What Is an Integrated Bathroom System?
The simplest, most common example of an integrated bathroom system is the space-saving, over-bath shower. Tapping into the incumbent water network and utilising the bathtub floor as a shower tray, the system simply adds a shower head and screen door, and both products can be installed with no additional space required.
Integrated Bathroom System Examples
The integrated bathtub-shower systems featured here, however, are a different breed of design. In Rexa Design’s Unico systems, a removable slatted floor sits at an open shower enclosure’s base which, when removed, reveals a stylish recessed bathtub. While the brand’s Ergo_nomic bathtub utilises the bath itself as a shower wall – negating the need for a standard enclosure and giving the user a luxurious sense of space and freedom.
Makro’s Manhattan integrated bathtub-washbasin system is a single block counter that specifiers can plumb in sub-floor, combining bathtub, washbasin, storage and mirror elements in the same minimalist block of eco-cement with total positional freedom. If two bathroom elements combined in the same structure simply isn’t enough for specifiers, however, then there’s always room for one more. Makro’s 3-in-1 bathtub-washbasin-shower system is like a miniature home spa, with every element working together in complete harmony.
Discover Integrated Bathroom Systems on Architonic
More detailed images and product descriptions can be found within each of the product pages, along with ambient images and contact forms to request prices, specifications, CAD files, dealers and catalogues direct from the manufacturer on Architonic.