From compact loft en-suites to luxurious freestanding-bath sanctuaries — our in-house designers, specialist tilers and plumbing teams create bathrooms that combine beautiful materials, precise craftsmanship and intelligent space planning. Every bathroom designed in 3D, every tile hand-selected, every fixture specified to last — delivered on a fixed-price contract.
Family-friendly area with Victorian and Edwardian terraces. Side-return and rear extensions are particularly popular. H&F planning is generally supportive. We specialise in family bathroom projects across Fulham SW6, working within Hammersmith & Fulham council's planning framework.
Fulham has conservation area coverage in parts, so some properties will need planning permission for external changes while others may proceed under permitted development. We assess each property individually.
Our family bathroom projects in Fulham are delivered by our in-house team of RIBA architects, structural engineers and specialist tradespeople. Every project is managed under a single fixed-price contract with no hidden costs.
A bathroom is the most intensively designed room in any house — more fixtures per square metre, more complex plumbing, more demanding waterproofing and more material decisions than any other space. In a London period home, the challenges multiply: cast-iron soil stacks that can't be moved, floor joists that need strengthening for a stone bath, ceiling heights that constrain shower enclosures and existing plumbing routes that dictate waste positions.
Our dedicated bathroom designers understand these constraints intimately because they work alongside our plumbers, tilers and structural engineers every day. They design bathrooms that are not only beautiful but buildable — resolving drainage falls, concealed cistern depths, valve positions and tile layout geometry before a single pipe is cut. The result is a bathroom that looks effortless but is engineered with precision.
We offer three specification tiers — Essential, Premium and Luxury — each with a clear price range and a defined level of sanitary ware, brassware, tiling and fixtures. Within every tier, the design is fully bespoke: layout, tile selections, sanitaryware brands, brassware finishes, lighting, mirror positions and storage are all tailored to your space, your preferences and your daily routine.
Every bathroom is designed in photorealistic 3D before construction starts, so you see exactly how your tile, grout colour, brassware finish and lighting work together. Changes are free at this stage — and costly once tiling begins. This is why we invest heavily in the design phase: it protects your budget and guarantees the finished result matches your expectations.
From a compact cloakroom WC to a hotel-standard master en-suite — we design and build every bathroom type that London homes demand.
Full-size bathroom with bath, separate shower, WC, basin and storage. The centrepiece of most London homes.
Shower room adjacent to the bedroom — walk-in shower, wall-hung WC, vanity basin and heated towel rail. Compact but complete.
Fully tanked level-access shower room with gradient floor to a linear drain. Sleek, minimal and accessible — ideal for loft en-suites and contemporary interiors.
Compact ground-floor WC with basin, vanity and feature tiling. Small space, big impact — often the first bathroom visitors see.
Most London bathrooms are compact. Clever design makes the difference between a cramped space and one that feels generous and considered.
Wall-hung WCs and basins float above the floor, exposing the tiles beneath and creating a visual sense of space. The concealed cistern and waste pipes sit inside a slim furniture unit or stud wall. The floor is easier to clean and the room feels significantly more open — the single most effective upgrade for a small bathroom.
In bathrooms under 5 square metres, replacing the bath with a walk-in shower reclaims substantial floor area. A frameless glass screen keeps the room open and light-filled. If you need a bath (for young children or resale value), consider a compact 1500mm bath rather than a standard 1700mm — the 200mm saved can accommodate a separate shower area.
A standard bathroom door swings into the room, consuming approximately 0.8 square metres of usable space. A pocket door slides into the wall cavity, reclaiming every millimetre. Sliding barn-style doors are an alternative where the wall construction does not allow a pocket. This is one of the cheapest yet most impactful changes for a small bathroom layout.
Counter-intuitively, larger tiles (600x600mm or 600x1200mm) make small rooms feel bigger because there are fewer grout lines breaking up the surfaces. Fewer joints also mean less maintenance. Continuing the same tile from floor to wall creates a seamless, uncluttered aesthetic that visually expands the space.
Built into the shower wall during construction, recessed niches replace bulky shelving and caddies. They sit flush with the tile surface, keep shampoo bottles tidy and eliminate the visual clutter that makes small bathrooms feel cramped. We typically recommend one or two niches per shower, sized to match the tile module for a clean, integrated finish.
A heated towel rail replaces the need for a separate radiator, freeing wall and floor space. Modern dual-fuel rails work with the central heating in winter and independently via an electric element in summer. Choose a ladder-style rail wide enough to hold at least two bath towels — typically 500mm wide minimum for a small bathroom.
A wet room is more than a shower without a tray. It requires specialist waterproofing, precise gradient engineering and compliant drainage. Here is what is involved.
What defines a wet room: A wet room is a bathroom where the entire floor area is waterproofed (tanked) and the shower drains directly into a floor-level drain — there is no shower tray, step or enclosure. Unlike a walk-in shower (which has a tray recessed into the floor), a wet room has a continuous tiled floor with a gradient that directs water to the drain. The result is a sleek, level-access space that is both visually minimal and fully accessible.
Tanking requirements: The entire floor and at least 100mm up each wall must be coated with a liquid-applied or sheet tanking membrane conforming to BS 5385 (the British Standard for wall and floor tiling). We use Schluter DITRA or Mapei Mapelastic, both of which create a continuous, bonded waterproof barrier. All joints, corners and pipe penetrations receive reinforcing tape or collars. The tanking is tested for 24 hours before any tiling begins.
Fall and gradient: The floor must slope toward the drain at a minimum gradient of 1:80 (approximately 12.5mm per metre). This is achieved using a pre-formed gradient tray or a sand-and-cement screed laid to falls. The gradient zone typically extends 1–1.5 metres from the drain; the rest of the floor can be level. Incorrect gradients cause pooling — the most common wet room defect.
Drainage options: A linear (channel) drain sits along one wall and allows large-format tiles to be laid with a single-direction fall — the cleanest aesthetic. A point (centre) drain is cheaper but requires the floor to slope from all four directions, which means cutting tiles into triangles. We recommend linear drains for all new wet rooms. Minimum drain capacity: 0.8 litres per second for a standard shower.
Suitable flooring: Porcelain tiles (minimum R10 slip rating), natural stone (honed, not polished), vinyl sheet and micro-cement are all suitable. Avoid polished porcelain, large-format polished stone and any material with a smooth, glazed finish — these become dangerously slippery when wet. We specify materials with tested slip resistance for every wet room project.
Building regulations: Wet rooms on upper floors require additional attention to waterproofing and floor structure. The floor must be rigid enough to prevent tile cracking (no deflection under load) and the tanking must prevent any water reaching the ceiling below. We check floor joist sizes and install plywood overlay where needed to achieve the required rigidity.
A well-designed bathroom serves you for decades. These features ensure comfort and safety now — and independence as you age.
A step-free threshold eliminates the trip hazard of a traditional shower tray. Whether wet room or flush-deck tray, the entry is at the same level as the surrounding floor. This is essential for wheelchair users but beneficial for everyone — from toddlers to anyone carrying a heavy towel basket. Building regulations now recommend level access for all new bathrooms.
Strategically placed grab rails near the WC, in the shower and beside the bath provide support without looking clinical. Modern manufacturers produce rails in brushed brass, matt black and polished chrome that match contemporary brassware ranges. We install concealed timber blocking behind tiles during construction so rails can be added at any point in the future without replastering.
Bathroom floors must be slip-resistant when wet. We specify tiles with a minimum R10 anti-slip rating (R11 or R12 for wet rooms and shower areas). Textured porcelain, honed natural stone and micro-cement all provide excellent grip without the institutional appearance of heavily textured surfaces. Slip-resistance testing certificates are available for every tile we specify.
Thermostatic shower valves and basin mixers maintain a constant water temperature and prevent scalding — particularly important for children and elderly users. All our shower installations use thermostatic valves with a maximum temperature stop (typically 38°C). These are a building regulations requirement for new installations and a safety essential for every household.
Standard WC pan height is 400mm; comfort-height models sit at 450–460mm, making sitting down and standing up significantly easier for taller users and anyone with reduced mobility. Wall-hung WCs can be installed at any height, offering complete flexibility. We discuss the ideal height with every client during the design phase.
For users with visual impairment, colour contrast between the sanitaryware and the wall or floor tiles is essential for safe navigation. A white WC against a dark tile, or a dark vanity against a light wall, provides the visual cues that prevent collisions and falls. Good contrast also happens to create more visually striking bathroom designs — accessibility and aesthetics align perfectly.
Choosing the right tile material affects durability, maintenance, slip resistance and cost. Here is how the most popular options compare.
| Material | Cost/m² | Durability | Maintenance | Water Resistance | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Porcelain | £25–£80 | Excellent | Very Low | Excellent | Floors, walls, wet rooms — the all-round choice |
| Ceramic | £15–£50 | Good | Low | Good | Walls only — softer than porcelain, not ideal for floors |
| Natural Stone | £60–£200 | Excellent | Medium | Good (if sealed) | Luxury bathrooms — marble, limestone, travertine |
| Large Format (1200x600+) | £40–£120 | Excellent | Very Low | Excellent | Modern, minimal bathrooms — fewer grout lines |
| Mosaic | £50–£150 | Good | Higher | Good | Feature walls, niches, shower floors — adds texture |
| Terrazzo | £80–£250 | Excellent | Low | Excellent | Statement bathrooms — distinctive aggregate pattern |
Costs are guide prices for supply only — installation adds approximately £40–£80 per square metre depending on tile size and complexity. Natural stone requires sealing before grouting and periodic resealing (typically annually). We source all materials through trade accounts, passing savings of 20–30% below retail directly to our clients.
A structured design-and-build process that eliminates guesswork and protects your budget.
We measure the existing bathroom, photograph it from every angle, check the plumbing routes (waste positions, water supply, soil stack location) and assess the floor structure for underfloor heating and any stone-bath loading requirements. We discuss your brief — shower vs bath preference, storage needs, aesthetic direction, must-have brands or finishes — and produce a 3D concept design with two to three layout options. Materials are selected from physical samples at our Finchley Road studio.
Existing bathroom stripped out — old tiles, sanitary ware, plumbing and flooring removed. Walls checked for damp and repaired where needed. New plumbing roughed in to the exact positions specified in the design: hot and cold feeds, waste connections, shower valve position, toilet waste and underfloor heating loops. Electrical first fix for lighting circuits, heated mirror, extractor fan and any shaver sockets. For wet rooms, the tanking membrane is applied and tested before tiling begins.
Our specialist tilers lay the wall and floor tiles — whether that's large-format porcelain, handmade Zellige, marble mosaics or encaustic cement tiles. Tile cuts around valves, niches and corners are precise and consistent. Sanitary ware installed: wall-hung WC with concealed cistern, basin on vanity or wall-mounted, bath (freestanding or built-in) and shower enclosure or wet room screen. Brassware fitted — shower valves, taps, towel rails and accessories.
Light fittings, mirrors, glass screens, towel rails, toilet roll holders and all accessories fitted. Silicone sealing around baths, showers and basins. Underfloor heating commissioned and tested. Full clean, snag inspection and client walkthrough. We hand over with all product warranties, care guides (particularly for natural stone) and a 12-month defects liability guarantee.
Guide prices for complete bathroom renovations in London. All tiers include design, plumbing, electrics, tiling, sanitary ware, brassware and accessories.
What separates a Hampstead Renovations bathroom from a plumber with a catalogue.
Every bathroom rendered in photorealistic 3D before work begins — see exactly how your tile, grout colour, brassware finish and lighting work together. Free changes at design stage prevent expensive changes on site.
In-house tilers who work exclusively on bathrooms — not general builders who tile occasionally. Large-format porcelain, handmade Zellige, marble mosaics, micro-cement and encaustic cement tile, all laid with sub-millimetre precision.
One price for design, all plumbing, electrics, tiling, sanitary ware, brassware, underfloor heating, accessories and decoration. Not a plumber's quote with tiles as an extra — the full bathroom, agreed before strip-out begins.
Accounts with Duravit, Villeroy & Boch, Crosswater, Vitra, Hansgrohe, Axor, Aqualisa and more. Trade pricing passed directly to you — typically 20–30% below retail.
Electric underfloor heating installed beneath bathroom tiling on most projects — warm feet, no radiators, more wall space for beautiful tiling.
Full tanking systems installed and pressure-tested before tiling. Linear drains, gradient screeds and bonded membranes that guarantee a watertight wet room for decades.
Wall-hung WC, wall-hung basin and floating vanity units as standard in our Premium and Luxury tiers — creating a clean, contemporary look that makes cleaning effortless.
Recessed shower niches, mirrored cabinets, under-vanity drawers and towel storage designed into the bathroom architecture — not bolted on as afterthoughts.
In Victorian and Georgian homes, we design bathrooms that respect ceiling heights, proportions and sightlines — using materials that acknowledge the property's heritage character.
Layered bathroom lighting: recessed downlights, backlit mirrors, niche lighting and dimming circuits designed to create both bright task lighting and relaxing ambient mood.
Electric or wet-system heated towel rails specified as part of the design — positioned for maximum convenience and integrated with the heating controls.
Selected bathroom renovations across London.
Walk-in rainfall shower, freestanding stone bath, wall-hung vanity with Calacatta marble splashback and brushed brass Axor brassware throughout.
Compact loft en-suite wet room with Zellige tiling, linear drain, wall-hung Duravit sanitary ware and matt black Crosswater brassware.
Full family bathroom with shower-over-bath, double basin vanity, large-format porcelain floor and feature herringbone wall tiling in sage green.
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Visit Hampstead On Demand →The tiling is extraordinary. Every cut is perfect, every grout line consistent, every corner mitred rather than edged. You can tell these tilers work exclusively on bathrooms — the precision is a level above anything we'd seen from general builders. The 3D render was so accurate that the finished bathroom is identical to what we approved on screen.
We had three bathrooms renovated as part of a larger refurbishment and the design continuity between them was superb. Each bathroom has its own character — different tiles, different layout — but they share a common design language that ties the whole house together. The wet room in the loft is genuinely better than most hotel bathrooms we've used.
Our tiny cloakroom is now genuinely the room visitors comment on most. The designer managed to fit a wall-hung WC, a beautiful basin and a stunning Zellige feature wall into 1.8 square metres. It feels spacious, considered and luxurious — proof that a small room with the right design is worth more than a big room with the wrong one.
Common questions from London homeowners planning a bathroom renovation.
Use these area-specific guide pages to compare the next build routes, planning questions and cost topics people commonly research in Fulham SW6.
Visit our studio to see tile displays, sanitary ware samples and brassware finishes — or invite us to survey your existing bathroom. We'll design, price and plan your new bathroom at no cost.
3D design, material selection and a fixed-price quotation — completely free and with no obligation.
Book Bathroom ConsultationOur design studio is 15 minutes from Fulham. Hammersmith & Fulham planning specialists.