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More Homeowners Bring Luxury Into the Bathroom

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From the Associated Press

One day soon, Leslie Blakey will relax. She’ll soak in her new master bath, fully stretched out in a deep tub with a breeze floating in from the French doors leading to her balcony.

“At the end of a really long week, you just really want to have that place you can go and it’s your special nest and you can burrow in it,” said Blakey, a public affairs consultant.

But not quite yet.

Blakey, 53, and her husband have been living in and renovating a former halfway house in Washington, D.C., for four years and they’re just now planning their master bath. They’ve picked out marble tile and granite countertops and are looking at fixtures for their walk-in shower, where they hope to have three sprays.

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They’re part of a growing number of people who want to bring luxury into their baths, manufacturers and analysts say. Companies such as Kohler Co. and American Standard Cos. are responding with products such as tubs with therapeutic lighting, shower heads disguised in bath tiles and an electronically controlled shower system that remembers settings for temperature, water pressure and number of sprays.

With the housing market cooling, homeowners are looking at renovations to boost resale value and distinguish their homes from others on the market, said Michael Wandschneider, Kohler’s senior product manager for performance showering products. For many of them, renovations start in the bathroom.

“It’s something the homeowner immediately recognizes as a value to them as they are shopping from a variety of similarly priced homes,” he said.

The amount of money Americans have spent on high-end luxury bath remodeling -- jobs worth $8,000 or more -- has nearly tripled since 2003 while the number of jobs almost doubled, according to the annual market forecast by trade publication Kitchen and Bath Business Magazine. This year, homeowners are expected to do more than 920,000 luxury remodels and spend more than $21.7 billion, up 18.5% from last year, according to this year’s forecast.

The trend isn’t limited to higher-end homes either, Wandschneider said. Homeowners at all levels want luxury and they’re willing to pay for it, he said.

Baby boomers, who are now more apt to stay in their homes during retirement, are helping drive this movement, said Mark Delaney, director of home improvement for the NPD Group Inc., a market research firm in Port Washington, N.Y. Boomers recognize the value that renovating their homes adds, both to their lifestyle and when they decide to sell.

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“We’re actually seeing them hold on to those homes and start to pour money into them, at a large increasing rate,” he said.

Sales of home improvement products as tracked by NPD rose 15% from 2004 to last year. Typically, sales grow only 2% or 3% a year, Delaney said.

People in their late 20s to early 40s show similar patterns of home improvement, possibly adding luxury because they are accustomed to it from a younger age, he said. Sales of home improvement products for people in Generation X jumped 10.8% from 2004 to last year, Delaney said.

Kohler is going after the boomer market, designing products that can help them as they age, said Cindy Howley, manager of the Kohler Design Center. One designer suite at the center shows grab bars that blend into bathrooms and countertops that can be raised or lowered. Cabinets on wheels can be moved throughout the tiled room, and the bathtub has an extended entry at wheelchair height, for people with limited mobility.

Overflow bathtubs with recirculating water are gaining in popularity, Howley said. And bathtubs are getting deeper, often plunging to 2 feet deep, well past the standard 14-inch-deep tub. But many homeowners are looking exclusively at their showers, enlarging them and adding products like a recirculating, vertical whirlpool for $3,600 or placing tile-like showerheads at a cost of $120 each, she said.

The company recently introduced a digital device that can be programmed to remember shower settings such as temperature, water pressure and direction from up to eight sprays. Basic components for the product retail for about $2,000.

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