If there is a theme in this year’s collection of master bathrooms, we might phrase it this way: Who knew? Who knew that a north-facing bath could become a virtual temple of light, that a master bedroom suite could be successfully turned inside out, with sleeping quarters tucked within a larger bathing and dressing space? Who knew that a radical simplification of forms and materials could so deepen the experience of an otherwise modest space, that Bauhaus and farmhouse styles could harmonize like old friends, that Art Nouveau still can be new, or that somewhere in Manhattan there is a bathtub carved from a single block of Mexican limestone? A bathroom can be as prosaic as a crate full of plumbing, and many are. But at the other end of the spectrum, in baths that can make your jaw drop, the bar keeps moving higher. Who knew?
The room’s single window is also frosted glass—for privacy—as are lighting strips at the tops of both mirrors.
Builder: Stroub Construction, Sausalito, Calif.; Architect: Dan Phipps, San Francisco; Project size: 103 square feet; Construction cost: Withheld; Photographer: John Sutton.
Resources:
Bathtub: Waterworks; Cabinets: Architectural Forest Enterprises; Fittings/fixtures: American Standard and Kroin; Floor: Stone Selection; Glass tiles: Ann Sacks; Hardware: Doug Mockett Co..
Details The glass tiles that cover the walls of this bath came out of a box. Getting glass counters, screens, and tub-deck surfaces in the same watery green, though, took some doing. The final color of the frosted glass panels is in part a function of glass thickness, architect Dan Phipps explains, and it shows only after sandblasting. “The thicker it is, the more green it is.” Getting the perfect shade, he says, “took a little bit of experimentation. We went through three samples to get the right match.”