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Complete Removal (rip-out), Expansion and Rebuild of Master Bath in a 1950's Cape Cod House



Our house is a Cape Cod house, so the bathrooms on the second floor are small and have sloped ceilings.  The master bedroom has an en suite bathroom, which in our area is an uncommon luxury.  In fact, most houses in our area only have 1 bathroom in the house--usually on the second floor.   So having a bathroom in the master bedroom, albeit small, is something we greatly appreciate.  Although 1950's construction was built to last forever (or ~70 years in our case), things have gone wrong.  For us, it was a leak in one of the pipes for this bathroom which we could not fix by going through the ceiling of the room below.  Additionally, we had mildew and peeling/chipping paint on the popcorn ceiling from poor ventilation (fan vents are not required in our area if the bathroom has a window so we bought this house without bathroom fan vents).  

We didn't just renovate the master bathroom.  We completely gutted it, changed where the fixtures were, and expanded it.  See the graphic below for a visual of how the layout changed and expanded.




The before pictures of the master bath are given below.  The bathroom door is awkwardly in the center of the bedroom wall.  This means large bedroom furniture cannot fit on either side of the bathroom door (i.e. bureau).  The bathroom door opens directly to the sink, which is right below a window.  This means that the mirror/medicine cabinet is not above the sink, but to the right of the sink (to use the mirror while using the sink means stepping to the side).


The shower is to the left of the door.  It has a sloped ceiling and lots of built up mildew on the popcorn ceiling.  If the ceiling wasn't textured, remediation of the mildew would be easy, but on a textured surface treating and repainting is very complicated (see above right photo).  The shower did have a nice custom glass door, but was also dark, small and foreboding (lower left photo).


To the right of the bathroom door was more peeling paint, mildew and sloped ceiling (top right photo).




On the right side of the skinny bathroom was the toilet (check out that vintage toilet!), mirror/medicine cabinet, light switches and radiator.


To renovate this bathroom, we started by completely ripping it out.  We hired people to rip out the two inch thick concrete on the walls, floors and ceiling.  They also removed the sink and toilet.  We paid for a dumpster to dump it all in.  It took two guys two weekends to rip out this bathroom, another bathroom we had downstairs, and remove other scrap wood we had in our basement and garage.  The total waste was about 6.5 tons.


The complete demolition is shown in the next two photos below.  The left part of the bathroom is shown first.  This is the side that had the built-in custom shower.


The photo below shows the right side of the bathroom.  That is the side that had the toilet, light switches and medicine cabinet.



The photo below shows the full dumpster.  It weighed about 6.5 tons, and had the concrete from two bathrooms and lots of scrap wood we had in the garage and basement thrown in.



Reconstruction of the bathroom included making it much larger.  The master bedroom had lots of space, so it really wasn't an issue to make the bathroom larger.  Also, the door was moved to be from the center of the wall to the right side.  This will allow a large piece of furniture to be placed on that wall now.

The photos below show the new frame of the larger bathroom and the position of the door now on the far right side of the wall.




When the construction was complete, the door on the right hand side of the wall opens to the toilet (see photos below).

The pedestal sink is now replaced with a double vanity.  The vanity sits against the wall towards the bedroom.  The shower is still against the same wall as before, but is much more open (see photo below).  The bathroom now has vanity lights above each sink.  Each vanity has a mirror and an outlet.  A ceiling fan was also installed, and it doubles as a light.  The bathroom now has all smooth walls without texture, which will be easy to maintain and update in the future.




The shower has a space behind it where the ceiling dips low.  This space can have shelves installed or can be used to hang additional towels (photo below right side of image).



This last photo shows the updated window.  Below the window we eventually put a wooden bench with a suede cushion.  The bench can be used while changing or to put clothes on while changing.



We hired a different contractor for the "deconstruction" and reconstruction of the bathroom.  The plumbing had to all be replaced, new electric outlets and lights run.  The radiator had to be moved to be under the window (not shown here).  In total the reconstruction part took about two weeks--but this was not the only project our contractor was working at the time.  Possibly it could have been done sooner if this was the only project.  This project was done during COVID lock down, so many materials were difficult to come by, this also impacted the timeline.









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