That makes sense, thanks! Admittedly, I’m not sure I’d be wiping down the floor everytime I showered if I splashed a bunch of water each and every time.
Wet bathroom sounds amazing, I now want one when I buy a place.
Comment on Do really large people need special bathtubs/showers to keep water from getting everywhere?
Toes@ani.social 11 months ago
In my experience doing home repair calls, they’re neglecting the environment they are living in. This isn’t unique to obese people but I’m sure it contributes strongly to their apathetic nature. So you’re likely right that the water is just splashing around and left to sit cause they aren’t agile enough or don’t care enough to take care of the environment they are living in.
You can make a wet bathroom, these are popular in Asian communities where the entire bathroom is a shower.
That makes sense, thanks! Admittedly, I’m not sure I’d be wiping down the floor everytime I showered if I splashed a bunch of water each and every time.
Wet bathroom sounds amazing, I now want one when I buy a place.
Yeah I had one in my first apartment miss that a bunch.
Another cause is water coming in from the side of the building or when the cable guy drills through the wall and calls it good.
That’s how Chinese bathrooms are. You have your shower over the toilet and sink and it helps keep them clean.
FireRetardant@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Even without the entire bathroom being a shower, having the entire bathroom be water tight with a drain just seems like the right idea. Drippings/splashes from the shower, common location for plumbing repairs, clogged toilet, in general a humid place. Building it not water proof is just setting up for failure.