Project Spotlight: Small Footprint, Big Upgrade- A Full Bathroom Addition

This project started with a larger bedroom and an idea:

What if part of this space became a new bathroom?

Originally, the plan was to frame in and build a simple half bath — just enough to add convenience and functionality to the home without taking too much square footage away from the bedroom.

But partway through the project, the homeowner made a bigger decision:

Instead of stopping at a half bath, they wanted a full bathroom with a shower.

And honestly, that changed everything.

Starting From Nothing

There wasn’t a bathroom here before.

No plumbing rough-in waiting in the floor.
No shower space already framed out.
No “easy conversion.”

This was bedroom space being completely reworked into an entirely new bathroom addition inside the home.

That meant building the room from the ground up:

  • Framing new walls

  • Running new plumbing

  • Creating drainage and water supply lines

  • Adding electrical and lighting

  • Designing a layout that could actually function comfortably in a compact footprint

Once the project shifted from a half bath to a full bath, the layout had to evolve fast. Adding a shower into a space that wasn’t originally planned for one takes careful planning — especially in a mobile home where every inch counts.

Making the Layout Work

One of the biggest challenges was balancing function with space.

The bathroom needed to fit:

  • A vanity

  • Toilet

  • Walk-in shower

  • Comfortable walking space

  • Proper plumbing access

…without feeling cramped or boxed in.

The framed section beside the shower became part of the solution, helping accommodate the plumbing and structure while still keeping the room open and usable. Projects like this are a reminder that remodeling is often about solving problems creatively, not just installing finishes.

When it's done right, the finished space feels natural — like it was always supposed to be there.

What Was Included

This remodel included:

  • New bathroom framing and layout creation

  • Full plumbing installation

  • Walk-in shower installation

  • Vanity and sink installation

  • Toilet installation

  • New flooring throughout

  • Electrical and lighting updates

  • Paint, trim, and finish work

The final bathroom feels bright, clean, and practical. The lighter color palette helps open up the room visually, while the flooring adds texture and warmth without making the space feel busy.

Most importantly, the home now has a completely new full bathroom where there was once only bedroom space.

Why This Project Stands Out

This wasn’t a cosmetic refresh.

This was creating entirely new function inside the home.

Projects like this have a huge impact on everyday living because they change how the house actually works for the people inside it. Adding another bathroom — especially a full bath — can dramatically improve convenience, flexibility, and long-term usability.

And unlike large open remodels, smaller-space additions often require even more careful planning. There’s very little wasted space in a mobile home, so every decision matters.

That’s the kind of challenge we enjoy.

The Finished Result

What used to be part of a bedroom is now a clean, fully functional bathroom that looks like it belongs there.

That’s always the goal:
Not just adding something new — but making it feel like it was meant to be part of the home from the beginning.

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Bathroom Bliss: Creating Spa-Like Retreats at Home

Bathroom Bliss: Creating Spa-Like Retreats at Home

Because Your Bathroom Should Feel Like a Break, Not an Afterthought

Most bathrooms in North Idaho homes are functional. They do the job.

But there's a difference between a bathroom that works and a bathroom that actually feels good to be in.

You know the feeling — you walk into a hotel bathroom, or a friend's newly remodeled space, and something just shifts. The tension in your shoulders drops slightly. You slow down without deciding to. Everything feels intentional.

That's not magic. That's design.

We walked into a bathroom last year where the homeowner was convinced they'd picked the wrong tile color. They were ready to rip it out and start over.

It wasn't the tile.

It was the lighting. One harsh overhead fixture making everything look flat and slightly gray. We changed the lighting. The tile was fine. The whole room looked completely different.

That's how much the details matter in a bathroom.

It's Not About Square Footage

Here's the first thing we tell people who assume a spa-like bathroom requires a massive budget or a massive footprint.

It doesn't.

We've transformed small bathrooms into genuinely relaxing spaces — and walked away from large ones that still felt cold and clinical because nobody thought about the details.

Size doesn't create the feeling. Intention does.

Start With What You're Removing

Before you add anything, think about what's currently working against you.

Harsh overhead lighting that makes everything feel like a doctor's office. Builder-grade fixtures that haven't been updated since the house was built. Grout lines so far gone they make a clean bathroom feel dirty.

Sometimes the biggest upgrade isn't what you add — it's what you finally get rid of.

A dated vanity. A plastic shower surround that's seen better days. A mirror that's purely functional with zero personality.

Start there. The spa feeling has room to come in once the things fighting it are gone.

The Shower Is Everything

If there's one place to invest in a bathroom remodel, it's the shower.

Not because it's the most visible — though it is — but because it's the experience you're in every single morning. It sets the tone for your entire day.

What makes a shower feel like a retreat instead of a rinse:

Large format tile. Fewer grout lines mean a cleaner, calmer visual. The eye has less to process. The space feels bigger even when it isn't.

A real showerhead. Not the builder-grade trickle that came with the house. And if your shower still has a plastic insert from 2006, no amount of decor is going to make it feel like a spa. That's just the truth. A rain head, a handheld, or both — this is one of the highest return upgrades per dollar in any bathroom.

A frameless glass enclosure. Nothing opens up a bathroom visually like removing a framed shower door or a curtain rod. Frameless glass makes even a modest shower feel intentional and upscale.

Niches. Built-in storage inside the shower wall. No more wire caddies hanging off the showerhead. No more shampoo bottles lined up on the floor. Just clean, built-in shelving that looks like it was always supposed to be there.

Lighting: The Detail That Changes Everything

We wrote a whole blog about how lighting transforms a home. In bathrooms it's especially true.

One overhead light is not a lighting plan. It's a starting point — and not a good one.

Layered bathroom lighting looks like this:

Overhead for general light. Vanity lighting at eye level so your face is lit from the front not the top — this eliminates the harsh shadows that make even a nice bathroom feel unflattering. And dimmer switches that let you wind down at night instead of staring into bright white light before bed.

In North Idaho winters when daylight is short and mornings are dark, good bathroom lighting isn't a luxury. It's how you start the day without feeling like it already beat you.

The Vanity: Where Function Meets Personality

The vanity is the focal point of most bathrooms. It's also where most builder-grade homes phone it in completely.

Upgrading the vanity doesn't always mean replacing the whole unit. Sometimes it means:

New hardware. Matte black, brushed brass, or brushed nickel — the finish you choose signals the whole room's personality.

A new mirror. Or mirrors. Or a framed mirror that actually has presence instead of just reflecting light back at you.

A new faucet. One of the fastest ways to make a bathroom feel like it was designed instead of assembled.

And if a full vanity replacement is in the plan — double sinks where space allows. One of the most requested upgrades we do, and one of the most appreciated once it's in.

Materials and Texture Do the Heavy Lifting

Spa environments don't feel sterile. They feel warm, layered, and natural.

That translates to bathrooms through material choices. Natural stone or stone-look porcelain. Wood tones in the vanity. Matte finishes over glossy ones. Warm whites and soft neutrals over stark bright white.

These choices don't cost dramatically more than their builder-grade alternatives. They just require someone to actually make them deliberately instead of defaulting to whatever's standard.

The Details Nobody Notices — Until They're Gone

Heated floors. A towel warmer. A niche with subtle lighting. A door that actually closes quietly.

These are the things guests can't quite put their finger on — but they feel them. They're what separate a bathroom that's been finished from one that's been thought through.

None of them are expensive in the context of a full remodel. All of them change the daily experience in ways that are hard to put a price on.

The Mr. Clean Fix Take

Most bathrooms we walk into aren't missing budget — they're missing decisions.

The right tile. The right light. The right showerhead. None of it requires a fortune. It just requires someone to actually think it through instead of defaulting to whatever was standard when the house was built.

That's what we do.

Your bathroom is one of the only places in your house where you're completely alone and completely off the clock — even if just for ten minutes.

It should feel like it was designed for that.

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