WALK-IN SHOWER: BATHROOM RENOVATION · EDMONTON
Clean, Timeless Bathroom Renovation’s in Edmonton
A modern Craftsman home built to honor the fabric of its neighborhood while
quietly redefining what quality feels like.
HENDERSON ESTATES · SOUTHWEST EDMONTON, AB
One Plan for All Three Rooms
The homeowners reached out looking to repair and refresh a couple of smaller bathrooms. Through that initial conversation, it became clear that the better long-term plan was to renovate all three bathrooms together.
The primary ensuite, the second-floor main bath, and the powder room each had a different footprint and a different daily role. They shared the same problem: none of them matched the standard of the home around them.
Doing all three together meant the investment would go further. The finish would stay consistent, and they would not find themselves renovating rooms in stages.
Clean, Timeless, and Built Around Real Use
The aesthetic direction was clean and timeless. Warm materials, quality fixtures, and layouts built around how the bathrooms were actually used day to day.
PRIMARY ENSUITE
The Most Significant Rework
The aesthetic direction was clean and timeless. Warm materials, quality fixtures, and layouts built around how the bathrooms were actually used day to day.
Clean, Timeless, and Built Around Real Use
The ensuite received the most significant changes. The old steam shower was removed. The new shower was fully tiled with digital controls and integrated niche lighting.
Heated tile flooring ran through the ensuite and into the water closet. A freestanding tub with a floor-mounted filler was placed where it made the most functional sense.
CABINETRY AND STORAGE
New Cabinetry, Existing Countertops
New maple vanity cabinetry was built to work with the existing countertops and undermount sinks, which were still in good condition and worth keeping. A tower cabinet was added to address the storage shortfall the old layout had left behind.
Large-format tile with mitered edges, updated lighting, and new bath fans completed the space.
A DELIBERATE DECISION
Keeping What Did Not Need Replacing
Keeping the existing countertops was a deliberate decision. Replacing quality pieces that did not need replacing is unnecessary spending.
The investment went where it made the most difference: layout, storage, tile, lighting, fixtures, and the waterproofing and details that make a bathroom renovation hold up over time.
CABINETRY AND STORAGE
New Cabinetry, Existing Countertops
New maple vanity cabinetry was built to work with the existing countertops and undermount sinks, which were still in good condition and worth keeping. A tower cabinet was added to address the storage shortfall the old layout had left behind.
Large-format tile with mitered edges, updated lighting, and new bath fans completed the space.
CABINETRY AND STORAGE
New Cabinetry, Existing Countertops
New maple vanity cabinetry was built to work with the existing countertops and undermount sinks, which were still in good condition and worth keeping. A tower cabinet was added to address the storage shortfall the old layout had left behind.
Large-format tile with mitered edges, updated lighting, and new bath fans completed the space.