Powder room by the kitchen
Little Bird
5 months ago
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is it odd or 'wrong' to have a powder room in the kitchen
Comments (22)I have an 1820-30 one-bedroom, 1.5 bath cottage, one room wide, three rooms deep -- with no hallway -- on the ground floor. the layout is, moving from the street: first room is the living room, second room is the dining room, and third room is the kitchen. The stairs leading to the second level (formerly attic space, now the bedroom and a full bath) are located in the kitchen, and yes, I have a teeny tiny powder room (my architect calls it a 1/4 bath) under the stairs: so, in the kitchen. The house is small (1050 square feet), so I was grateful just to have a powder room downstairs at all. I never thought about this question of it being in the kitchen before today! I have a full bath upstairs, and so I just tell my guests where each bath is, and they go to whichever one they want or whichever is available. One good tip another response mentioned: there is a very loud exhaust fan in that powder room. It was there when I bought the house, and I am glad to have it. Definitely a good idea. :-)...See MoreRemodeled Powder Room with Kitchen Leftovers
Comments (19)Semi- We also paid for the slabs directly...same as kaysd. dedtired- Unless you can think of a way to use the travertine, I think Craig's list is a great idea. I never have bought or sold anything on Craig's list, but so many others use it....another great idea! kaysd- The reason our counters curve around is because that area use to be a bumped-out breakfast nook. The peninsula use to come straight out like they usually do, only it came out right into where the refridgerator is. We couldn't even open our fridge door all the way. So this was a way to enlarge the floor space of the kitchen. Our peninsula is 8 ft. long by 3 ft wide. I didn't think it was going to be very large, but it seems massive to me. KA:)...See MoreNeed Help with a powder room off kitchen
Comments (3)I have a very small powder room off my kitchen hallway, and it's 5'1" by about 41 or 42 inches wide. Not much more than a closet, really! So yeah, it's feasible, if problematic. I'd kill for your extra six inches in width! A lot of the older houses around here have half-baths directly off the kitchen like you describe as their only main floor bathroom. I know a lot of people nowadays find a bathroom right off the kitchen unpleasant, but weighed against no bathroom at all on the main floor, I think a bathroom wins! I think it makes a big difference which way the 4x6 is laid out, and where the doorway would be. A big problem with my "closet bath" is door clearance. I'm in the process right now of wainscoating and replacing the toilet and sink, and it was very difficult to find a modern sink with a depth small enough to allow me to close the door. Would you be able to do pocket doors? I don't have enough wall on either side to do that, but that would make your space much bigger and more accessible....See MorePowder room off kitchen: Yay or Nay?
Comments (40)Here are some resources on sound-reducing construction. The one immediately below, and the one that is hyper-linked, look pretty good. The other one (''Suppressproducts'') might just be an advertisement for their products, I am not sure. Basically sound is vibration that is transmitted from the source to your ear by rigid materials (sound travels well through hard materials like wood) and air. To reduce sound, you want to reduce the transmission of vibration. Air gap is better than a rigid connection. A heavy, soft material (e.g. rubber) is better than an air gap. Techniques are: - Double layers of drywall with dampening material like the referenced ''green glue'' between them (not simply screwing one sheet of drywall to the other) - Staggered studs w/ separate floor plates (essentially making two walls, no physical connection from one side to the other) - Sheet of sound dampening material between the staggered studs (reducing sound transmission through the airspace) - Sealing openings in the walls (electrical boxes, holes for plumbing, gaskets around and under door frame) - Special doors, or (less good) a conventional solid door, or (maybe an in-between alternative) a conventional door w/ a sound dampening layer on one side. - Dampening material between subfloor and joists, and between ceiling drywall and joists - Sound-proofing paint (I've not heard of this stuff before, I am skeptical it does much) Since the bathroom is a small space, you can use these techniques without too much additional expense, and just the loss of about 6'' if using staggered studs and double drywall layers. http://www.soundproofingcompany.com/index.php?/library/articles/elements_of_room_construction http://www.supressproducts.com/soundproofing-articles/Soundproof-Sheetrock.html Here is a link that might be useful: Link...See MoreLittle Bird
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