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I'll be the dissenter that likes all-wet bathrooms. Yes, you need a squeegee by the shower, but with shower drapes it's just a couple of small puddles. You can still keep your clothes or fluffy bathrobe in there, just keep it off the floor (which you probably want to do either way). On the positive side it makes the useful shower area larger than most shower stalls, and it makes the floor completely flat so there's nothing to trip on with wet slippery feet. Practically speaking it makes it trivial to wash the floor, and easier to wash large objects in the shower. I also use the bathroom as a place to let dripping-wet jackets and the like hang and dry, since I live in a small apartment and the wooden floor in the hallway probably wouldn't appreciate it. (No pictures, though. It's a minimum-effort 1998 "built as an investment by a rental company" apartment, and we've put a matching amount of care into decorating it.)
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# ¿ May 15, 2017 12:09 |
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# ¿ May 5, 2024 02:34 |
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As modern additions go that's not horrible. It mostly leaves the existing building alone instead of bolting huge SciFi elements to/through the facade, and the actual new building is fairly clean and open. If she managed to make the underground spaces suitable for their intended use, I'd say it succeeded well above average for such extensions. I'll want to see it in person before deciding if I like it, though.
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# ¿ Jun 29, 2017 17:09 |