loading

تُعد شركة SHKL شركة رائدة في تصنيع خزائن الحمامات وأبواب الاستحمام ومرايا الحمامات المزودة بإضاءة LED منذ عام 2004.

How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide)

جدول المحتويات

How to Design an Entire Bathroom Around the Vanity?

When designing a bathroom, many people first think of tiles, showers, toilets, or the overall decoration style first; but from the perspectives of practicality, visual focal point, budget control, and execution efficiency, designing the entire bathroom around the bathroom vanity/dressing vanity is a very reasonable and efficient approach.

Because the vanity usually determines these core factors at the same time:

  • The main visual focal point of the bathroom
  • Whether the washing/grooming flow is convenient
  • Whether the storage capacity is sufficient
  • The matching relationship among the countertop, mirror, lighting, and faucet
  • Whether the style direction is modern, luxury, minimalist, vintage, or natural
  • The budget range
  • The installation method and later maintenance difficulty

In other words, a vanity is not just a piece of furniture; it is more like the “core anchor” of the entire bathroom design.

1. In the overall design of a bathroom, is soft furnishing or hard furnishing more important?

My judgment is:

The foundation of the overall bathroom design is hard furnishing, while the final effect and completeness are elevated by soft furnishing and accessories.

If we break it down further:

1) Hard furnishing determines “whether it works and whether it works well”

Hard furnishing usually includes:

  • Space layout
  • Plumbing and electrical positioning
  • Drain location
  • Wall and floor tiles
  • Wet and dry separation method
  • Wall structure
  • Waterproofing
  • Vanity installation method (wall-mounted/freestanding)
  • Pre-embedded mirror cabinet or reserved lighting wiring
  • Shower area dimensions and glass partition position

These determine:

  • Whether the vanity can be installed
  • Whether the basin can align properly
  • Whether the mirror/light wiring is reasonable
  • Whether the door can open properly
  • Whether it is comfortable to stand in front of the sink
  • Whether the space is easy to clean
  • Whether it is prone to moisture, mold, and deformation over long-term use

So, without reasonable hard furnishing, even the most beautiful soft furnishing is only “surface-level beauty.”

2) Soft furnishing and accessories determine “whether it looks like the style you want”

Soft furnishing and decorative elements usually include:

  • Mirror style
  • Lighting atmosphere
  • Hardware color
  • Storage trays
  • Towel racks
  • Fragrance diffusers, plants, decorative paintings
  • Towels and textiles
  • Small decorative items

These determine:

  • Whether the space has atmosphere
  • Whether the style is unified
  • Whether there is enough layering
  • Whether it looks high-end

3) The most correct understanding

It is not a matter of “which is more important, soft furnishing or hard furnishing,” but rather:

  • Hard furnishing determines structure and function
  • The vanity determines the main axis and style direction
  • Soft furnishing determines the final refinement and completion

So if you ask whether it is reasonable to design a bathroom around the vanity, the answer is:

Very reasonable.

Because it combines the “functional center” and the “visual center” into one, allowing all later choices to have a clearer direction.

2. If the overall bathroom is designed around the vanity, what is the complete process?

Below I will write out a truly practical and detailed step-by-step process from beginning to end.


Step 1: First determine the bathroom’s basic conditions and usage goals

Before choosing the vanity, you should not start with the style first, but first clarify “what problems this bathroom needs to solve.”

The basic conditions that need to be confirmed first

1. Space dimensions

You need to clarify:

  • Total bathroom length, width, and height
  • Door opening size
  • Door opening direction
  • Toilet position
  • Shower area position
  • Window position
  • Whether the wall is load-bearing
  • Drain outlet position
  • Floor drain position
  • Plumbing and electrical point heights and positions

2. User group

Different users have completely different needs:

  • Single user
  • Couple use
  • Shared by family
  • Elderly use
  • Children use
  • Hotel/Airbnb/rental property
  • High-end residential projects

3. Usage frequency

  • Primary bathroom: high-frequency use, emphasis on storage, durability, moisture resistance
  • Secondary bathroom: balances display and basic use
  • Guest bathroom: more emphasis on aesthetics and lightweight configuration
  • Apartment projects: more emphasis on cost, standardization, and installation efficiency
  • Hotel projects: more emphasis on durability, consistency, and ease of maintenance

4. Core priority needs

You should first sort out clearly which of the following are most important:

  • Appearance
  • Storage
  • Moisture resistance and durability
  • Easy cleaning
  • Countertop space
  • Double sink
  • Cost control
  • Premium look
  • Customization
  • Installation speed
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 1

Step 2: Choose a suitable vanity

This step is the core of the entire design.

Once the vanity is decided, many later elements are “locked in,” such as:

  • Style
  • Size
  • Color direction
  • Material tone
  • Installation method
  • Basin type
  • Faucet type
  • Mirror size
  • Lighting layout
  • Hardware color
  • Storage form

After choosing the vanity, what other details still need to be clarified?

This step is extremely important. Many people think that once the vanity is chosen, the work is done, but in fact that is only the beginning.

1) Size

You need to clarify:

  • Cabinet width
  • Cabinet depth
  • Cabinet height
  • Total countertop height
  • Whether it will affect door opening, walkways, or toilet use
  • Whether there is enough standing space in front of the cabinet

Generally speaking, the vanity is not better just because it is larger; it must be proportionate to the space.

2) Installation method

There are mainly two types of vanities:

Wall-mounted

Characteristics:

  • Visually lighter
  • More modern
  • Easier to clean underneath
  • Higher requirements for wall condition and installation precision
  • Open underneath, making the space feel larger

Suitable for:

  • Small bathrooms
  • Modern minimalist style
  • Designs seeking a lighter visual effect
  • People pursuing easy cleaning
Freestanding

Characteristics:

  • More grounded and stable
  • More complete storage
  • Lower wall requirements
  • Relatively easier installation
  • More suitable for traditional or classic styles

Suitable for:

  • High storage demand
  • Uneven floors that can be adjusted
  • Most standard residential projects
  • More stable and durable solutions

3) Single sink or double sink

You need to consider:

  • Number of users
  • Countertop length
  • Whether there is really a need for two people to wash at the same time
  • Whether a double sink will sacrifice countertop working area and lower storage

Generally speaking:

  • Below 1200 mm, a single sink is usually more suitable
  • Above 1500 mm, it is easier to do a double sink
  • A double sink is not the only sign of “premium”; suitability is what matters most

4) Basin type

Common types include:

Vessel sink
  • Strong design presence
  • More visually prominent
  • Relatively flexible installation
  • More likely to have hard-to-clean corners
  • More sensitive to faucet height
Undermount sink
  • Cleaner look
  • Easier to maintain
  • Easier to wipe countertop water into the basin
  • Requires higher installation craftsmanship
Integrated sink
  • Easiest to clean
  • Clean and simple visual effect
  • Suitable for modern minimalist style
  • Relatively limited in style options

5) Countertop material

For example:

  • Sintered stone
  • Quartz
  • Solid surface
  • Ceramic integrated basin
  • Natural stone

You need to consider:

  • Stain resistance
  • Ease of cleaning
  • Scratch resistance
  • Resistance to color penetration/staining
  • Cost
  • Visual style

6) Cabinet material

This will directly affect the lifespan and stability of the bathroom vanity.

You need to clarify:

  • MDF
  • Plywood
  • Solid wood
  • Multi-layer board
  • Aluminum/aluminum honeycomb panel
  • PVC and other moisture-resistant materials

Focus especially on:

  • Whether it is suitable for high-humidity environments
  • Whether edge sealing and enclosure treatment are adequate
  • Whether the back panel and bottom panel are moisture-resistant
  • Whether the hardware installation areas are strong enough
  • Whether the surface finish is resistant to water vapor

7) Surface color and finish

You need to determine:

  • Wood grain
  • Matte solid color
  • High-gloss lacquer
  • Stone pattern
  • Metallic texture
  • Dark tones / light tones / neutral tones

8) Storage structure

You need to determine:

  • Drawers or doors
  • Whether there are false drawers
  • Whether there are U-shaped drawers to avoid plumbing
  • Whether there is side storage
  • Whether it is paired with a mirror cabinet
  • Whether open shelving is needed

9) Hardware system

This step is easily overlooked, but very important:

  • Hinges
  • Drawer slides
  • Handles
  • Push-open mechanisms
  • Soft-close systems
  • Rust resistance rating

10) Moisture resistance and durability requirements

You especially need to confirm:

  • Whether all cabinet edges are fully sealed
  • Whether cut-out areas are painted/sealed/glued
  • How the joints between countertop and wall, and basin and countertop, are finished
  • Whether the cabinet feet and bottom panel are protected from moisture
  • Whether there is ventilation and clearance design on the back
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 2

Step 3: Based on the vanity, determine the overall style direction of the bathroom

Once the vanity is selected, the next step is to “make the whole space serve it.”

Which style dimensions need to be determined?

1. Style type

For example:

  • Modern minimalist
  • Light luxury
  • Scandinavian
  • Cream style
  • Wabi-sabi
  • Modern natural style
  • American classic
  • New Chinese style
  • Industrial style
  • Hotel-inspired premium style

2. Main color palette

The vanity color usually becomes the primary or secondary dominant color, so you need to define clearly:

  • Cabinet color
  • Countertop color
  • Wall tile color
  • Floor tile color
  • Metal hardware color
  • Mirror frame color
  • Lighting color temperature

3. Principle of style consistency

For example:

  • Wood-tone vanity + warm white wall tiles + brushed metal = warm, natural premium feel
  • Dark gray vanity + black faucet + large-format gray tiles = modern cool-toned feel
  • White vanity + gold hardware + marble pattern = light luxury feel
  • Walnut vanity + soft lighting + beige-gray tiles = calm hotel-style feel

The most important point at this stage is:

Do not treat the vanity as an isolated product, but as the “starting point of the entire spatial style.”

How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 3

Step 4: Determine the mirror / mirror cabinet system

A mirror is not a secondary item; it is the second strongest protagonist tied to the vanity.

What needs to be determined:

1. Mirror type

  • Regular flat mirror
  • Round mirror
  • Irregular-shaped mirror
  • Lighted mirror
  • Mirror cabinet
  • Recessed mirror cabinet
  • Full-width mirror

2. Width and proportions of the mirror

Generally you should consider:

  • Same width as the vanity
  • Slightly narrower than the vanity
  • For double sinks, whether to use two mirrors or one continuous mirror

3. Whether a mirror cabinet is needed

Suitable situations for a mirror cabinet:

  • Small bathrooms
  • Insufficient storage
  • Desire to keep the countertop neat
  • Families with many daily-use items

Situations where a mirror cabinet may not be suitable:

  • Minimalist display-oriented designs
  • Spaces aiming to feel lighter
  • When cabinet storage is already sufficient

4. Relationship between lighting and the mirror

You need to consider in advance:

  • Front lighting
  • Top lighting
  • Mirror-front light
  • Backlit mirror ambient lighting
  • Integrated LED mirror lighting
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 4

Step 5: Determine the faucet, basin, drain accessories, and hardware color system

This stage is about “unifying the visual language of details.”

What elements need to be unified?

  • Faucet color
  • Shower set color
  • Towel rack color
  • Handle color
  • Floor drain color
  • Door handle color (if needed)
  • Mirror frame color

Common color systems

  • Chrome: the most classic, safest, and most versatile
  • Matte black: strong modern look, but easily shows water spots
  • Brushed gold: luxurious and warm, but needs restraint
  • Gunmetal gray: premium, understated, modern
  • White: fresh, but more limited in matching range

Note

The more unified the color system is, the more premium the space feels;
too many colors will make the space look messy.

How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 5


Step 6: Determine the relationship among wall surfaces, flooring, shower area, and background

This stage is essentially creating the “spatial backdrop.”

No matter how beautiful the vanity is, if the background is messy or materials conflict, the overall effect will feel downgraded.

Key points to determine:

1. Wall tiles

  • Size
  • Texture/pattern
  • Color
  • Matte or glossy
  • Whether to tile continuously throughout
  • Whether to create a feature wall

2. Floor tiles

  • Slip resistance rating
  • Color depth
  • Whether they match the wall tile material/color
  • Drainage slope treatment

3. Wet and dry separation method

  • Shower glass enclosure
  • Half-wall partition
  • Shower curtain
  • Open wet-dry zoning

4. Key treatment of the vanity background wall

The wall behind the vanity is usually one of the visual focal points, so you can consider:

  • Same-color tiles for a neat, unified look
  • Feature tiles for a focal background
  • Large-format stone-look slabs to enhance premium feel
  • Wood-grain wall panels to add warmth (provided moisture protection is adequate)
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 6

Step 7: Determine the lighting system

Whether a bathroom design feels premium or not is heavily influenced by lighting.

Many bathroom designs fail not because the vanity is bad, but because the lighting is wrong.

Bathroom lighting generally needs layers:

1. General lighting

Provides overall brightness:

  • Ceiling light
  • Downlights
  • Linear lights

2. Task lighting

Used for washing, makeup, shaving:

  • Mirror-front light
  • Side mirror lights
  • LED illuminated mirror

3. Ambient lighting

Used to enhance the premium feeling:

  • Backlit mirror strip
  • Niche lighting
  • Toe-kick lighting
  • Pendant light (for large spaces)

Color temperature suggestions

  • Too cool: tends to feel harsh
  • Too warm/yellow: can distort makeup and mirror viewing

It is usually recommended that:

  • Main lighting be relatively neutral
  • Functional mirror lighting have good color rendering
  • Ambient lighting be softer
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 7

Step 8: Determine the storage system and usage flow

This is a very important step in functional design.

Problems that need to be solved:

  • Where will toiletries be stored?
  • Where will hair dryers and electric toothbrushes go?
  • Where will towels go?
  • Where will spare paper products go?
  • Should high-frequency daily items be openly accessible or hidden in storage?
  • Is there space for cleaning tools?

Flow principle

A good bathroom usage flow should be:

  • No congestion when entering
  • Smooth and convenient for washing/grooming
  • No frequent bending just to reach items
  • Wet and dry areas do not interfere with each other
  • Cabinet doors and drawers do not collide when opened
  • Two people can use it at the same time without conflict
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 8

Step 9: Determine soft furnishing, accessories, and the final atmosphere expression

This part does not determine “whether it works,” but determines “whether it looks like a complete work.”

Elements that can be styled later:

  • Towels
  • Bath mat
  • Soap dispenser
  • Storage boxes
  • Fragrance diffuser
  • Small green plants
  • Decorative trays
  • Candles
  • Small ornaments
  • Framed artwork

Principles

  • Less but better
  • Do not pile up the countertop
  • Keep the color scheme consistent with the vanity
  • Repeat materials to create unity
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 9

Step 10: Recheck budget, construction feasibility, and maintenance difficulty

Design is not only about renderings; it must also be truly executable.

Final checks:

  • Whether the budget has exceeded the limit
  • Whether the dimensions are truly installable
  • Whether the cabinet conflicts with the drain location
  • Whether the wall can support a wall-mounted vanity
  • Whether hardware of the same color system can all be sourced
  • Whether wiring for mirror lighting has been reserved
  • Whether the countertop, basin, and faucet are compatible
  • Whether future repairs will be convenient
  • Whether daily cleaning will be troublesome
  • Whether moisture protection in damp areas has been sufficiently addressed
3. You asked, “What is step two? Step three? Step four...?” I’ve organized it into one clear workflow

Below is a workflow that is more suitable for direct execution:

Overall process

Step 1: Clarify the bathroom’s basic conditions

  • Measure dimensions
  • Check structure
  • Check plumbing, electrical, and drainage
  • Clarify user group and goals

Step 2: Determine the vanity

  • Size
  • Style
  • Material
  • Installation method
  • Basin form
  • Storage form
  • Color
  • Hardware requirements

Step 3: Determine style and color direction

  • Minimalist / luxury / natural / classic, etc.
  • Main color, accent color, metal color

Step 4: Determine mirror or mirror cabinet

  • Style
  • Size
  • Function
  • Need for integrated lighting

Step 5: Determine the faucet and metal hardware system

  • Faucet
  • Shower set
  • Handle
  • Shower enclosure hardware
  • Towel rack
  • Unified color and surface finish

Step 6: Determine wall and floor materials

  • Wall tiles
  • Floor tiles
  • Feature/background wall
  • Wet-dry separation solution

Step 7: Determine the lighting plan

  • Main light
  • Mirror-front light
  • Ambient light
  • Color temperature and brightness

Step 8: Improve storage and movement flow

  • Position of high-frequency items
  • Drawer dividers
  • Mirror cabinet configuration
  • Door opening and standing space

Step 9: Determine soft furnishing and decorative details

  • Towels
  • Trays
  • Fragrance diffuser
  • Plants
  • Small decorative items

Step 10: Do the final review

  • Budget
  • Installation
  • Maintenance
  • Moisture resistance
  • Dimensions
  • Long-term usage experience

4. What mistakes should be avoided when designing around a vanity?

This part is very important. Many projects fail because of these mistakes.

1. Focusing only on appearance and ignoring moisture resistance and structure

Many cabinets look beautiful in photos, but in long-term use:

  • Materials are unstable
  • Edge sealing is poor
  • Bottom panels are vulnerable to water
  • Hardware is poor quality
  • Back panels are not moisture resistant

The result will be:

  • Swelling
  • Warping
  • Cracking
  • Peeling
  • Mold
  • Misaligned doors

2. Choosing a vanity that is too large or too deep

Common problems:

  • Compresses the walkway
  • Blocks the door
  • Crowds the toilet area
  • Makes standing uncomfortable
  • Makes a small space feel even more cramped

3. Buying the vanity first, then checking drainage and wall conditions later

Common results:

  • Drain location does not align
  • Drawers cannot be made
  • Wall-mounted installation is not possible
  • Faucet and mirror conflict
  • Basin position is unreasonable

4. Too many style elements

For example, using all of the following at once:

  • Wood grain
  • Gray stone pattern
  • Gold
  • Black
  • Cream tones
  • Vintage tiles

The final result can easily become messy and lack focus.

5. Incorrect mirror proportion

For example:

  • The vanity is wide, but the mirror is too small
  • A double sink uses an overly cramped mirror
  • The mirror-front light feels oppressive
  • The mirror cabinet is too thick and affects usability

6. Ignoring storage

Pursuing only aesthetics with open design, resulting in:

  • Countertops piled with items
  • The space looking messy
  • Cleaning becoming more troublesome

7. Focusing only on visual effect and ignoring comfortable height

For example:

  • The cabinet is too high
  • The total height becomes uncomfortable after adding a vessel sink
  • The mirror is too high or too low
  • The faucet spout position is not appropriate

8. Ignoring lighting

Wrong lighting can lead to:

  • Inconvenience for washing, shaving, and makeup
  • The vanity looking low-quality
  • Heavy shadows in the space
  • An overall cheap atmosphere

9. Inconsistent hardware and accessory colors

One of the most common failure points:

  • Chrome faucet
  • Black shower set
  • Gold handles
  • Gunmetal shower enclosure frame

The overall space will feel chaotic.

10. Ignoring daily maintenance

Some solutions look great in photos, but are painful to use:

  • Too many seams and gaps
  • Too many dead corners around vessel sinks
  • Black surfaces covered with water spots
  • Open shelves collecting dust
  • Hard-to-clean areas under cabinet feet

5. As a professional manufacturer, what useful tips I give you?

The following suggestions are very practical, based on manufacturing, installation, durability, and actual delivery considerations.

1. Don’t only ask “what is the material?” Ask “how is the structure and craftsmanship done?”

For example, even with the same plywood or multi-layer board, the final result can vary greatly from one factory to another.

You should ask:

  • What is the board grade?
  • What are the density and stability like?
  • What edge banding process is used?
  • Are cut-out areas sealed for waterproofing?
  • How thick is the back panel?
  • Is the bottom panel reinforced?
  • How is the countertop connected to the cabinet?

2. What the vanity fears most is not “water” itself, but “long-term humidity + poorly sealed details”

Many cabinets are not ruined by direct soaking, but by long-term moisture entering through these areas:

  • Board cut edges
  • Bottom panel edges
  • Basin cut-out edges
  • Hardware drilling points
  • Toe-kick area
  • Wall-side joint areas

So you must pay attention to the positions of “edges, holes, seams, and bottom.”

3. Hardware determines long-term feel and repair rate

Good hardware is not only about being “smooth,” but also relates to:

  • Whether doors sag
  • Whether drawers shift out of alignment
  • Whether opening/closing makes noise
  • Whether rust develops over time
  • Whether maintenance frequency is high

4. For wall-mounted vanities, wall conditions must be confirmed in advance

Many designers like the wall-mounted effect, but if site conditions do not allow it, the result will be very troublesome later.

You must confirm:

  • Wall material
  • Load-bearing conditions
  • Fixing method
  • Hidden plumbing/electrical lines inside the wall

5. The basin, countertop, and faucet must be selected as one system

Do not buy them separately and randomly.

Because they all affect one another:

  • Faucet height
  • Water outlet angle
  • Basin depth
  • Countertop hole position
  • Splashing during use

6. Small bathrooms require more restraint

Small spaces most fear “wanting too much.”

Recommended priorities:

  • Appropriate size
  • Sufficient storage
  • Easy cleaning
  • Light visual effect
  • Simple color scheme

Rather than piling on many complex elements.

7. Dark-colored cabinets look great, but require higher surface treatment standards

Dark colors more easily reveal:

  • Fingerprints
  • Water spots
  • Scratches
  • Color differences
  • Joint issues

So if using dark colors, the craftsmanship and stain-resistant surface quality need to be better.

8. The wall behind the vanity is not only a decorative surface, but also a “functional surface”

It is recommended to consider in advance:

  • Waterproofing
  • Ease of cleaning
  • Compatibility with mirror/light installation
  • Whether tile joints are too numerous
  • Whether it will affect cabinet leveling

9. For project procurement, don’t just look at unit price; look at total delivery cost

Including:

  • Transportation damage rate
  • Installation efficiency
  • Repair/return rate
  • Moisture resistance performance
  • Hardware lifespan
  • After-sales maintenance difficulty
  • Degree of standardization

10. Truly mature design is “it looks simple, but every detail is reasonable”

A premium feeling often does not come from piling up materials, but from:

  • Good proportions
  • Stable color palette
  • Comfortable lighting
  • Unified details
  • Smooth usability
  • No problems over time

6. Summarizing design ideas by bathroom type


1. Small bathroom

Design idea:

  • Prioritize space efficiency
  • Consider wall-mounted or slim-depth cabinets
  • A single sink is more suitable
  • A mirror cabinet can be used to improve storage
  • Use light, unified color schemes
  • Reduce complex decorative elements

Key points:

  • Proportion
  • Storage
  • Visual lightness
  • Easy cleaning
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 10

2. Primary bathroom

Design idea:

  • Focus on comfort and long-term user experience
  • Storage capacity should be sufficient
  • Larger vanity sizes can be used
  • Double sinks can be considered for two-person use
  • Upgrade materials and hardware
  • Lighting and mirror systems should be complete

Key points:

  • Flow
  • Storage
  • Texture and quality
  • Durability

3. Guest bathroom

Design idea:

  • More emphasis on visual image
  • Configuration can be lighter
  • Stress neatness and display effect
  • Countertops should not be too cluttered
  • Integrated basins and simple mirrors are more suitable

Key points:

  • Appearance
  • Easy cleaning
  • Lightweight configuration

4. Hotel-style bathroom

Design idea:

  • Emphasize premium feel and consistency
  • Lighting atmosphere is critical
  • Material matching should feel calm and refined
  • Countertop neatness is very important
  • Hidden storage should be good
  • Hardware systems should be unified

Key points:

  • Atmosphere
  • Premium feeling
  • Unified language
  • Easy maintenance
How to Design a Bathroom Around Your Vanity (Step-by-Step Guide) 11

5. Shared family bathroom

Design idea:

  • Focus on high-frequency daily use scenarios
  • Storage must be well divided
  • Mirror cabinets or layered drawers are very important
  • Materials should resist moisture and stains
  • Cabinet corners and hardware should be more durable and safer

Key points:

  • Practicality
  • Storage categorization
  • Durability
  • Cleaning efficiency

6. Bathroom in high-humidity/coastal areas

Design idea:

  • Put moisture resistance first
  • Choose cabinet materials carefully
  • Edge sealing and surface processes must be stricter
  • Metal hardware should have a higher anti-rust rating
  • The ventilation system should also be considered

Key points:

  • Moisture resistance
  • Rust resistance
  • Structural stability
  • Easy maintenance

7. Checklist before starting

Below is a very practical pre-start checklist.

Space and structure

  • Are the bathroom dimensions accurately measured?
  • Is the door opening size confirmed?
  • Is the door opening direction confirmed?
  • Are the toilet, shower area, and window positions confirmed?
  • Is the drain location confirmed?
  • Are the water inlet and outlet positions confirmed?
  • Is the wall suitable for installing a wall-mounted vanity?
  • Have floor leveling and wall verticality been checked?

Vanity itself

  • Is the cabinet size suitable for the space?
  • Is the cabinet depth reasonable?
  • Has wall-mounted or freestanding been confirmed?
  • Has single sink or double sink been confirmed?
  • Has the basin type been confirmed?
  • Is the material suitable for wet areas?
  • Is the surface finish moisture-resistant and stain-resistant?
  • Does the storage structure meet the needs?
  • Are the hardware brand and specifications confirmed?

Style and matching

  • Is the overall style clearly defined?
  • Is the cabinet color determined?
  • Are the wall and floor tiles coordinated?
  • Are the faucet, shower set, and handle colors unified?
  • Does the mirror or mirror cabinet size match properly?
  • Is the lighting plan clear?

Use and maintenance

  • Will cabinet doors and drawers conflict when opened?
  • Is there enough countertop operating space?
  • Are the storage positions for daily-use items clearly defined?
  • Is there sufficient protection in damp areas?
  • Is cleaning convenient?
  • Are later maintenance and repairs convenient?

Budget and construction

  • Does the budget cover main materials, hardware, mirror, lighting, and installation?
  • Is the custom lead time acceptable?
  • Are the installation conditions suitable?
  • Have finishing/joint details been considered in advance?
  • Has allowance been reserved for damage and adjustment?

8. Final summary

If I had to summarize it in one sentence:

One of the most effective ways to design a bathroom is to first determine the vanity, then let the mirror, lighting, tiles, hardware, storage, and style develop around it.

Because the vanity itself simultaneously affects:

  • Function
  • Visual effect
  • Storage
  • Flow
  • Style
  • Budget
  • Durability

So designing around the vanity not only makes the logic clear, but also makes it easier to create a bathroom that is both “beautiful and practical.”

The core design logic can be remembered with these keywords:

Function first, style second; cabinet first, system second; proportion first, decoration second; durability first, extravagance second.

A truly good bathroom design is not about piling up materials and styles, but about achieving these points:

  • The vanity is chosen correctly
  • The proportions are coordinated
  • The movement flow is convenient
  • The storage is sufficient
  • Moisture resistance is properly addressed
  • The lighting is comfortable
  • The color scheme is unified
  • The details are durable
  • It is not troublesome to maintain later

A bathroom designed this way is not just “photogenic,” but truly suitable for long-term use.

السابق
دليل اختيار الأدوات المعدنية لخزائن الحمامات (المفصلات، والمنزلقات، والمقابض)
موصى به لك
لايوجد بيانات

تواصل مع SHKL

ما عليك سوى ترك بريدك الإلكتروني أو رقم هاتفك في نموذج الاتصال حتى نتمكن من إرسال عرض أسعار مجاني لك لمجموعة واسعة من التصاميم لدينا!
"نقدم لكم حلولاً متكاملة للحمامات وخدمة مميزة."
فيسبوك     لينكد إن     يوتيوب     تغريد     انستغرام
CONTACT

جهة الاتصال: ريتا لو
بريد إلكتروني:info@shklbathroom.com

بريد إلكتروني:info@shkl.cc
الهاتف: +86 0757 82583932
الفاكس: +86 0757 82583936
واتساب: +86 139 299 10217

شركة فوشان SHKL للأدوات الصحية المحدودة

FOSHAN SHKL SANITARY WARE CO., LTD
جميع الحقوق محفوظة © 2004-2025 لشركة SHKL.SITEMAP
Customer service
detect