View Ridge kids bathroom remodel with floor-to-ceiling tile

View Ridge Kid's Bath

Seattle, WA

This kids' bathroom in Seattle's View Ridge neighborhood proves that a children's bathroom doesn't have to compromise on style. We installed floor-to-ceiling tile throughout, extending the tile pattern past the shower to wrap the toilet wall for a cohesive, spa-like feel. A custom walnut vanity with champagne bronze hardware anchors the room, complemented by a matching walnut linen storage cabinet. Heated tile floors add a touch of luxury that the whole family appreciates on cold Seattle mornings.

Project Details

The original bathroom had a single vanity sink set into an angled corner cabinet, awkwardly facing into the corner — not ideal for one kid, let alone two. We replumbed the vanity wall and installed a double-sink setup so both kids can brush teeth and get ready for school at the same time without a battle for mirror space. It's a practical change that makes the morning routine dramatically smoother.

The tile transformed the feel of the room. The original burgundy and pink tile made the space feel dark and dated, and the new tile brightens everything up with a clean, modern palette. Rather than stopping at the shower opening, the tile extends across the entire wall — wrapping around the shower, past the dividing wall, and continuing behind the toilet. It's a unified, floor-to-ceiling look that gives even a kids' bathroom a real sense of polish.

Quartz tops the dividing wall between the shower and toilet, wraps the window sill, and lines the bottom and sides of the shower niche. It gives these flat surfaces a clean, seamless finish and an extra layer of protection wherever water might collect.

The clients wanted to do this remodel once and do it right, and the fixtures reflect that. The shower hardware is finished in champagne bronze — as pricey as the name implies — but it's the kind of detail that turns a bathroom into something special. Same philosophy with the heated tile floors: a luxury, sure, but one the whole family appreciates on dark Seattle mornings when bare feet hit warm tile instead of cold.