Curbless shower
Recessed pan, linear drain, and a subfloor rebuilt when the slab or framing in a Colonial Park Ridge home requires it.
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Design-build accessible bathroom remodel planned for Colonial homes in 1920s-1970s
Delta - Bathroom and Kitchen Remodeling is a Inner Suburbs accessible bathroom design firm working in Park Ridge, Illinois, on Colonial homes from the 1920s-1970s era. Curbless showers, grab-bar blocking, and comfort-height fixtures are layout decisions designed in from the first walkthrough.
Accessibility in a Park Ridge bathroom does not mean institutional. Local projects often start with this condition: Original pre-war bathrooms with character alongside basic post-war layouts, both needing full renovation. The goal is independent daily use that still reads as a premium residential space, with universal design layered in from the layout stage rather than retrofitted.
Pricing is shaped by cabinetry specification, finish level, structural work, and how much the layout moves. Every project is priced after an in-home visit.
| Tier | Range | What's typical |
|---|---|---|
| Accessibility-aware refresh | $28K–$45K | New comfort-height fixtures, grab bar installation, lever hardware, slip-resistant tile. Same footprint. |
| Curbless shower conversion | $15,000–$40,000 | Recessed pan and linear drain, walk-in or roll-in shower, blocking for future grab bars, comfort-height vanity, accessible storage. |
| Full universal-design suite | $40,000 and up | Rebuilt subfloor, custom roll-under vanity, integrated lighting, transfer-friendly door swings, premium tile, full mobility planning. |
Accessible bathroom remodels in Park Ridge generally track the local bathroom range of $15,000 to $40,000, shaped by curbless conversion, subfloor or drain work, doorway widening, and finish level.
Recessed pan, linear drain, and a subfloor rebuilt when the slab or framing in a Colonial Park Ridge home requires it.
In-wall blocking goes in at every realistic future grab-bar location during the remodel, even when the visible bars are installed later.
A 60-inch turning circle, 30-by-48-inch clear approaches, and transfer-safe door swings, planned against the existing room footprint.
City of Park Ridge Community Preservation and Development Department. The City operates a seven-member Historic Preservation Commission that recommends landmark and historic district designations to City Council; non-busy-season permit review targets two weeks, busy-season (May through September) extends that window. We submit, schedule inspections, and close out the project.
Ranch and split-level homes in Park Ridge already solve the hardest aging-in-place problem: no stairs between the bedroom and the bathroom. An accessible remodel builds on that advantage with a curbless shower, clear floor space, and in-wall blocking, so the house stays livable for decades.
1920s-1970s Park Ridge ranches were built with compact hall bathrooms sized for a tub-shower combo. Recovering usable space, removing the curb, and planning a 30-by-48-inch approach is a layout change that decides how much of the bathroom stays or gets rebuilt.
When mobility needs arrive suddenly in a Park Ridge home, the bathroom is the highest-risk room. Because the living space is already on one level, an accessible bathroom is often the single change that keeps the whole house working.
Accessibility begins with floor space, door clearance, and shower geometry. In a Colonial home the bathroom can carry the same tile, lighting, and vanity quality as any premium remodel while supporting independent use.
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Park Ridge is the only inner-suburb community on Delta - Bathroom and Kitchen Remodeling' service map with an actively designating Historic Preservation Commission that evaluates candidate landmarks and districts. For remodels on candidate or designated properties, that adds a preservation-review step that neighboring Skokie and Niles do not administer at the same level.
Most accessible bathroom projects in Park Ridge run four to eight weeks from demolition through final walkthrough. Curbless shower conversions that require rebuilding the subfloor or relocating the drain trend toward the longer end. The schedule is locked before contract signature.
Accessible bathroom projects in Park Ridge generally track the local bathroom remodel range of $15,000 to $40,000, with curbless shower conversions, in-wall blocking, and clear floor space shaping where a project lands. Park Ridge has a diverse housing stock spanning multiple eras. Costs vary based on the home's age, existing conditions, and the scope of structural work needed. Every project is priced after an in-home visit.
Yes. City of Park Ridge Community Preservation and Development Department. The City operates a seven-member Historic Preservation Commission that recommends landmark and historic district designations to City Council; non-busy-season permit review targets two weeks, busy-season (May through September) extends that window. Curbless shower conversions, drain relocation, and doorway widening commonly require permits and inspections. We submit the permit set, coordinate inspections, and close out the project so homeowners never deal with the building department directly.
Yes. The same project is searched as a handicap-accessible, wheelchair-accessible, ADA, senior, or aging-in-place bathroom. In Park Ridge we design it as an accessible bathroom: a curbless or roll-in shower, a 30-by-48-inch clear approach, in-wall blocking for grab bars, comfort-height fixtures, and a roll-under vanity, planned into a room that still reads as a high-end residential bathroom rather than a hospital fixture set.
No. In a Colonial Park Ridge home, curbless showers, comfort-height fixtures, blocking for future grab bars, and clear floor space are specified inside the same tile, stone, and lighting language as any premium remodel. The goal is independent daily use that never signals institutional or hospital aesthetics.
ADA compliance is a commercial code standard. Park Ridge homes are designed ADA-informed, which pulls the relevant clearances, fixture heights, transfer zones, and grab-bar locations into a residential design sized to the actual home and household rather than a code-minimum public restroom.
Tell us about the room. We will follow up within one business day with the next step. No high-pressure sales call.
"I started this firm in 1987. Every project carries the same standard I'd apply to my own home."
A team member will be in touch within one business day. If it is urgent, call (847) 847-4148.