12
days
and
to
get
this
all
done
within
that
period.
Excuse
me
nine
days
and
we
did
this
for
twelve
thousand
dollars.
So
that
was
the
challenge.
B
B
Another
way
to
do
that
is,
take
the
window
out
completely
and
you
can
do
and
insulate
you
can
buy
the
insulated
glass
like
in
a
brand
new
window,
just
the
glass
itself
and
frame
it
in
there,
and
then
this
was
done
with
glass
tile,
because
that's
a
color
element
that
she
really
liked
she
traveled
in
Europe
a
lot
and
really
liked
that
detail
instead
of
the
shower
door.
This
is
what
they
call
a
bath
screen.
B
So
it's
a
piece
of
glass,
that's
fixed
and
it's
stable,
but
it's
open
on
the
end
very
common
in
Europe
us
as
Americans
I.
Don't
know
why,
but
we
just
so
scared
to
get
our
with
that
water
might
get
out
of
our
tub,
but
there's
tile
on
the
floor,
our
pardon
cycle,
okay,
but
you
see
what
we
did
with
the
to
solve
the
code
issue
here.
This
is
an
18
inch
wide
pedestal
sink,
so
that
met
the
code
issue.
C
B
B
B
B
This
is
what
we
did
to
it
now.
The
idea
here
is
by
floating
the
vanity.
You
see
how
the
room,
how
the
floor
space
opens
up,
and
it's
a
very
it's
not
a
difficult
thing
to
do.
Those
are
stained
glass
panels,
just
overlaid
right
over
the
window
panels
and
where
the
white
sections
of
the
stained
glass
is
light
comes
through
there,
but
yet
it's
still
private,
but
it
almost
looks
like
a
piece
of
art
sitting
on
the
wall
so
on
this,
and
then
there
was
a
tub
in
here
that
they
never
ever
used.
B
So
then,
why
keep
the
space,
so
we
were
able
to
turn
it
into
a
four
foot
shower
and
then
put
at
all
vanity
on
our
tall
linen
cabinet
on
the
end
to
give
them
additional
storage.
So
it's
about
space
planning
and
how
you
use
space
and
then
on
this
side.
This
is
what
it
was
when
you
walked
in
before
you'll
notice.
There's
eight
inches
of
space
here,
that's
basically
wasted!
Isn't
it
there's
nothing
going
on
there,
so
there's
an
opportunity
to
use
that
in
the
bathroom.
B
B
This
bath
is
in
st.
Paul
again
another
standard
five
by
nine
bathroom
and
it's
the
challenge
here
is
how
do
I
make
this
more
accessible?
These
folks
are
retired.
They
want
to
stay
in
this
house
forever,
but
we
want
to
make
this
as
accessible
for
them,
where
they're
at
now
and
what
might
happen
to
them
in
the
future
or
not
so
looking
at
what
their
needs
are.
B
Here's
some
ideas.
One
idea
is
this
idea
of
the
floating
pedestal
sink
with
this
solid
surface
shelf
along
there
for
storage
and
then
you'll
notice
over
here
and
I'm,
going
to
show
you
a
different
picture.
This
is
a
toilet,
that's
built
into
the
wall
and
in
wall
toilet
so
which
saves
nine
inches
of
floor
space
in
front
of
it,
which
now
makes
getting
through
here
very
easy.
So
if
they
were
ever
to
go
into
like
a
walker
or
into
a
wheelchair,
they
could
still
use
this
bathroom.
B
Here's
a
shot
straight
on
this
toilet
is
inside.
This
wall
is
a
metal
frame
that
holds
the
tank
and
everything's
accessible
from
that
flush
button
up
on
top-
and
this
is
a
dual
flush
system-
everything's
accessible
right
there
and
you
can
also
because
you're
mounting
this
toilet
bowl
onto
this
metal
framework,
you
can
make
it
whatever
height
is
comfortable
for
you.
This
is
a
real
important
issue
for
some
people.
I
had
a
94
year
old
woman,
who
was
probably
all
of
130
pounds,
and
she
was
six
foot.
B
Four
I
mean
she
was
just
a
stick
and
she
had
some
real
difficulties,
but
you
can
imagine
her
trying
to
sit
down
in
a
normal-sized
toilet
you.
She
would
feel
like
she's
falling.
So
with
these
kinds
of
toilets,
I
actually
set
the
bowl
at
22
inches
off
the
floor
and
for
her
was
perfect.
So
if
you
were
in
a
wheelchair,
you
can
make
a
transfer
more
easily,
depending
on
the
height,
that's
more
comfortable
to
you
different
ways.
You
can
do
that.
Yes,
sir.
B
B
Right,
if
you
replace
the
toilet,
a
good,
full
height
toilet,
like
a
DA
height,
you
know
good
one
will
be
at
350
bucks,
so
it's
easier
to
change
that
out
and
get
a
or
you
what
we're
doing
a
lot
of
now
is
what
we
call
comfort
height,
toilets.
Your
standard
toilet
is
about
14
or
15,
inches
off
the
floor
to
the
seat.
Comfort
height
is
16
and
a
half
and
you're
a
DA
or
commercial
toilets
or
18
inches
high.
B
B
This
toilet.
This
is
about
1,500
bucks
with
everything
done,
but
it's
one
thing
about
it.
Is
it's
really
quiet
because
the
tank
is
in
the
wall?
It's
really
easy
to
clean,
because
you
notice
that
the
bowl
doesn't
go
down
to
the
floor,
the
it's
a
floating
bowl,
so
it's
really
easy
to
clean.
Under
these
and
you'll,
everybody
ask
me
well
how
much
weight
can
that
support
your
you
look
at
it.
You
think?
Oh,
my
gosh
that's
going
to
break,
but
these
are
rated
for
eight
hundred
and
eighty
pounds.
B
So
if
you
can
put
eight
hundred
eighty
pounds
on
there,
good
luck
so
but
I
like
the
the
pedestal
there
with
that
towel
ring
in
the
front
being
able
to
get
up
to
that
and
really
get
tight
to
it.
That
makes
it
really
easy
to
work
at
that.
So
and
doesn't
this
room
feel
bigger
yeah,
and
this
is
the
tub
shower
on
the
other
side
of
that
room.
Here
again,
we've
put
grab
bars
in
there
to
hold
on
to,
as
you
enter
an
exit
another
one
on
the
left
to
help
steady
yourself.
B
Inside
the
tub,
it's
an
acrylic
tub.
Oh,
this
is
an
armrest
there's
armrests
molded
into
the
top,
so
you
can
sit
down
and
you
can
push
up
out
of
there
and
these
panels
that
are
on
the
wall.
Here
are
solid
surface
material
and
that's
what
this
whole
line
is
right
here.
It's
the
same
panel
systems
I
was
talking
about
earlier.
B
This
was
a
tiny
again
five
by
nine
bathroom,
but
it
feels
much
smaller
because
you'll
see
when
you
walk
in
how
the
shower
door
just
blocks
your
eye
and
cuts
the
room
right
in
half.
So
just
by
opening
this
up,
it's
got
the
window
in
it
again
so
and
then,
on
the
other
side,
it
had
the
original
beadboard
paneling
from
when
the
house
is
built,
which
is
a
character
of
the
house,
and
we
really
wanted
to
keep
that,
but
let's
clean
it
all
up
and
then
put
a
new
vanity
in
there.
B
So
this
is
one
way
to
do
this,
and
this
is
how
you
can
mix
materials
so,
for
example,
here
in
the
shower
in
the
center.
That's
that's
real
tile.
It's
that
rock
the
tile
rocks
and
then
all
the
panels
on
the
walls
on
the
rest
of
the
walls
are
the
acrylic
panel.
So
you
can
mix
and
match
these
kinds
of
things
too
and
create
interesting.
Looks
if
you
like
what
kind
of
floor
she
has.
Let's
see.
Oh
that's
the
marmoleum
floor
again,
you'll!
It's
just
a
very
subtle
pattern.
B
The
nice
thing
about
the
marmoleum
too,
is
it
stays
at
room
temperature,
so
it
doesn't
feel
cold
it
if,
like.
If
you're
walking
on
tile
work,
it's
cold,
it
feels
warmer
underfoot.
But
this
is
that
area
where
we
put
this
acrylic
around
the
window
with
a
frosted
panel
to
give
you
privacy
and
let
light
in
this
is
an
acrylic
panel
on
the
right,
and
this
is
the
tile
inset
in
the
center.
So
you
can
be
creative
and
how
you
do
these
things,
and
yet
you're
still
not
spending
a
lot
of
money.
C
B
B
The
oil
rubbed
bronze
is
it's
it's
a
pretty
classic
finish
and
it
will
probably
always
be
around
to
some
extent
you're,
seeing
that
and
black
matte
black
finishes
still
coming
back
very
strong.
The
one
knock
against
oil
rubbed
bronze,
especially
in
bathroom
fixtures,
is
it's
a
little
softer,
so
it
can
be
scratched
a
little
more
easily
if
you
want
something,
you
really
want
to
be
able
to
scrub
or
something
chrome
or
brushed.
B
Nickel
might
be
a
little
better
choice,
but
here
this
was
a
period
to
the
house,
because
there
was
a
lot
of
those
kinds
of
features
and
that
remember
that
would
be
bored
that
was,
it
was
original
there.
We
it's
all
cleaned
up
and
just
painted,
so
you
can
still
maintain
the
character
of
it,
but
I
changing
it
like
that.
Another
five
by
nine
baths
and
again
this
idea
of
how
the
shower
door
and
the
tub
just
kind
of
stops
your
eye
and
cuts
the
room
off.
So
how
do
we
make
it?
B
Look
bigger
these
again
losing
the
larger
panel
or
larger
tile
on
the
floor.
You
see
that
bigger
size
tile,
how
much
bigger
the
room
looks
on
the
floor
itself
and
by
using
clear
glass
and
the
frameless
shower
doors
like
that
now,
you're
I
extends
all
the
way
to
the
back
wall.
This
one
we
did
I,
think
it's
probably
now
12
or
13
years
ago.
Here's
your
1950s
pink
tile
on
the
floor
and
the
tie.
B
Everything
in
this
bathroom
is
still
here
except
the
vanity
and
the
light
we're
going
to
go
right
over
everything
in
this
particular
bath.
So
this
is
one
way
to
do
it.
That
floor
was
again
one
of
the
mud
bed
set
tiles.
So
it's
a
perfect
if
it's
in
good
shape
and
not
damaged
it
all
by
water.
It's
actually
a
very
good
sub
firm
base
for
just
going
new
tile
right
over
it.
So
this
is
large-format.
Tile
is
laid
right
over
the
top.
These
are
pieces
of
granite
and
tiles
that
are
cut
very,
very
thin.
B
These
are
examples
of
them
up
here.
These
are
real
granite
panels.
They're
cut
that
thin.
They
have
an
aluminum
backer
on
the
back
and
and
the
real
stone
on
the
front.
They
come
in
many
different
colors
and
patterns,
but
the
beauty
of
this
product
is
this.
Aluminum
backer
gives
a
great
stability,
so
when
it's
glued
on
the
wall,
it's
it's
not
coming
off
and
it's
there
for
the
life
of
the
house,
and
you
can
go
right
over
existing
tile
with
this
again
and
that's
what
we
did
here.
B
This
is
another
bathroom
where
you
have
the
big
ol
radiator
in
there,
and
we
wanted
to
take
this
out
and
do
a
shower,
and
we
want
to
do
with
kits
and
on
the
market
today,
especially
from
places
like
Malaysia
and
places
like
that,
you
can
buy
very
inexpensive,
bathroom
kits
to
remodel
your
bathroom.
What
this
is
the
other
side
of
that
room
before
we
started,
and
then
here's
the
after-
and
this
is
a
kit,
the
vanity,
the
st.,
the
faucet,
the
mirror
and
the
toilet.
B
B
This
is,
you
can
buy
these
online.
You
just
do
a
search
online
sure,
and
this
is
the
other
side
of
that
room
and
that
shower
system
is
the
granite
that
we
just
looked
at
in
that
last
bathroom.
These
are
kits
as
well.
These
are
granite
panels
and
the
shower
base,
it's
all
a
kit,
and
then
we
took
the
window
out,
and
this
is
an
example
where
we
did
the
frosted
glass
panels,
but
it's
a
double
pane
windows
sealed
with
the
argon
gas
in
it.
B
But
the
thing
is:
they've
never
used
the
tub
anymore,
so
the
idea
here
is
they
wanted
to
create
the
shower
and
they
also
want
to
create
what
they
call
a
low-profile
shower
and
that's
an
example
of
these
kinds
of
products.
So,
instead
of
your
standard
shower
base,
which
is
usually
five
or
six
inches
tall,
two
step
over,
these
are
products
now
that
are
made
with
just
that
kind
of
a
lip.
B
That's
all
you
got
to
step
over
to
get
into
it
and
if
you
were
ever
do
need
assistance
to
get
in
there
with
any
kind
of
a
walker
or
wheelchair
they
make
a
little
ramp.
That
will
go
right
up
and
you
can
roll
right
into
this
thing
and
it's
all
one
solid
piece
and
it's
really
heavy
duty.
It's
not
going
to
it's
not
going
to
break
down
and
it's
very
easy
to
clean,
but
yet
there's
a
slight
to
peddling
on
the
bottom
of
it,
so
that
it's
very
soon
this
is
called
onyx
Oh
NYX.
C
B
That's
always
the
argument.
You
know
if
you
talk
to
all
the
real
real
estate
people,
they
say
you
have
to
have
one
bathroom
in
the
house,
but
yet
survey
after
survey
after
survey
of
people
that
are
buying
homes
in
the
remodeling
industry,
we're
taking
out
more
bathtubs
and
we're
putting
in
if
we're
putting
in
tubs
are
usually
separate.
You
have
a
separate
shower
and
a
separate
tub.
If
you
have
the
space
to
do
that,
it's
just
that
this
is
the
way
we
live.
Now
we
take
more
showers
than
we
do
baths.
C
B
C
B
Can
figure
something
out?
I'm
sure
this.
This
bathroom
again
is
a
five
by
nine
bathroom
and
he
called
it.
His
amazing
multi-purpose,
bathroom
you'll,
see
how
tight
that
toilet
is
to
the
this.
Is
the
tub
there's
about
10
inches
of
space
in
front
of
that
toilet?
He
said
he
could
sit
down
on
the
toilet
and
wash
his
feet
in
its
tub
and
he
could
multi-purpose
all
day
down
and
be
really
efficient
about
getting
ready
in
the
morning
and
again
you
walk
in
and
that
vanity
just
blocks
your
eye.
B
Doesn't
it
and
that's
just
the
way
this
happened
to
be
laid
out,
so
they
asked
us,
they
said:
look.
What
can
we
do
to
rearrange
this
or
not?
Or
what
can
we
do
to
make
this
more
efficient
better
for
us
and
also
make
it
code
compliant,
because
that
toilet
does
not
mean
Kobe
in
that
tight
to
the
tub?
So
here's
an
idea.
B
So
that's
what
we
did
to
it,
and
sometimes
these
kinds
of
projects
are
really
about
space
planning.
How
can
you
take
that
particular
space,
and
is
there
a
better
way
to
lay
things
out,
given
that
we
needed
a
tub
given
that
we
needed
a
vanity
and
given
that
we
needed
a
toilet?
How
do
we
rearrange
that
space
so
by
taking
the
tub
and
turning
it
on
to
the
N
wall?
B
It
solved
two
problems
for
us:
it
allowed
us
to
make
the
toilet
spacing
code
compliant
and
by
moving
the
vet,
the
vanity
sink
to
the
other
side
of
the
wall.
It
allowed
us
to
get
all
this
storage
in
there
and
there's
that
shot,
and
you
can
be
creative
with
the
materials
to
take
a
look
at
the
mirror.
It's
just
plain,
simple
flat
mirror,
but
it
doesn't
mean
it
has
to
be
square.
You
can
cut
me
or
any
way
you
want
to
so
we
just
cut
it
like
a
half
moon
and
wrapped
it
around
the
cabinet.
B
B
C
C
B
On
which
one
you
buy
there's
some
like
any
products,
there's
usually
really
good
ones
on
the
market
and
there's
some
that
are
done
really
cheaply.
They
do
leak.
So
the
thing
there
is
good
make
sure
you
get
the
guarantee
that
they
won't
leak.
So
we
there's
good
ones
on
the
market
that
won't
leak
and
they
perform
very
well,
but
it
is
a
little
bit
more
of
a
fixed
use,
so
we
put
them
in.
C
B
Yeah,
you
can
use
it
that
way,
but
then
it's
not
as
it's
universally
friendly
for
a
lot
of
people,
but
most
people
aren't
used
to
working
with
them.
Yet
so
they're
a
little
bit
afraid
of
them
is
what
I
find
they
look
at
them
and
go.
You
got
to
show
them
how
to
use
them
the
first
time.
So
we
talked
a
lot
about
in
bathrooms,
especially
about
lighting
and
one
of
the
things
about
lighting
in
a
bathroom.
It's
always
best
to
try
to
get
the
lighting
straight
on
your
face.
B
So
the
idea
of
doing
sconce
lights
here
instead
of
having
lights
coming
up
over
your
head
and
shadowing
down
your
face,
having
a
light
straight
on
your
face
is
usually
much
better.
So
just
an
idea
here
and
you
have
two
sinks
and
you
can
create
his
in
her
areas
and
with
separate
areas
like
that,
instead
of
one
big
light
fixture
over
the
top.
B
This
is
kind
of
a
bad
photograph.
I've
married
two
photographs
here
together,
but
the
idea
is
that
there
was
medicine
cabinet
above
and
then
this
setup
area
below.
And
how
can
you
mask
that?
If
you
don't
want
it
to
show
that
much
here's
one
idea
you
can
take
things
like
this
is
a
Shoji
screen
that
then
just
folds
back
and
then
you
can
see
the
lights
in
the
mirror
and
get
at
everything.
But
if
you
want
to
put
it
away
and
make
it
look
more
like
an
art
piece,
you
can
do
this.
B
B
B
That
was
space
that
we
really
didn't
have
we
wanted
to
be
able
to
open
up
the
store
way
to
make
it
easier
for
the
clients
to
get
through
that
door
so
by
combining
the
toilet
and
a
bday
that
allowed
us
to
open
up
this
wall
and
make
that
opening
much
bigger
and
make
the
room
feel
bigger.
So
here's
an
example
there's
a
lot
of
them
on
the
market.
This
happens
to
be
one
from
a
company
where,
when
you
sit
down
you
open
up
the
seat,
you
sit
down
on
there.
B
The
weight
of
your
body
sitting
on
the
seat
releases,
a
glass
of
nice,
warm
air.
So
and
then
you
do
your
business,
you
can
do
either
regular
toilet
or
bday
or
both
cause
of,
and
then,
when
you
hit
the
button
and
the
bday
retracts
and
cleans
itself
and
as
you're
getting
up
out
of
there,
it
shoots
warm
air
over
here
and
dries
you
off
and
it'll.
B
You
know,
it'll
put
a
smile
on
your
face
and
send
you
on
your
way
very
happy
every
morning
now
these
aren't
cheap
at
the
time
I
put
this
in,
which
is
quite
a
while
ago.
Now
it
was
four
thousand
dollars,
but
if
you've
seen
anything
in
the
trades,
Koehler
has
them
out
there
they're,
like
six
thousand
bucks
for
that
Kohler,
Nexus
or
total
has
these.
But
you
can
also
do
these
relatively
inexpensively
total
and
other
companies
like
that
at
what
they
call
a
wash
let
which
is
just
the
toilet
seat
portion.
B
That
is
the
bday
and
you
can
retrofit
a
standard
toilet
with
that.
So
if
you
really
want
those
features,
you
can
get
them
now
and
you
can
pamper
yourself
to
death
and
then
that
allowed
us
to
open
up
a
closet
on
the
other
side
and
do
a
roll
in
shower
for
them,
so
we're
just
trying
to
make
it
more
accessible
for
them.
B
And
this
had
been
a
sleeping
porch
on
the
second
floor
and
the
idea
of
turning
that
into
the
master
bath
was
very
appealing,
but
also
the
idea
of
doing
the
transom
windows
on
there
to
maintain
that
feeling
that
it's
still
the
porch.
So
it's
just
again
a
matter
of
how
do
you
put
things
together,
and
these
are
called
another
way
to
make
space
look
bigger.
B
You
see
that
this
vanity
again
is
only
12
inches
deep,
but
the
sinks
are
what
they
call
semi
and
cast,
so
they
hang
out
over
the
front
of
it
and
that
allows
you
a
lot
more
floor
space.
You
can
get
right
up
to
the
sink
and
makes
the
room
feel
much
much
bigger
and
then
quite
often
we
walk
into
houses
that
have
what
they
call
Jack
and
Jill
bathroom
is
the
same
bathroom
back-to-back
same
style
same
look.
This
client
had
one
of
these
Jack
and
Jill
bathrooms
and
we
worked
with
them
on
the
design.
B
They
love
the
design
and
she
was
going
to
use
one.
He
was
going
to
use
the
other
one,
but
what
they
couldn't
agree
on
was
what
the
finishes
were.
What
she
liked
he
didn't
fancy
that,
can
you
imagine
so
here's
an
idea
of
what
you
can
take
in
the
same
design,
but
by
just
doing
different
materials,
how
it
looks
totally
different.
So
here's
one
so
that's
the
one
design
and
then
this
is
the
other
one
and
see
how
the
room
character
changes
just
by
how
you
do
the
finishes.
B
And
this
is
this
is
a
very
common
request.
We
just
talked
about
a
little
bit
earlier.
Take
the
tub
out,
create
them.
The
group
they're
really
great
shower,
because
we
just
never
used
the
tub
and
get
rid
of
the
busy
tile
on
the
floor
and
now
by
using
large-format
tile
carrying
it
through
the
room
feels
bigger
and
then
a
nice
little
trick
is
just
using
this
glass
tile
as
the
backsplash
and
letting
it
just
run
right
into
the
shower
like
that,
helps
to
tie
those
areas
together.
B
The
question
is,
when
you're
doing
like
this
tile
over
the
existing
floor,
you're
going
to
have
a
height
change
at
the
doorway
of
course,
and
you
can
ramp
that
many
different
ways
if
you're
doing
tile
many
of
the
tiles
now
come
with
a
bullnose
tile,
it's
like
a
finished
I'll.
You
can
use
it
to
ramp
it
down
and
you
can
extend
it
through
the
door
further.
If
you
can
step
back
a
little
bit,
it's
different
ways
to
do
it,
but
yeah
it's
those
are
the
compromises
you
have
to
make
yep.
B
This
is
I'm
going
to
show
you.
This
is
an
example
of
green
remodeling.
This
is
the
existing
vanity
we're
going
to
keep
it
we're
going
to
go
right
over
pretty
much
everything
here,
we're
going
to
change
the
vanity
top,
so
that's
an
exact.
That's
an
example
of
refacing
cabinet
done
with
a
product
called
it's
a
sorghum
wood
product
and
it's
a
wood
panel
made
out
of
sorghum,
and
it
just
has
a
really
interesting
texture
to
it.
B
So
and
then
the
countertop
is
recycled
paper,
but
it's
actually
stands
up
to
the
water
and
the
panels
in
the
shower
these
stone
panels
that
go
right
over
the
existing
tile.
So
all
we
did
was
change
the
light
in
the
sink.
This
is
now
getting
to
a
little
larger
remodel
and
this
is
a
much
bigger
bathroom.
So
you
have
a
lots
of
really
loud
wallpaper.
Now
you
see
how
the
wallpaper
just
brings
a
room
in
and
this
client
on
the
other
side.
This
is
the
shower.
So
it's
a
separate
tub
and
shower
idea.
B
This
client
fell
in
love
with
a
piece
of
granite
that
they
had
seen.
They
said,
look
use
this
wherever
you
can,
and
this
is
the
vanity
on
the
other
side,
pretty
basic
and
kind
of
sterile.
So
we
want
this
to
feel
really
warm
and
inviting-
and
we
love
this
really
rich
colored
van
at
the
granite
that
we
found.
So
how
can
we
keep
the
basic
layout
but
just
update
it
all?
B
There's
an
example
of
the
shower
and
what
they
do
is
they
take
granite,
slabs
and
mill
them
down
to
three
quarters
of
an
inch
thick
and
then
lay
him
right
up
that
way.
So
the
other
thing
is,
we
did
extend
the
tub
deck
into
their
to
create
now
a
bench
where
you
could
sit
down
and
put
a
handheld
shower
in
there
for
you,
as
I
mentioned
earlier,
I'm,
an
interior
designer
by
training
but
also
kitchen
and
bath
remodel.
B
B
Now,
when
he
did
the
log
cabin
in
the
end,
the
add-on
space
all
the
floors
throughout
were
this
black
slate,
and
he
said
you
know,
I
have
a
bunch
of
this,
and
I
really
want
to
use
it
up,
but
he
says:
I
have
a
very
different
aesthetic
for
this.
He
said:
I
want
this
to
look
like
it
has
Japanese
and
Norwegian
influences
to
it
and
I'm.
Sorry,
I
missed
design
school
that
day,
because
I
didn't
I'm
going
what
what's
where
we
going
to
go
with
this,
but
actually
by
using
the
black
flight.
B
As
the
as
the
basis
for
it,
it
grounds
it,
and
then
the
shower
is
done
in
vertical
strips
of
teak
and
the
countertop.
The
vanity
top
is
actually
a
blackboard
that
was
salvaged
from
a
school
out
of
Duluth,
and
so,
as
you,
the
other
interesting
thing,
you'll
notice
that
the
toilet
is
recessed
into
the
wall.
Well,
they're
outside
of
this
wall
is
a
stairway
going
up
to
the
second
floor.
B
He
also
said,
oh
by
the
way,
would
that
go
when
that's
going
up
to
the
second
floor,
we're
going
to
put
a
window
in
there
to
make
it
look
like
an
outhouse
and
he's
a
very
creative
guy,
so
right
up
there,
it's
a
little
hard
to
see,
but
there
are
glass
panes
up
in
there
that
are
wire,
glass
and
frosted
to
let
light
in
like
it's
an
outhouse
coming
in
there.
So
whatever
that's
what
we
came
up
with,
but
it
was
a
pretty
interesting
look.
This
is
a
small,
too
small,
little
bathrooms
in
a
hallway.
B
You
see
a
lot
of
this
and
little
in
80s
homes,
where
there's
a
lot
of
little
rooms
with
a
lot
of
wasted
space.
So
the
idea
of
taking
two
small
bathrooms
in
this
hallway
and
creating
one
master
suite
out
of
them-
and
this
next
picture
is
there's
the
two
stepper
up
into
the
tub.
It's
a
slip-and-fall
waiting
to
happen
so
by
combining
these
rooms
now
I
can
create
a
really
large
master
bathroom
with
two
sinks
and.
B
Separate
shower
separate
tub
area
and
there's
a
walk-in
closet
up
there
now
too,
so
for
them
it
allows
them
to
stay
in
the
house,
but
it's
also
much
more
usable
for
them.
Another
80s
home.
This
is
actually
in
West
Bloomington,
not
too
far
from
here.
This
is
a
long,
narrow
room
and
again
a
bit
of
wasted
space,
and
they
said
you
know
we
have
this
beautiful
window,
but
it's
we
have
a
towel
hanging
over
at
most
time
for
privacy,
and
we
have
this
shower.
That
doesn't
work
very
well.
B
So
here
again
we
just
reorganize
the
space
to
take
the
best
advantages
of
the
architecture
of
the
home.
Now
they
wanted
a
separate
tub
so
by
creating
the
tub
under
the
window
and
the
window
has
a
privacy
blind
on
it.
If
and
when
you
want
to
use
that,
but
by
reorganizing
it
that
back
corner
now
has
a
barn
door
piece
of
glass.
This
is
actually
a
shower
door,
laid
on
a
track
that
retracts
and
the
toilets
tucked
around
the
corner.
B
So
now
it's
private,
whereas
before
it
was
right
out
in
the
open
and
then
on
this
side
now
we
were
able
to
take
him
and
create
two
vanities
with
a
sit-down
makeup
area
for
her
and
then
on.
The
other
end
of
this
room
is
the
shower
area,
and
that's
done
out
of
these
marble
panels.
This
is
silver
vein,
cut
marble
and
that's
what
that
shower
is
made
out
of
it's
absolutely
gorgeous
and
again
it's
real
stone,
so
very
easy
care,
and
it's
going
to
last
a
life
of
the
house.
Yes,
sir.
A
B
We're
a
dealer
for
them:
I,
don't
think
there
are
many
around,
but
we
do
a
ton
of
this
kind
of
work,
because
it's
such
a
beautiful
look,
but
also
it's
really.
It
solves
the
issue
of
grout
and
the
maintenance,
and
that
kind
of
thing
this
is
a
these-
are
called
then
stone
panels
so
and
there's
a
bunch
of
colors
up
here.
In
fact,
I
did
a
we
use
them
all
over
the
house.
B
This
is
a
piece
of
real
onyx
done
with
those
panels
set
up
and
if
you
see
the
light,
you'll
see
that
it's
translucent,
so
you
can
backlight
these
and
create
really
interesting
effects
too.
And
yet
the
interesting
thing
about
these
products
is
you
pay
a
little
bit
more
for
the
stone
but
the
labors
very
inexpensive.
It
only
takes
us
about
two
hours
to
put
a
panel
in
versus
the
cost
of
tile.
So
when
we
compare
it
to
what
a
cost
to
put
in
tile
versus
this,
they
aren't
that
much
different.
C
B
No
because
these
are
totally
waterproof-
this
backer
on
here
makes
these
totally
waterproof,
so
I
can
go
right
over
anything
and
seal
it,
and
then
this
is
the
other
side
of
that
room
with
the
vanity
set
up
and
it's
just
using
different
materials.
You'll
see
the
little
makeup
counter:
that's
actually
recycled
glass
and
there's
company
right
here
in
town.
That
does
that
and
you
can
create
your
own
countertop.
You
can
pick
the
color
of
your
glass.
You
can
pick
the
size
of
the
particulates.
You
can
pick
the
mix
of
it
and
the
background
color.
B
So
you
can
write
your
name
in
your
countertop
if
you
want
to
out
of
glass,
so
it's
pretty
creative
stuff,
that's
a
close-up
of
that
glass,
and
then
we
used
the
blue
glass
and
the
knobs
to
pull
the
blue
glass
out
of
there.
Those
are
vodka
bottles
actually
in
that
glass,
and
then
this
client
actually
was
from
Belgium
and
they
they
originally
and
they
moved
over
here
to
the
state.
So
they
had
a
very
European
aesthetic
about
things
and
there
you
tile
all
the
way
up
to
the
ceiling.
B
So
you
can
see
the
tile
and
the
walls
going
right
up
to
the
ceiling.
This
shower
is
pretty
unique.
It's
a
quarry
on
on
the
base
coreana
and
the
ceiling.
The
walls
are
done
out
of
silestone,
which
is
a
quartz
product,
and
then
those
two
shower
heads
up
on
top
when
those
are
on
they
spin
it's
kind
of
crazy
stuff,
so
you
can
get
yeah
and
then
there's
a
steams
and
then
down
here.
B
So
a
different
look,
and
then
this
was
more
one
of
the
more
interesting
challenges.
I've
had
this
guy
bought
this
place
on
the
st.
Croix
River
he's
a
little
run
over
the
river,
absolutely
beautiful,
it's
a
very,
very
contemporary
house.
It
says
you
know:
I
bought
this
house
in
the
st.
Croix
and
I
really
want
this
to
look
like
a
Northwoods
lodge
so
I'm
going
we're
going
to
take
this
contemporary
house
and
make
it
look
like
a
Northwoods
lodge
okay.
How
we
going
to
do
that?
Well,
here's
one
way!
B
So
now
those
cabinets
are
all
standard
stuff.
There's
a
company
out
of
Wisconsin
that
builds
those
there's
not
custom
at
all.
The
tie
of
the
pebble
tile
is
inset
into
a
regular
field
tile
and
that
path
lead
you
out
to
a
back
deck
where
there's
a
hot
tub,
so
it's
like
walking
through
the
forest
and
then
this
is
complete
with
deer
prints
on
the
glass
and
we
created
a
steam
sauna
and
a
regular
shower
in
there.
Thank
you
very
much
and
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
questions.