new_bug
New Member
I would like to put a 60" freestanding or acrylic clawfoot tub in a 64" tiled "alcove" space. we came in after tile work was done with plumbing roughed in for a right hand drain tub (freestanding of some sort) with wall filler.
I have looked around at a bunch of old cast iron clawfoot tub installations, and the closest I have found is 1.5" from a stub (candle holder & faucet) wall, with most 3-4" on one end and 4-8-12" or more on the other wall. 4" seemed common from the back wall.
The area is tiled, including obscured vinyl window/sill at 40 inches. The plan would be wall mount filler on one end, bar mount hand shower, and old style oval shower curtain rod.
the next size down is a 54"-56" tub which feels like a much smaller tub, more expensive, and less options. not looking for suggestions of tubs to look at. we won't be going that route.
alternatively we would be installing a 60" americast alcove tub, a 4" end shelf/wall, and dealing with the window/sill rot issues when they came eventually.
not saying that the window & current tile job are bad, (sloped tiled window sill, waterproofing membrane, concrete backer board, I believe epoxy based grout).. but eventually this would be an area where I would expect rot with an alcove tub. moving the window up isn't possible (roof overhang) and glass block window or new siding (no window) are currently too costly for the result which is not as "nice"...
I believe a freestanding tub makes sense with the current window, and would be less likely to see eventual window sill or wall damage.
any thoughts about cleaning/access with only 2" clearance between the top rim of a freestanding tub & side wall? any standards I should be aware of? i have requested product literature on a few 60" freestanding tubs. but so far I haven't seen anything concrete.
with pedistal sinks i know the standard is 4" min side clearance. but with a rounded freestanding tub, i am not sure if this will be so critical, as dropped items retrieval & cleaning could still be accomplished in the back corners and from the front.
Thank you for any advice or help.
I have looked around at a bunch of old cast iron clawfoot tub installations, and the closest I have found is 1.5" from a stub (candle holder & faucet) wall, with most 3-4" on one end and 4-8-12" or more on the other wall. 4" seemed common from the back wall.
The area is tiled, including obscured vinyl window/sill at 40 inches. The plan would be wall mount filler on one end, bar mount hand shower, and old style oval shower curtain rod.
the next size down is a 54"-56" tub which feels like a much smaller tub, more expensive, and less options. not looking for suggestions of tubs to look at. we won't be going that route.
alternatively we would be installing a 60" americast alcove tub, a 4" end shelf/wall, and dealing with the window/sill rot issues when they came eventually.
not saying that the window & current tile job are bad, (sloped tiled window sill, waterproofing membrane, concrete backer board, I believe epoxy based grout).. but eventually this would be an area where I would expect rot with an alcove tub. moving the window up isn't possible (roof overhang) and glass block window or new siding (no window) are currently too costly for the result which is not as "nice"...
I believe a freestanding tub makes sense with the current window, and would be less likely to see eventual window sill or wall damage.
any thoughts about cleaning/access with only 2" clearance between the top rim of a freestanding tub & side wall? any standards I should be aware of? i have requested product literature on a few 60" freestanding tubs. but so far I haven't seen anything concrete.
with pedistal sinks i know the standard is 4" min side clearance. but with a rounded freestanding tub, i am not sure if this will be so critical, as dropped items retrieval & cleaning could still be accomplished in the back corners and from the front.
Thank you for any advice or help.
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