|
|
| Frank Webb’s Accessible Living Bath Design Center
comprises almost one-third of the company’s newest showroom, and provides more
than a dozen displays showcasing innovative accessible design ideas. |
|
Frank
Webb’s Accessible Living Bath Design Center comprises almost one-third of the
company’s newest showroom, and provides more than a dozen displays showcasing
innovative accessible design ideas.
“While companies like
American Standard, Toto and Jacuzzi have created attractive comfort-height
toilets and walk-in tubs, we have taken this a step further,” explains Pope.
“We didn’t just want to show available product options, we wanted to create
bathrooms that take mainstream products and show how they can be adapted to
meet accessible living needs. We want this Accessible Living Bath Center to be
a catalyst for new thinking, better design and solving people’s challenges.”
“I
have been specializing in residential accessible design for 25 years,” says
Jacqueline
Dobson, founder and senior designer for Watertown, Mass.-based
SOLUTIONS for Accessibility, “and this is the first resource in New England
that affords my clients the opportunity to actually see the products I specify
in their bath designs. Until now, though I would make recommendations for
products to meet their specific needs, we could generally only review the
products in catalogs.”
According to Dobson, who had a medical/therapy background
before opening her access design firm in the 1980s, “I am thrilled to have a
resource like Frank Webb’s Bath Center. It makes such a difference for my
clients to visit a beautiful showroom, actually see and touch the products that
we’ve discussed, and to talk to the showroom team about their plans. We all
work together and it makes a huge difference.”
|
|
| Vignettes showcase lavs with hands-free faucets and a double-vanity
where the right side has storage below the countertop and the
left side leaves room for knees to fit underneath. |
|
Dobson
isn’t the only New England professional welcoming Frank Webb’s Accessible
Living Bath Design Center.
“It’s
wonderful to have someone in our own community that is also focusing on
bathroom accessibility issues,” said
Dennis Conlin,
president of Methuen-based Conlin’s Pharmacy and Medical Equipment. “We’ve been
servicing the medical equipment needs of residents with accessibility issues in
Massachusetts and New Hampshire for more than 20 years, and now with Frank
Webb’s Bath Center we can actually refer clients to a resource that not only is
well-versed in accessible design products for the bath, but shows them on the
showroom floor. This is a great community alliance that will benefit both
companies, but more importantly, truly benefit the residents of the area.”
|
|
| There are displays that show new tile shower designs that have
slanted floors and drainage that do not require a lip (or curb) for someone to
step over. |
|
The
Frank Webb’s Accessible Living Bath Center showcases baths with hands-free
faucets, a double-vanity where the right side has storage below the countertop
and the left side leaves room for knees to fit underneath, and a removable
shower seat. There are displays that show new tile shower designs that have
slanted floors and drainage that do not require a lip (or curb) for someone to
step over.
According
to the showroom manager
Danielle Frank, “We’d like to be a
resource center for people to think about this in a much more elegant way.”
Frank and her staff work directly with consumers or with their designers and
contractors. “We love putting the right product together with the right
application,” she continued. “While many of these products meet ADA standards,
others meet requirements of aging-in-place retirees. We encourage homeowners to
work with a knowledgeable architect, designer or contractor to make sure what
we provide works on the installation end to provide the bathroom they imagine.”
For
additional information, call the Frank Webb’s Bath Center in Methuen, Mass., at
781/325-7140 or visit www.frankwebb.com.All photos by John Ferrarone.