




This one started at bare bones. Studs exposed, plumbing roughed in, subfloor down - the kind of blank canvas that lets you build everything the right way from the ground up. That's actually how we prefer it. When you strip a bathroom all the way back, nothing gets hidden behind the finished work.
We used moisture-resistant board throughout the walls before anything else went up. It's the kind of detail that doesn't show once the job is done, but it matters a lot for longevity - especially in a wet space like this. Getting the bones right is what separates a bathroom that holds up for 15 years from one that starts showing problems in two.
The shower is where a lot of the character lives here. Large-format wall tile with a clean, stone-like finish, a herringbone mosaic floor, a built-in niche, and a ceiling-mount rain head paired with a handheld. The frameless glass panel keeps it feeling open. Recessed lighting overhead pulls it all together without cluttering the ceiling.
The vanity area came together just as sharp. Floating white cabinetry with a white quartz countertop, double undermount sinks, chrome fixtures, and a tall linen tower for storage. The large mirror and the pendant-style light bar above it give the whole wall a polished, hotel-quality feel. The same large-format charcoal floor tile ties both spaces together seamlessly.
From the roughed-in shell to the finished result, this South Boston bathroom remodel is a good example of what a full gut renovation can actually deliver when every phase gets the same level of attention.