Baltimore Sun Sunday

For some, tubs are more luxury than necessity

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helpful for a traveler with a time-crunched schedule.

The standard rooms at the Draftsman Hotel — a new property in Charlottes­ville, Va., that is part of Marriott’s Autograph Collection — also have bathrooms outfitted with walk-in showers only. But the bathrooms in suites have tubs as well as walk-in showers.

The implicatio­n is that the tub signifies luxury, only afforded by those who have the ultimate luxury: the time to soak in that tub.

The no-tub trend applies to homes as well. Millerton, N.Y.-based architect John Allee says that almost all of his clients would prefer not to install bathtubs and usually do so only for resale value. When they do request a tub, it’s usually for the master bathroom only, and it’s a free-standing soaking tub (he often uses Victoria + Albert’s contempora­ry, sculptural Barcelona model).

“Many of my clients are past toddler time (except for grandchild­ren) and will put in a tub/shower combo only if there is a logical place, like an extra guest suite,” Allee says.

Even his clients with younger kids only install a functional kid-washing tub if they have three or more full baths. Allee theorizes that his clients’ movement away from installing bathtubs is a combinatio­n of our culture’s fastidious hygiene and our busy schedules. Relaxed bathing is a luxury and a therapeuti­c experience, neither of which seem to be interests of Allee’s busy clients.

Dolores Suarez and Caroline Grant, who head the New York-based design firm Dekar Design, say most of their clients need a tub and a shower. In their experience, it’s often a his-and-her situation, in which one prefers baths and one prefers showers, so creating a designated space for the tub is essential. And if there are children, they say a tub is critical as it’s the safest and most fun way to bathe them.

Michael Rankin, a managing partner at TTR Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty, feels differentl­y. As one of the top real estate agents in the D.C. area, he says his buyers still want tubs, but that they don’t necessaril­y need them.

“Everyone is too busy, and time is short, but when you finally have a quiet moment — and that may only be every month or two — people still desire a bath,” Rankin says. He equates the bathtub conundrum to that of the dining room: “A dining room might only get used four or five times a year, but the buyer still wants a house with one.”

Rankin also makes it clear that having a tub, particular­ly in a master bathroom, is a sign of luxury that his clients expect. “Free-standing spa tubs and walk-in showers with rain shower heads, hand-held fixtures and numerous body sprays are master bathroom musts.”

Nancy Taylor Bubes, another top D.C.area agent and associate broker for Washington Fine Properties, has a personal bias because she loves a bath and doesn’t go a day without taking one. But she has found that the market has changed, particular­ly in urban areas.

“Young profession­als are living in smaller places and seem to prefer the walk-in shower convenienc­e because it’s quick and easy,” Taylor Bubes says. Plus, a walk-in shower design is low maintenanc­e; with fewer parts to clean and fewer corners where mold can get caught, walk-in showers are a bonus for busy families.

Traditiona­lly, Taylor Bubes says, bathtubs were always installed in the hall bath for the kids’ use, and the master bath was outfitted with a shower only. But over time, master bathrooms got bigger, and tubs got architectu­rally fancier. Eventually, high-end buyers began to expect to see free-standing luxury tubs in master suites.

“Sometimes I feel like tubs are the fireplace of the bathroom — they are the centerpiec­e, the focal point of the bathroom,” she says. “Many people still want both tubs and fireplaces, but the reality is that they don’t use either as often as they might think.”

“Interestin­g,” Taylor Bubes ponders, “fireplaces and tubs — the places we relax around — could both be on their way out?”

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