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‘I reworked the floorplan to fit a showstoppe­r bath’

With a stylish tub at the top of her wish list, Anthea O’Neil re-jigged her upstairs layout to create space for a functional yet glamorous bathroom

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When Anthea first moved into this house, the bathroom was downstairs and there was a tiny shower room upstairs, which didn’t suit the family at all. ‘The shower was located next to a small bedroom, so it was easy to see that with a change of floorplan, we could use the bedroom space to create a large bathroom upstairs,’ explains Anthea.

‘My starting point was a piece of squared paper,’ Anthea says, adding ‘I always like to draw my designs out to scale to see if they’ll work.’ Anthea checked that the bedroom wall wasn’t load-bearing and then contracted a builder to take care of the entire project, including managing the plumbing, electrics and plastering. ‘Everyone in the house leads busy lives, so this seemed like

the best approach to take the stress out of the job,’ admits Anthea.

First, the old shower was ripped out, and then the wall between the two rooms came down. ‘We also blocked up a window and created the alcove for the wet-roomstyle shower. Then I started looking for the bathroom furniture,’ says Anthea. ‘When we bought the house we kept back money for renovation­s, but I still had to budget hard to get the look I wanted. I knew I wanted twin basins, and to include a nod to the Victorian origins of the house, but my main wish was a statement bath. I wasn’t sure we could afford one, then I spotted this beautiful exdisplay, copper-effect tub in the sale for less than half price, so I snapped it up.’

The work took six weeks in the end, which was longer than the couple anticipate­d, but there was a lot of groundwork to do, and the plumbing and waste had to be moved. ‘Sometimes work moved quickly and other times it seemed really slow, but, luckily, we still had the downstairs bathroom, so we were never without a loo,’ explains Anthea. ‘The disruption­s were so worth the finished result. I’m over the moon with it and still think “Wow” every time I use the room.’

 ?? ?? Before
A PERFECT BALANCE Anthea drew her layout on square paper first, so she knew she’d have space for a double vanity. ‘I chose this wooden unit because I felt the room needed a bit of texture to balance all the hard fixtures and fittings,’ she says
Before A PERFECT BALANCE Anthea drew her layout on square paper first, so she knew she’d have space for a double vanity. ‘I chose this wooden unit because I felt the room needed a bit of texture to balance all the hard fixtures and fittings,’ she says
 ?? ?? TAILOR THE TRENDS
Anthea has made the trendy pink-and-green combo her own by adding black taps and pipes, while injecting a glam glow with her copper bath
TAILOR THE TRENDS Anthea has made the trendy pink-and-green combo her own by adding black taps and pipes, while injecting a glam glow with her copper bath
 ?? ?? FUN AND FUNCTIONAL
Anthea has thought about every detail, right down to choosing a quirky radiator design for a stylish twist on a practical essential
SMART WITH SPACE
David and Jason wanted a large shower as well as a bath, but Anthea didn’t want a big enclosure dominating the room, so went for this open-plan wet room area instead
FUN AND FUNCTIONAL Anthea has thought about every detail, right down to choosing a quirky radiator design for a stylish twist on a practical essential SMART WITH SPACE David and Jason wanted a large shower as well as a bath, but Anthea didn’t want a big enclosure dominating the room, so went for this open-plan wet room area instead

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