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A Bathroom Built for Two: How Priya Solved a Layout Problem 3 Contractors Couldn't Figure Out

A Bathroom Built for Two: How Priya Solved a Layout Problem 3 Contractors Couldn't Figure Out

Priya K. had one of those master bathrooms that looks fine on paper but fails in daily life. A single sink vanity. A shower that required shimmying sideways to enter. A toilet positioned so close to the door that it swung into your knees. And a linen closet taking up prime real estate on the wrong wall.

She'd brought in three contractors over two years. Each one proposed essentially the same layout shuffling: move the vanity here, flip the shower there. None of it felt transformative. None of it solved the root problem — the space felt adversarial.

Posting the Problem

"I took photos and drew a rough floor plan — very rough — and posted it on DunRite Social," Priya says. "I was honest. I told them three professionals had looked at it and I still wasn't satisfied. I asked if anyone had a creative idea I was missing."

The response was immediate and enthusiastic. A community member with a background in interior design dropped a suggestion in the first two hours that reframed everything: bump the toilet into the linen closet space, sacrifice the linen closet entirely, and use the reclaimed square footage to create a double-sink vanity alcove with integrated storage above.

"My immediate reaction was 'where do I put my linens?' which is exactly what they anticipated," Priya laughs. "Three different people immediately replied with over-the-door solutions, a linen tower in the bedroom, and a built-in niche above the toilet in the new location. The community literally had answers before I even formed the question."

The Detail That Changed Everything

A second contributor suggested something none of Priya's contractors had mentioned: converting the existing swing door to a barn door. This single change — eliminating the door's swing radius — freed up enough floor space to comfortably position the toilet and added a design element that pulled the whole room together.

An AI visualization showing the barn door, double vanity, and restructured shower was created by a community member and posted directly to Priya's thread. "I showed it to my husband and he said, 'Book whoever can do that.' We didn't care about the price anymore."

The Finished Bathroom

  • Double-sink vanity in the former linen closet footprint
  • Barn door replacing the original swing door
  • Repositioned toilet in a private nook
  • Walk-in shower expanded by 18 inches using reclaimed space
  • Built-in niches replacing linen closet storage

The project cost $22,500 and took four weeks.

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