Interiors

6 Tips for Updating your Bathroom

Your bathroom is your sanctuary. You start and end your day there. In a hectic household, it is sometimes the only place you get to be alone and have some “me time”. It is also one of the hardest working rooms in your home. It typically includes three sources of water, electricity and myriad surface and storage requirements. Remodeling a bath can be a huge undertaking, and I have seen numerous incidents where a small mistake had huge ramifications.

A peaceful and hard-working bathroom

A peaceful and hard-working bathroom

A repurposed Bombay Chest becomes a perfect vanity

A repurposed Bombay Chest becomes a perfect vanity

Here are a few tips for getting the most out of your bath project:

•Draw it up and plan it out. If you are not working with a design professional, start by measuring your spaces and drawing it on graph paper so that you understand what your space limitations are. Be as accurate as possible, and write in your dimensions. This will be very helpful as you choose fixtures and order materials.

• Understand how you use your bath.

How many people use your bath at one time?

Do you need lots of storage for medications or makeup? Do you have small children from whom medications must be carefully stored away?

Do you spend a lot of time in the shower? Do you use a lot of products there that require space for storage?

Is there towel and linen storage in close proximity to your bath? Do you have enough space to hang damp towels?

Do you actually use your tub? If not, get rid of it and use the space for something useful. If so, are there attributes you wish it had? (Space to set a book and a glass of wine? A ledge for candles and bath salts?)

• Find Inspiration. There are so many great visual resources on line to get ideas from. Check out Houzz and Pinterest. Both sites have ways for you to search for, organize and archive images.

• As you start to select plumbing fittings, consult with your plumber to see what is readily available in your area, and easily serviceable. Don’t just by a faucet because it’s pretty. It has to work!

• Unless you are dead-set on a color for your porcelain fixtures, choose white. It’s timeless and goes with everything!

• Consider hiring a professional. As the saying goes: “If you think hiring a professional is expensive, try hiring an amateur!” A design professional will know where the pitfalls are and have an arsenal of products and insights that will save time and money, and add value to your project.

A punchy "pocket bath" that serves a small guest room.

A punchy "pocket bath" that serves a small guest room.

In the end, remember that this highly private space is often the first thing to greet you in the morning and the last to say goodnight. Make it something special!

Barn to be Wild

A Powerful Barn Image by Photographer and Friend, Lisa Cuman

A Powerful Barn Image by Photographer and Friend, Lisa Cuman

It seems I cannot escape from barns! Granted, I live in Vermont. However, there seems to be a resurgence in the romance of the barn. Old barns, new barns, “wedding barns”, working barns. There is a trending fascination with this agrarian building type. But let’s face it. Barns really are pretty cool.

barn 22.jpg

My earliest barn memory is of the time when my next-oldest brother and I built enormous forts out of hay bales with the Shelley girls in the loft of the barn by their house. The experience had a magical impact. (Although that might have something to do with the “Spinning of the Bottle”!) Slivers of light shown through the cracks in the walls, forming razor-thin sheets as they illuminated the hay-dust suspended in the air. I can still see it today.

Stone Barn

Stone Barn

I designed my first recreational barn some ten years ago. It is a handsome structure, inspired by the ruins of a stone silo I came across not far from where I live. The owner wanted a retreat from his spectacular, if not precious home, where he could put his feet up, have a cigar and relax, while watching a game or playing pool. It is an elegant reaction to the concept of the “man cave”.

Horse Barn Cottage

Horse Barn Cottage

 

 

 

I recently designed a guest suite conversion of the hayloft in a modern horse barn. The final scheme was a study in contrasts. My client and I sourced and repurposed materials from a barn on her family’s soy bean farm, bringing both patina and provenance to lend warmth to the clean, modern design. HGTV recently sent a crew up to film this project for their show , “You Live in What?”

Mountain Top Inn Barn

Mountain Top Inn Barn

 

I am currently working on my second “wedding barn”. Apparently, city-dwellers are fascinated by the romantic idea of being betrothed near a manger. While the space and light are suggestive of a rural cathedral, the reality of donning one’s finest frocks amid the silage and manure of a working farm dose not jibe with the notion of a symbolically virginal espousal. Not to mention that the bacchanal banquets associated with these events require stealthily operating staff and support space.

 

Also on the boards these days, is a hybrid remodel of a fabulous horse barn. The program combines an apartment for a family of four, and offices for a farm manager, as well as stalls and associated areas for up to four horses. And while the family is delighted to live in “the Hayloft”, there is a need to bring some of the comfort, scale, and refinement of home to the project.

 

 

Having spent the better times of my childhood in the company of horses, I think I will always love a good barn.