Renovating Your Bathroom? Max Out Your Space with a Wet Room
Mar 19, 2025
Want a spa feeling at home? Behold the wet room, like this one by Third Street Architecture.
Photograph by Christy Kosnic.
“How can I maximize the available space and also add drama?” This was the question confronting Ann Gottlieb, a Virginia interior designer, when she was working on a recent
bathroom renovation for clients in Upper Marlboro. Her solution, one that’s finding a growing number of fans, was a wet room. The concept is simple: Ditch the shower enclosure and instead merge the shower and tub into one waterproofed, open-plan space. It’s a way to transform your bathroom into something more efficient, practical, and luxurious.
Consider the couple who might want—or, for the sake of marital happiness, need—both a large shower and a soaking tub, but who live in a historic rowhouse with tight quarters. “The wet room is just a good solution,” says Sarah Snouffer, founder of Third Street Architecture in DC. “You’re getting your soaking tub, you’re getting your large shower, but you’re cutting down on the circulation space by combining them.”
No need to set aside room for the swing of the shower door. As the cost of fabricating those glass enclosures has escalated in recent years, says Gottlieb, the wet room—often featuring just a few strategically placed panels, to keep the rest of the bathroom dry—can help deliver cost savings. And with the elimination of curbs and other tripping hazards, it can promote aging in place, one of the reasons Gottlieb suggested a wet room for her Upper Marlboro clients, who are retired.
The owners of this Upper Marlboro home love blue, hence the moody Japanese tile in this project by Ann Gottlieb. Photograph by Angel Newton Roy Photography.
A wet room can bring drama to small spaces, such as this one that Fowlkes Studio designed for European clients in Spring Valley. Photograph by Jenn Verrier.
If you’re fortunate not to have space or budgetary constraints, well, the possibilities abound. Catherine Fowlkes of DC’s Fowlkes Studio has designed her share of wet rooms, some for clients inspired by a stay in a luxury hotel or in Asia, where bathing culture is revered and the wet room is a staple. She starts by asking, “Do we need to be efficient about the space or can we celebrate it?” If the answer is celebrate, then she can create what she deems “a sculptural moment.”
Picture a freestanding tub on display like a work of art, a nearby window offering a connection to the outside, walls of tile or stone, a couple of luxe shower fixtures on full display—a minimalist and almost poetic take on what is normally a utilitarian space. If you enclose a wet room with doors, you can install a steam shower and/or multiple shower heads and introduce a spa-like feel.
But as Kristen Mendoza, a project designer at Four Brothers Design + Build, acknowledges, the motivating force behind the wet rooms she’s created has always been the tub. “Every client has been a person who loves baths,” she says. Snouffer, for her part, had a client in Falls Church who wanted a wet room because of their cold-plunge tub, part of their fitness routine. “Since Covid, people are spending more time in their homes. Being able to design your home with wellness in mind”—that, Snouffer says, is the new ambition.
Design Tips
A McLean wet room by Four Brothers Design + Build features a mix of textures and materials, including a terra cotta floor and brick accent tile under a storage ledge. Photograph by Steve Hershberger.
A Question of Slope
The key to any wet room is drainage, which requires that everything slopes to a central or linear drain, or multiple drains, depending on the space’s size and shape. Another key question is the placement of water fixtures. “You’ve got to figure which way the shower heads and body sprays are going,” says Gottlieb—ensuring that any glass panels or other dividers are well positioned so the vanity, say, doesn’t get wet.
Picture-Perfect Tubs
“Tub selection is the most critical part of the design process,” says Snouffer. For some projects, she’s used an alcove tub and has tiled over the front. For freestanding tubs, Fowlkes has installed ones with adjustable feet, hidden by a skirt, to help negotiate the floor’s slope. If the space is large enough, the incline can be reduced around the tub area. And remember to leave enough space around the bath, Mendoza cautions—not just for safe exit and entry but also to allow for cleaning.
Storage as Accent
There are a few ways to create storage space for shampoo and other bath accessories: a small table, for instance, or a wall niche. “I’m a fan of ledges,” Mendoza says. They allow homeowners to add decorative elements—plants, candles, sculptures, or other artwork—to help counterbalance the quotidian array of bottles and lotions. They also can infuse the space with an added design element. For a project in McLean, Mendoza positioned the ledge atop a brick-covered section of wall—a small accent in a sea of subway tile that helps spotlight the freestanding tub.
Zone of Privacy
When a client has children or when the bathroom will be heavily used, Fowlkes often designs a private water closet apart from the wet room so that multiple people can use the space at the same time while maintaining privacy. The wet room, she says, “is just another tool in our toolkit”—a way to bring drama to small spaces, or luxury to large ones.
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This article appears in the March 2025 issue of Washingtonian.The post Renovating Your Bathroom? Max Out Your Space with a Wet Room first appeared on Washingtonian. ...read more read less