Narrow Bathroom Adaptions
#1
Posted 31 December 2010 - 02:15 PM
My problem is that the bathroom is very narrow (4 feet wide) and so the OT has recommended that I put a wheelchair accessible bathroom in what was originally a scullery off the kitchen.
I don't like this option because:
this room is far from my bedroom for middle of the night trips to the toilet
if I eventually need a hoist/lift I will need a bathroom adjacent to my bedroom anyway
the current bathroom shares a wall with my bedroom. my thought was to put large sliding doors in that wall so that I could have a turn circle in the bathroom that extended into the bedroom. Is this a workable idea or just madness?
#2
Posted 31 December 2010 - 02:34 PM
Should that plan not work out (and it does not sound very feasible from my understanding), you might consider using a more compact shower chair with a tub slide to get you into the tub. Take a look at www.GoesAnywhere.com, click on "Products" and look at the CST model. This may eliminate the need to make any modifications to your bathroom and have to lose all that space in the kitchen.
Happy New Year!!
rick
Rick Goldstein
GO! Mobility Solutions
www.GoesAnywhere.com
#3
Posted 31 December 2010 - 02:54 PM
goldnucs, on 31 December 2010 - 02:34 PM, said:
Should that plan not work out (and it does not sound very feasible from my understanding), you might consider using a more compact shower chair with a tub slide to get you into the tub. Take a look at www.GoesAnywhere.com, click on "Products" and look at the CST model. This may eliminate the need to make any modifications to your bathroom and have to lose all that space in the kitchen.
Happy New Year!!
rick
nick, thank you for your reply and thoughful suggestion, unfortunately at 4 feet wide the bathroom is too narrow to accomodate a chair alongside the bath, hence the need for a refit.
#4
Posted 31 December 2010 - 04:12 PM
You could have a "wheel-in" shower at one end, with toilet the other and wash basin in the middle so you can get your legs under the wash basin, which helps with your turning circle. You'd need to make sure the wash basin has nothing underneath and ideally one with a plug hole at the back rather than the centre, so the drain pipe is further away.
This sort of simple layout will mean you can transfer on to the toilet or reverse a shower/toilet chair over the toilet, and then wheel in to the shower.
Make a sketch and put it on here so we can see where the door's going to be etc.
#5
Posted 31 December 2010 - 11:05 PM
#6
Posted 31 December 2010 - 11:25 PM
The problem you might encounter is one a friend of mine has. He simply opened the wall between his bedroom and bath,,, no doors,,, When showering, he finds he gets a lot of water vapor moving into the bedroom area. He solved the problem with a powered vent above the shower,,, no problem, now,,, except that he has to keep his bathroom neater.
Good luck with the refit.
ed
ps,,, opt for the roll in shower, if at all possible.
#7
Posted 01 January 2011 - 09:02 PM
The first is the current layout
The second is the layout proposed by the OT
as you can see it is not a large flat and I don't have much storage space, so it seems a waste to have two bathrooms.
The current bathroom is 9 foot long and 4 foot wide. I think it would be workable without even putting in a sliding door. I can turn my wheelchair in the space outside the bathroom and if I replaced the bath with a roll-in shower could back into the bathroom. But the OT seems insistant that it wouldn't work
#8
Posted 01 January 2011 - 10:32 PM
You said that you don't have much storage in the flat and that 2 bathrooms would be a waste. I think that you could increase your storage by taking the bathtub out but leave the loo in. That would give you space for some storage cupboards. Visitors could then still use the loo without traipsing through your bedroom. Only people staying over would need to go through if they wanted to take a shower.
You would keep your nice big living room, have your en-suite and you would escape this dreaded fashion of having kitchen and living room in one
Edited by Angela250153, 01 January 2011 - 10:41 PM.
#9
Posted 01 January 2011 - 11:01 PM
One the other hand,,, using the OT's idea about the new bathroom,, but keeping the bedroom and living room alone,,, then making the original bath into a rather nice, large closet,, opening to either bedroom. You still have the problem of guests going thru your bedroom to get to the bath,,, but how often is that going to be a problem?
Small flats are hard to rearange,,, they are generally fairly econimical concerning use of space, to start. Best of luck.
Oh, by the way,,, changing drain lines is usually the most expensive part,, so keeping them close to original will be a lot easier for the contractor,, and the price tag.
ed
#10
Posted 02 January 2011 - 12:08 AM
Angela250153, on 01 January 2011 - 10:32 PM, said:
You said that you don't have much storage in the flat and that 2 bathrooms would be a waste. I think that you could increase your storage by taking the bathtub out but leave the loo in. That would give you space for some storage cupboards. Visitors could then still use the loo without traipsing through your bedroom. Only people staying over would need to go through if they wanted to take a shower.
You would keep your nice big living room, have your en-suite and you would escape this dreaded fashion of having kitchen and living room in one
the problem is that I need to have a larger kitchen too. It doesn't really show up well in the drawings but the kitchen as it is just has enough room for me to wheel my chair in, but I can't turn round in it. The kitchen and adjoining bedroom were once one big kitchen/dining room, and so the plan is to take out the stud wall that divides the kitchen from the bedroom. All the other walls are solid brick and taking them out would need a steel beam installed
#12
Posted 02 January 2011 - 03:37 PM
This first one shows you a very small but functional wheel-in shower. Note the wash basin on the left which was secured to the corner by a marble slab so it was totally clear underneath.
My idea for your bathroom, which you say is 4 x 9 foot, is to have the wheel-in shower at the far end - 4 x 4ft - with a grill-type drain to stop the water flowing out of the shower in the the remainder of the bathroom.
That leaves 5ft to place a toilet and wash basin on the left wall. If you place the toilet in the centre you can use a drop-down grab-rail and have the wash basin on the left, immediately as you enter the bathroom, so the corner can support a stone slab with a wash basin in the centre.
Door would have to swing inwards and hinged on the right, so it opens flush with the wall opposite the wash basin and toilet.
Another example of the wash basin on the same wall as a toilet, but has a bath. Rather than having a bath, you'd have your wheel-in shower.
#13
Posted 02 January 2011 - 04:50 PM
DaveP, on 02 January 2011 - 03:37 PM, said:
This first one shows you a very small but functional wheel-in shower. Note the wash basin on the left which was secured to the corner by a marble slab so it was totally clear underneath.
My idea for your bathroom, which you say is 4 x 9 foot, is to have the wheel-in shower at the far end - 4 x 4ft - with a grill-type drain to stop the water flowing out of the shower in the the remainder of the bathroom.
That leaves 5ft to place a toilet and wash basin on the left wall. If you place the toilet in the centre you can use a drop-down grab-rail and have the wash basin on the left, immediately as you enter the bathroom, so the corner can support a stone slab with a wash basin in the centre.
Door would have to swing inwards and hinged on the right, so it opens flush with the wall opposite the wash basin and toilet.
Another example of the wash basin on the same wall as a toilet, but has a bath. Rather than having a bath, you'd have your wheel-in shower.
DaveP, that looks like a great design for me. One of my neighbours has the same basic layout as you suggest except their shower isn't level access, but the bathroom dimensions are the same. I'm wondering how the wheelchair to toilet transfer would work and how much space I'd have for getting past the toilet to the shower, but it looks like a real possibility
#14
Posted 02 January 2011 - 08:06 PM
Best to use a wash basin that has the plug hole as far back as possible - ie as near to the wall as possible. This means the waste pipe is further away from your knees.
#15
Posted 02 January 2011 - 08:20 PM
a pedistool sink would work well. it's small and it allows you access without having pipes showing.
i have an accessible toilet but i rarely sit on it. i approach it from the front and cath into it and i'm sitting in my shower chair over it when i do my bowels. i do have grab bars on either side.
i've seen a modified shower that fits where a standard tub would be.
there are so many different ways to pull this off.
best wishes.
mellowgator
#16
Posted 03 January 2011 - 12:30 PM
My worry is that even if I came up with a workable solution for the current bathroom, one that actually works for me, that the OT would not approve it. I wonder if they would give me the grant for just the kitchen bit and I could get the bathroom done privately.
Anyway thanks everyone I will keep you posted
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