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by beekay33
3 months ago in Design Dilemma
Laundry room - half-bath divider
Part of a renovation to our house will include a small room that is a half-bath on one end and laundry area on the other. Would love to hear ideas for dividing off the laundry area other than bi-fold doors (take up too much space). Thanks!
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eagledzines Do they need to be divided off? Use under-cabinet appliances with a folding area on top. Cabinets could be put on top if desired.
3 months ago · ·
Creations Nadia Interior Design if you really need the doors - why not to put sliding doors? :))
3 months ago ·
beekay33 One side will be stacking washer-dryer; one side counter/cabinet, shelves above. Sliding doors would close off one or the other; not easy to use the space.
3 months ago ·
beekay33 eagledzines - This may be what we have to do. We would need to be much neater with the laundry area than we have in the past, though. ;-)
Thinking of a curtain on a hospital track as it could be pushed to the side of stacked washer/dryer most of the time or vertical fabric blinds. Thoughts on those? Or your creative ideas?? Thanks!
3 months ago ·
eagledzines You could use solid French doors. I definitely would not use a hospital track system. I don't think vertical blinds could take that kind of use. They would be getting pushed in and out.
3 months ago ·
groveraxle I always dislike curtains as room dividers. They have a college-apartment vibe. What if instead of cabinets in the space beside the washer/dryer, you used a rolling laundry cart. Then you could use bypass doors. When you do laundry, simply roll the cart out; return it when you're done.
3 months ago ·
ASVInteriors Do you HAVE to stack your machines? It is possible to put them side by side?

That way you could build a counter on top as Eagledzines suggested. It seems there is no creative solution for your current predicament so is it at all possible to change the environment. You would have so much more space (visually as well) and you could add cabinets or shelves up top.
3 months ago ·
eagledzines Do you have room in your bathroom for an organizer? This is a DIY project. The baskets also serve to separate the laundry by color, etc. It could be made taller if you needed it to be
3 months ago ·
Creations Nadia Interior Design then i would keep the machines open and put some cabinets on the wall above :))
3 months ago ·
blindsdirectcanada Sliding panels work really well I use them quite often as room dividers.
3 months ago ·
apple_pie_order A curtain is likely to look very informal and make-do. I suggest you revisit your laundry organization plan. How about drawers in the bottom cabinet instead of shelves, so you can keep laundry soap and what-not in there instead of out on top shelves? Then add a closet rod above the counter for hanging things directly out of the dryer. An alternative that may suit your laundry style is a wall mounted drying rack. Some are collapsible, others stay in place. Some of the Italian designs are quite sleek looking, several wood varieties are informal looking (search amazon.com).
3 months ago ·
beekay33 Thanks all! I like eagledzine's DIY laundry organizer and no, washer-dryer don't have to be stacked, so I'm definitely rethinking that. And I had thought of sliding panels also. So appreciate the ideas!
3 months ago · ·
beekay33 Judy M - Thanks for the pics. These are excellent. I could definitely see this working.
Someone asked the room dimensions - will be approx. 6'7" wide x 10'8" long with a pocket door to enter on the long wall.
3 months ago · ·
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