Trends New Zealand Volume 35 No 2 | Page 30

Previous pages: With a trough sink for two in a long vanity to the left and bath and concrete shelf/seat to the right, the bathroom makes optimum use of available space. Wainscoting was also popular in classic Mid-century Modern designs, but here Bustamante has set it flush to the wall for a fresher aesthetic. Above: The large bedhead in the master bedroom continues the use of wood. This fronts a walk-in dressing room area behind. search | save | share at also includes the contemporary advantage of two powered pull-out grooming stations. And while a mirror would have been expected in the past, setting this flush with the large-format wall tiles is a more modern design convention.” These were only some of the accent changes from the original style in the luxury bathroom. “Mid-century Modern dedicated makeup areas from the 1950s to 1970s would often echo Hollywood backstage rooms, with bulbs dotted around the mirror. But for this space, we designed a clean-lined affair, that opens to reveal a tilt-up mirror, storage and integrated lighting. “And where an ornate shelf system or even full walls might have brought privacy for the toilet in a classic Mid-century bathroom, here we went with a frosted glass privacy partition.” This features a slender medicine cabinet on one side and a magazine cabinet on the other. Bustamante created the shower zone with a stall in the same aqua tone as the privacy wall. A freestanding cube element – straddled by the frameless glass of the shower stall – acts as a handy bench in the shower on one side of the glass and as a shelf for the freestanding tub on the other side.