Check out some projects to inspire your home remodel:

With much time at home due to social isolation, many residents have begun to make reforms and improvements in the most diverse environments. If you’re thinking about transforming your bathroom, check out 30 inspirations that include concrete, travertine and tile designs:
Minimal Fantasy Apartment, by Patricia Bustos Studio

Designed by Patricia Bustos Studio, this pink bathroom has shimmering curtains and mirrors framed in the same color to match the rest of the Madrid apartment, which is almost entirely pink.
Botaniczna Apartment, by Agnieszka Owsiany Studio

Located in Poznań, this apartment designed by Agnieszka Owsiany Studio for a couple working in medicine has a bathroom with travertine marble walls and a bathtub of the same material.
House 6, by Zooco Estudio

Zooco Estudio covered the walls and floor of this bathroom in Madrid with white tiles and blue stucco. A geometric tile-covered top winds across the floor and wall to form a closet space.
Casa Porto, by Fala Atelier

Fala Atelier used white square tiles for this bathroom in a house in Porto. The tiles are combined with the marble top, the blue doors and the large round mirror above the sink.
Makepeace Mansions Apartment, by Surman Weston

The bathroom of this Surman Weston-designed apartment is finished with hand-painted tiles arranged to form a graphic black and white pattern. This model mimics the property’s faux Tudor facade.
Unit 622, by Rainville Sangaré

Located in an apartment within Moshe Safdie’s Habitat 67 residential complex in Montreal, this bathroom designed by Rainville Sangaré features a color-changing shower screen.
Rylett House, by Studio 30 Architects

Created as part of the refurbishment of a Victorian maisonette in London, this small private bathroom is finished with a black tiled grille and bright yellow wall.
The pink house of cats, by KC Design Studio

This Taiwan vacation home was designed with the owner’s cat in mind and includes cat ladders, a spinning carousel climbing frame and a pink swing. The bathroom combines square pink tiles with a mosaic wall.
Borden house, by StudioAC

This private bathroom at the front of a StudioAC designed home has sloping walls covered in gray tiles.
Spinmolenplein apartment, by Jürgen Vandewalle

This bathroom in an apartment in the tallest building in Ghent is housed in a white lacquered wooden box and accessed through a series of barn-style doors. Internally the bathroom is finished with pink earth microcement in contrast with the white wood.
House of the cloister, by MORQ

The reinforced concrete walls of the Cloister House in Perth have been left exposed in the bathroom, where they are softened with wooden slatted floors and tub and sink covered in the same material.
Akari House, by Mas-qui

Designed by the Mas-aqui architecture firm as part of the renovation of a 20th-century apartment in the mountains above Barcelona, this small bathroom combines red tiles with white tiles.
Louisville Road home, by 2LG Studio

Created by 2LG Studio as part of a colorful renovation of a period house in South London, this bathroom has pale marble walls and a light blue tiled floor. The blue color was also used for the taps and the edge of the mirror, which contrasts with the coral-colored dressing table.
Apartment A, by Atelier Dialect

This bathroom, which is part of a large open-plan master bedroom in an Antwerp apartment designed by the Belgian studio Atelier Dialect, has a freestanding rectangular bathtub in the center.
The bathtub is clad in mirror steel to complement the stainless steel sink, while the walls are clad in subway tile and mint green paint.
House V, by Martin Skoček

Martin Skoček used reclaimed bricks inside this triangular house near Bratislava, Slovakia. The master bedroom has an ensuite bathroom and a Victorian bath lined with a sloping wooden roof apex.
Apartment 308 S, by Bloco Arquitetos

The bathroom of this 1960s apartment refurbished by Bloco Arquitetos incorporates white tiles as a reference to the city architecture of the 1960s. The white walls and ceiling combine with the matte granite countertop and floor.
Mexican holiday home in Palma

This narrow bathroom is located behind a bedroom in a vacation home designed by the Palma architecture firm. It has wooden slatted doors that open directly to the outside.
South Yarra Townhouse, by Winter Architecture

This Winter Architecture designed bathroom in a Melbourne home combines gray tiles with exposed aggregates and thin horizontal white tiles with gold brass towel racks and faucets.
Edinburgh apartment, of Luke and Joanne McClelland

The main bathroom of this Georgian apartment in Edinburgh has green tiles in the lower half of the walls and in the front of the bathtub. Next to the tub, a washbasin was placed on a restored wooden sideboard from the 1960s by Danish designer Ib Kofod Larsen.
Ruxton Rise Residence, from Studio Four

Built for Studio Four co-director Sarah Henry, this quiet home in Melbourne’s suburb of Beaumaris features bathrooms with surfaces covered in tadelakt, a waterproof lime-based plaster that is often used in Moroccan architecture to make sinks and tubs from bathroom.
House with three eyes, by Innauer-Matt Architekten

A House with Three Eyes, the bathroom has a glass wall overlooking the surrounding Austrian countryside. The marble-lined bathtub is placed next to this window so that bathers can enjoy the view.
Hygge Studio, by Melina Romano

Brazilian designer Melina Romano designed this fern-green bathroom to extend from a bedroom to an apartment in São Paulo. It has a black dressing table, a corner mirror, and a red brick dressing table with an opening for storing towels and toiletries.
Ready house, by Azab

This bathroom in a prefab house is separated from the bedroom by an angled blue curtain. The triangular bathroom space is distinguished from the bedroom by the blue tiles on the floor, which extend along the front of the tub and along the walls.
Immeuble Molitor apartment, by Le Corbusier

This small bathroom was designed by Le Corbusier in the Immeuble Molitor apartment in Paris, which has been his home for over 30 years. The room, which has walls painted sky blue and covered with small white tiles, has a small bathtub and a sink.
Apartment in Born, by Colombo and Serboli Architecture

Colombo and Serboli Architecture have added a new guest bathroom to this apartment in Barcelona’s historic El Born district, featuring pink tiles and a circular mirror.
Apartment model 130 William skyscraper, by David Adjaye

Built inside a high-rise apartment in New York City, this bathroom is tiled with serrated gray marble tiles and features a wooden sink with a matching profile.
Pioneer Square Loft, by Plum Design and Corey Kingston

The bathrooms in this Seattle loft are housed in a custom L-shaped wooden box in the corner of the room, which features an upstairs bedroom.
A toilet, shower, toilet and sauna are located in several cubicles, each lined with charred wood using the traditional Japanese technique known as Shou Sugi Ban.
VS House, by Sārānsh

VS House’s bathroom in Ahmedabad, India combines two contrasting Indian stone finishes. Floors and walls are made with speckled gray tiles, while emerald marble surrounds the toilet and mirror.
Nagatacho Apartment, by Adam Nathaniel Furman

Part of the colorful apartment that Adam Nathaniel Furman designed to be a “feast of sight”, this bathroom combines blue tiles and a milky orange. A light blue dressing table, lemon yellow towel racks and taps and a pink toilet seat complete the colorful composition.
Kyle House, by GRAS

This Scottish holiday home was designed by GRAS architecture firm to have a “monastic simple” interior. This extends to the bathroom, which has gray walls and a shower stall with large black tiles.
* Via Dezeen
Source: Terra

Benjamin Smith is a fashion journalist and author at Gossipify, known for his coverage of the latest fashion trends and industry insights. He writes about clothing, shoes, accessories, and runway shows, providing in-depth analysis and unique perspectives. He’s respected for his ability to spot emerging designers and trends, and for providing practical fashion advice to readers.