![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I show them to you because if you want to have the toilet beside the shower, the water supply for the toilet is not the only thing you need to take into consideration. I, once, had a question about what is behind the wall of a toilet. Based on your 16'8" measurement, the 6'0" double pocket door uses a total length of 12' and the shower uses 4' so you are left with 8". Even with careful planning these changes will consume at least 75% of your budget. Recommendations leave all the fixtures in their current location, since you're going to replace the siding-change the window to one that does not protrude into the tub/shower space (ie narrower side-to-side), keep the current tub while replacing the surrounding walls with product such as Onyx Collection or US Marble, change stool to "tank in wall" model with round seat profile (this will require a licensed plumber), install towel warmer ladder over the stool (it will also heat the room) using current HW system (this will require a licensed plumber). Depending on your location, this change alone would eat up between 30% to 50% of your budget. This move will likely require opening the kitchen wall to allow for the re-route. It might be possible to move it toward the entry door but, it must be on the current wall. Toilets ("stools" in plumber-speak) have written-in-stone requirements. First issue is the waste line for the toilet, it's the most expensive plumbing change to make.if it can be done at all. ![]()
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