Top 5 Homes of the Week With Tranquil Bathrooms
These bathrooms from the Dwell community are the epitome of serenity and style. Check out our editor’s top community-submitted homes that have perfected their own private respite.
Featured homes were submitted by members of the Dwell community through our Add a Home feature. Add your home to Dwell.com/homes today.
1. Shou Sugi Ban House
Architect: Schwartz and Architecture, Location: Los Gatos, California
From the architect: "The original home occupies a prominent hilltop overlooking Silicon Valley and faces into the pristine rolling hills of a nature preserve at the end of the house receiving the new addition. Taking cues from dominant natural elements of the surrounding densely wooded hillside—boulders, bark, and leaves—[we] created a two-story addition with the visual weight needed to anchor the long axis of the extended original house."
Photo: Matthew Millman
2. Tehama Grasshopper
Architect: Fougeron Architecture, Location: San Francisco, California
From the architect: "The ground floor office is utilitarian in design while the second floor living area is open, with clear glass panes throughout. The connection between interior and exterior is the ultimate celebration of urban living, which is why the third-floor penthouse offers breathtaking views of the city skylines."
Master bathroom
Photo: Richard Barnes
3. Ashworth Residence
Architect: CAST Architecture, Location: Seattle, Washington
From the architect: "A serene modern oasis on a small urban lot, the Ashworth House is a renovation and second-story addition over a cottage originally constructed in 1912."
Photo: CAST architecture
4. Eastwood Residence
Architect: Gregory L. Howe, Location: Chicago, Illinois
From the architect: "While the site had many advantages, one contextual constraint was the pair of large houses that hug the property. These structures prompted the pulling of sunlight into the interior in innovative ways without compromising privacy. An exterior atrium cuts into the core of the house bringing light into what normally would be its darkest parts. The atrium footprint is evoked in a double height space that houses the staircase and it is topped with a series of skylights that flood the space with light on even the cloudiest of days."
Photo: Searl Lamaster Howe
5. Hilltop Residence
Architect: Design Platform, Location: Denver, Colorado
From the architect: "[The] master bathroom suite. [It features a] glossy white vanity with dark quartz waterfall countertop. Hexagon tile drops down wall the from the shower enclosure to the tub surround."
Master bathroom suite. Gloss white vanity with dark quartz waterfall countertop. Hexagon tile drops down wall from shower enclosure to tub surround.
Photo: Jess Blackwell
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