<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><!-- generator=Zoho Sites --><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><atom:link href="https://www.wholellc.com/blogs/tag/residential-design/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title>Whole LLC - Blog #Residential design</title><description>Whole LLC - Blog #Residential design</description><link>https://www.wholellc.com/blogs/tag/residential-design</link><lastBuildDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2026 05:46:05 -0700</lastBuildDate><generator>http://zoho.com/sites/</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Your Home Looks Beautiful. So Why Does It Not Feel Right?]]></title><link>https://www.wholellc.com/blogs/post/modern-farmhouse-custom-home-alabama</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://www.wholellc.com/AdobeStock_1107928820.jpeg"/>If your home looks beautiful but never quite feels right, you are not alone. Families across Auburn, Birmingham, Huntsville and Lake Martin are discovering what a modern farmhouse built around their life actually feels like.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_yj13w6IEQrWBUjTWPCkIlw" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_WhC2oEjZSKeAOfxHh8padg" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_J3dYFubxR5yqE9JF8UWoSQ" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_mvM1rInGT-2Ju2JcFPEx4g" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p></p><div><p style="text-align:left;"></p></div></div><div><p><span style="font-family:&quot;MS Serif&quot;, sans-serif;font-size:48px;font-weight:700;text-align:left;">Why Does Your Home Feel Wrong Inside?</span></p><p style="text-align:left;">From the outside, your home is lovely. People compliment it. It photographs well. On paper it checks every box. But every single day you walk through it and something feels just slightly off. The rooms do not flow the way you want them to. The kitchen is gorgeous but somehow it always feels crowded. The living room is big enough but it never quite settles into the cozy warmth you had in your head when you bought it. It looks like a home. It just does not feel like yours. You are not being picky. You are noticing something real. Most homes in Auburn, Huntsville, Birmingham and Montgomery are built to look good in a listing photo. The finishes are chosen for broad appeal. The layout is designed to work for the widest possible range of buyers. The result is a home that pleases everyone a little and no one completely. And it is more common than you might think.<span style="font-weight:bold;"> A Zillow survey found that 75 percent of recent home buyers have at least one regret about the home they purchased. Nearly 90 percent of people who built new construction wish they had made different decisions during the process.</span> Those numbers are not about bad homes. They are about homes that were never designed around how someone actually lives. A modern farmhouse done right solves this from the ground up. Not because of the style itself, but because of what the style stands for. Warmth that is real, not staged. Spaces that feel generous without feeling empty. A home that looks exactly as good on a rainy Alabama Tuesday as it does in a magazine.</p><p style="text-align:left;"><br/></p><h2 style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-size:32px;">Spend Where It Counts</span></h2><p style="text-align:left;">Here is something most people do not hear until they are already deep into a build: custom design is not about upgrading everything. It is about figuring out where your investment will actually change how you feel in your home every single day, and putting it there instead of spreading it thin across a list of features that sound impressive but do not move the needle. Production homes cannot do this. They are built to appeal to the broadest possible buyer, which means every room gets the same level of finish and the same assumptions about how people live. The kitchen gets quartz because quartz sells. The living room gets a fireplace because fireplaces photograph well. But nobody asked you what matters to your family. We worked with a couple in Auburn who knew exactly what mattered to them. They wanted a fireplace that reminded them of evenings at a grandparent's house, the kind with real river rock that feels like it has been there forever. So we designed around that. The stonework was a real investment. But it became the emotional centerpiece of the entire home, the thing that made the living room feel like theirs and nobody else's.</p><p style="text-align:left;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:left;">They did not need premium finishes in every room. They needed one thing done with real intention, and it changed the entire feel of the house.</p><p style="text-align:left;">That is what thoughtful design looks like. Not a checklist of luxury finishes. A conversation about what matters most, and then the discipline to put the budget there.</p><p style="text-align:left;">For most families, the places where quality makes the biggest daily impact come down to three areas. The primary bathroom, because it is the most personal space in the house and the first room you experience every morning. The kitchen, because it is where you gather, cook and host. And outdoor living, because in Auburn and across Alabama, a covered porch with the right details is basically a second living room for eight months of the year. Get those three right and the rest of the home can be solid and well built without needing to be extravagant.</p><p style="text-align:left;"><br/></p><h2 style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-size:32px;">Layout Over Size</span></h2><p style="text-align:left;">One of the biggest misconceptions in home building is that bigger is always better. A third of recent home buyers said their home felt too small. But in many of those cases, the problem was not the square footage. It was how the square footage was used. We have seen it across hundreds of projects from Lake Martin to Birmingham. A well designed 2,800 square foot home can live bigger than a poorly planned 3,400 square foot one. The difference comes from eliminating wasted space: the formal dining room nobody uses, the oversized foyer that looks impressive in a rendering but just collects shoes, the hallway that is wider than it needs to be while the pantry barely holds a week of groceries. In a custom home, every square foot has a job. A flex room near the main living area might function as a home office during the week, a reading room in the evening and a guest bedroom when family visits. A mudroom that also serves as a pet transition zone and a package landing spot. A pantry that is deep enough to actually organize rather than just deep enough to close the door on. This is the kind of planning that does not show up in a listing photo but changes how a home feels from the very first week you live in it.</p><p style="text-align:left;"><br/></p><h2 style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-size:32px;">Design for Your Life</span></h2><p style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-weight:bold;">Here is something production home builders never ask you: do you have dogs?</span> In Auburn, the answer is almost always yes. And the way a family with a large energetic dog moves through their home is completely different from a family without one. But standard floor plans do not account for that. We worked with a family who had dealt with exactly this in their previous home. They had a big golden retriever they adored, but every time guests came over they had to lock the dog in the mudroom. The dog would bark nonstop because it could not see what was happening. They would end up taking it for a walk in the middle of hosting just to calm it down. In their custom home, we designed the mudroom a bit larger, right off one side of the kitchen, with space for a dog crate and a Dutch door. That Dutch door changed everything. The dog could stick its head over the top, see the family, get a treat from someone walking by and still feel part of the action. But it could not bolt into the kitchen or run over a visiting toddler. The family got their evenings back. The dog stopped barking. And it did not require a dedicated dog room or a major budget increase. It required someone to ask the right question before the first wall went up. That is the kind of detail that turns a house into a home that actually works.</p><p style="text-align:left;"><br/></p><h2 style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-size:32px;">Name That Feeling</span></h2><p style="text-align:left;">It is called living in a home that was built for you. Not built for a neighborhood. Not built for a price point. Built around the way you cook, the way you entertain, the way your kids move through the house after school, the way you want to feel when you walk in at the end of a long day. Built around whether you have a 90 pound golden retriever who needs to be part of the action or a collection of river rocks from your childhood that deserves a place by the fire. Most of our clients can tell us within five minutes what they would change about their current home. That conversation is where good design starts. Not with a wish list of finishes. With the truth about what is not working and what has always felt slightly off. We have been having that conversation with families across Auburn, Lake Martin, Birmingham, Huntsville, Montgomery and throughout the Southeast since 2016. Over more than 500 projects, it starts the same way nearly every time. Someone says, I love my home but something has always felt off. And we say, tell us more.</p><p style="text-align:left;"><br/></p><h2 style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-size:32px;">Stop Settling</span></h2><p style="text-align:left;">If this puts words to something you have been feeling for a while, that is not a coincidence. It means the home you actually want is closer than you think, whether you are in Auburn, looking at land near Lake Martin, or planning a build anywhere across Alabama.</p><p style="text-align:left;"><a href="/contact" title="Visit wholellc.com to book your free consultation and let us start with the conversation that changes everything." rel="" style="font-weight:bold;">Visit wholellc.com to book your free consultation and let us start with the conversation that changes everything.</a></p></div></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_i-ibnFmNQdSfRkFBjqsM9A" data-element-type="button" class="zpelement zpelem-button "><style></style><div class="zpbutton-container zpbutton-align-center zpbutton-align-mobile-center zpbutton-align-tablet-center"><style type="text/css"></style><a class="zpbutton-wrapper zpbutton zpbutton-type-primary zpbutton-size-md zpbutton-style-none " href="/contact" target="_blank"><span class="zpbutton-content">Get Started Now</span></a></div>
</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Sun, 22 Mar 2026 20:35:55 -0500</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Home You've Always Pictured Is Closer Than You Think]]></title><link>https://www.wholellc.com/blogs/post/home-you-picture</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://www.wholellc.com/WhatsApp Image 2026-02-18 at 03.46.39 -1-.jpeg"/>Explore Alabama's most stunning custom home styles — from Lake Martin waterfront retreats to luxury brick estates. See how Whole Construction Solutions brings your vision to life, one detail at a time.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_TZrKRjRaT9-YAdeyBb9O1A" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_alYCdEuuR_SxPboii-_xjQ" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_jCmAUtnfSgah2wh0lHvHmA" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_thiLR6LdTgqFK6vlyexgjA" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><p></p><div><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:6pt;"><span style="font-style:italic;">A look inside Alabama's most beautiful custom home styles and what makes each one unforgettable</span></p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:15pt;"><span style="font-style:italic;">By Whole Construction Solutions LLC&nbsp; ·&nbsp; Auburn, Alabama</span></p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">──────────────────────────────────────────────</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">There's a particular moment that happens when someone steps into a home that was designed specifically for them. They don't just say &quot;this is nice.&quot; They go quiet for a second. And then they say, &quot;this is exactly right.&quot;</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">That feeling doesn't happen by accident. It happens when a home has been thought through: not just how it looks, but how you move through it in the morning, how the light falls in the afternoon, how it holds the people you love on a Friday night. Every detail considered. Every space intentional.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">Here in Alabama, from the waterfront lots at Lake Martin to the rolling neighborhoods of Auburn, the historic streets of Birmingham to the emerging estates of Huntsville, we're seeing a new era of custom home design. One that blends timeless Southern character with modern sophistication. One that doesn't look like a neighborhood. It looks like someone.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">We're sharing four of the most compelling design styles we work with, and what makes each one worth knowing about.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">──────────────────────────────────────────────</p><h2 style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:8pt;">01&nbsp; ·&nbsp; The Lakefront Home: Living Where the Water Reflects the Sky</h2><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">There is no design challenge more rewarding or more specific than a home built for the water.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">A true lakefront home isn't just a house with a view. It's a home that's been oriented around that view from the first sketch. Floor to ceiling glass positioned to frame the cove at golden hour. Multi level rear decks that step down toward the dock like a conversation happening between the house and the water. A great room that flows outdoors so seamlessly you're never quite sure where inside ends.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-left:36pt;margin-right:36pt;margin-bottom:16pt;"><span style="font-style:italic;">&quot;The best lake homes feel like they grew there, as if the land always knew a house was coming.&quot;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">At Lake Martin, one of Alabama's most coveted waterfront destinations, we've had the privilege of designing homes that honor the setting without trying to compete with it. Exteriors in deep charcoal and warm cedar that disappear into the tree line. Interiors bathed in natural light. Roof lines that echo the slope of the hillside.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">What most people don't realize is how much goes into getting a waterfront home right before a single wall goes up. The orientation. The sight lines. How the topography affects the basement level. How a covered porch can extend the livable season by months. These are not afterthoughts. They are the foundation of a home that will be extraordinary for generations.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">If you've been holding onto a waterfront lot, or dreaming about one, this is the kind of design that makes the investment undeniable.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">──────────────────────────────────────────────</p><h2 style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:8pt;">02&nbsp; ·&nbsp; The Modern Farmhouse: When Warmth and Sophistication Share the Same Roof</h2><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">The modern farmhouse has earned its place in the canon of American home design. Not as a trend, but as a philosophy. It says: I want a home that feels genuinely lived in. And I want it to look beautiful doing it.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">The best examples of this style aren't the ones that simply add shiplap and call it a day. They're the homes where the exterior, with board and batten siding, metal roofing, and deep covered porches, flows naturally into interiors with soaring ceilings, wide plank floors, and a kitchen designed for people who actually cook.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-left:36pt;margin-right:36pt;margin-bottom:16pt;"><span style="font-style:italic;">&quot;The magic of a modern farmhouse is that it's equally at home on five acres of Alabama countryside or a premier lot in a suburban neighborhood.&quot;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">What makes the style work in our region is how naturally it adapts to the Southern landscape. A broad front porch is not decoration. It is a room. A mudroom is not an afterthought. It is the first thing a family reaches for at the end of the day. When these elements are designed from the beginning as part of the home rather than additions to it, the result is something that feels rooted and right.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">We work with clients to take the farmhouse silhouette, with steep gables, honest materials, and generous proportions, and make it theirs. Sometimes that means a more traditional exterior with a dramatically modern interior. Sometimes it means a home that reads as farmhouse at every turn. Either way, the result is a home that photographs beautifully and, more importantly, lives beautifully.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">──────────────────────────────────────────────</p><h2 style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:8pt;">03&nbsp; ·&nbsp; The Fully Custom Luxury Home: No Compromises. No Template. Just Yours.</h2><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">Most people have spent years accumulating a mental list. The butler's pantry with the right countertop depth. The primary suite that feels like a private retreat rather than just a large bedroom. The entry hall that makes a quiet statement when guests walk in. The home office with the window that faces the right direction.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">A fully custom luxury home is the only opportunity to turn that list into reality. Not approximately, not close enough, but exactly.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">This is where our process is designed to be genuinely different. We begin with a conversation that's less about specifications and more about life. How do you actually use your home? Who comes over on weekends? What's the first thing you do in the morning, and where do you do it? What did your last home get wrong that still quietly bothers you?</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-left:36pt;margin-right:36pt;margin-bottom:16pt;"><span style="font-style:italic;">&quot;The details that make a custom home extraordinary are usually the ones only you would think to ask for.&quot;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">The result of that process is a home that couldn't have been designed for anyone else, because it wasn't. The proportions of each room calibrated to how you use it. The exterior character that feels genuinely personal rather than pulled from a catalog. The small decisions, the height of the windows, the placement of the mudroom bench, the way the staircase lands, all accumulate into something unmistakably yours.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">Luxury isn't a price point. It's precision. And precision starts with listening before drawing.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">──────────────────────────────────────────────</p><h2 style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:8pt;">04&nbsp; ·&nbsp; Southern Traditional &amp; Brick Estates: The Architecture of Belonging</h2><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">Certain homes have an authority that newer styles simply haven't earned yet. You know them when you see them: the brick facade that looks like it was always there, the symmetrical windows that frame a gracious front porch, the gabled rooflines that give the home a sense of permanence against the Alabama sky.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">The Southern traditional home, when done well, is not nostalgic. It's confident. It speaks a visual language that has been refined for generations, and it does so without apology.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">What we bring to this style is the ability to honor its proportions and character while meeting the expectations of how people actually want to live today. The grand foyer that opens to a well connected floor plan. The formal dining room that transitions naturally to an indoor outdoor living space. The timeless brick exterior paired with a primary suite that rivals any modern luxury home.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-left:36pt;margin-right:36pt;margin-bottom:16pt;"><span style="font-style:italic;">&quot;The goal is a home that looks like it's been here for a hundred years and will be here for a hundred more.&quot;</span></p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">We've worked on estates across Alabama where the brief was simple: build something that belongs. Something the family will be proud to pass down. Something that adds to the neighborhood rather than simply occupying space in it. That's not a small request, but it is one we've been answering, one home at a time, since 2016.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">Whether the setting is a large lot in a Birmingham suburb, a premier parcel near Auburn, or a new development in Huntsville, this style brings a sense of arrival and permanence that no other design achieves quite the same way.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">──────────────────────────────────────────────</p><h2 style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:8pt;">The Right Home Begins With the Right Conversation</h2><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">If any of these visions stirred something in you, if you found yourself lingering on one of these ideas and thinking <span style="font-style:italic;">&quot;yes, that's what I want&quot; </span>that feeling is worth a conversation. At Whole Construction Solutions, we don't start with blueprints. We start with you: how you live, how you entertain, what you've always wished your home could be. Then we draw it.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:10pt;">We work across Auburn, Lake Martin, Birmingham, Montgomery, Huntsville, and throughout the Southeast. Every project begins with an initial consultation, a real conversation about your vision, your lot, your life.</p><p style="text-align:left;margin-bottom:8pt;"><span style="font-weight:700;font-style:italic;"><a href="/contact" title="When you're ready, we'd love to hear what you've been imagining." rel="">When you're ready, we'd love to hear what you've been imagining.</a></span></p><div><span style="font-weight:700;font-style:italic;"><br/></span></div><p></p></div></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Fri, 06 Mar 2026 08:44:45 -0600</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[Should You Do a Jack and Jill Bathroom?]]></title><link>https://www.wholellc.com/blogs/post/should-you-do-a-jack-and-jill-bathroom</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://www.wholellc.com/J-J Bath Web.jpg"/>A practical look at Jack and Jill bathrooms. We break down the real pros and cons, how much space they actually save, what they cost compared to separate baths, and when a shared bathroom makes sense versus when it becomes a daily frustration.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_7hn8g3XqQje7OZuDjmtpVg" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_VZKE1sqQQpGzi2CLTHlSXw" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_SAMySXniSKK-Xnd3Rwk9jw" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_eivpYsnCQo6dHcwkdGNDpA" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><span>Pros, Cons, and Real-World Tradeoffs&nbsp;</span></h2></div>
<div data-element-id="elm_ofV_mrITSAKuW2wE8--HQg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><span style="font-size:18px;"><br/></span></div><div style="text-align:left;"><span style="font-size:18px;"><div><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Jack and Jill bathrooms are a classic solution in homes with kids. One bathroom sits between two bedrooms, usually with two doors and a shared tub or shower. On paper, it sounds efficient: one bathroom, two bedrooms, less plumbing, less cleaning.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">In reality, the decision is a little more nuanced.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">The Upside of a Jack and Jill Bathroom</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">One bathroom serves two bedrooms. This is the obvious benefit. For kids' rooms, it can feel more convenient than walking down a hall, especially at night.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Fewer fixtures to clean. One toilet, one tub, one shower. If you are the one cleaning the bathrooms, this is not nothing.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Potential plumbing efficiency. When done well, a shared wet wall can slightly reduce plumbing runs compared to two fully separate baths. This can help a little with construction cost, but it is rarely dramatic.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Works well for younger kids. For small children who do not need much privacy and are on similar schedules, a shared bath can function just fine.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">The Downsides (and Why People Regret Them)</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">They do not save as much space as people think. This is the biggest misconception. Jack and Jill bathrooms often require extra circulation space, two doors, and clearances that limit efficient layouts. In many plans, a compact hall bath plus a short hallway takes up about the same square footage.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Doors are always a problem. Two doors introduce privacy issues if someone forgets to lock, door swing conflicts, and noise and light bleeding into bedrooms. Pocket doors help, but they add cost and complexity.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Morning traffic jams. Two kids, one sink, one toilet, one shower. This is fine at age six and a headache at age sixteen. Even with dual vanities, the toilet and shower remain shared choke points.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Aging poorly as kids get older. What works for elementary school often fails in the teenage years. Privacy matters more, schedules diverge, and the shared setup becomes a daily friction point.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Resale is mixed. Some buyers like Jack and Jill baths. Others see them as a compromise. A true ensuite plus a hall bath is often easier to market.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">Cost: Are Jack and Jill Bathrooms Cheaper?</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Usually, not by much.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">You still need a full bathroom's worth of fixtures. You add doors, trim, and sometimes more framing. You often lose efficiency in layout.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">In many cases, the cost difference between one Jack and Jill bathroom and two small, simple bathrooms is smaller than expected.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">When a Jack and Jill Makes Sense</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">A Jack and Jill bathroom works best for younger children, tight floor plans where another bathroom truly does not fit, secondary or guest bedroom pairs, and homes where minimizing cleaning is a priority.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">When You Should Avoid One</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Skip the Jack and Jill in teen-heavy households, homes with frequent guests, layouts that already feel circulation-heavy, or when a small hall bath would work just as well.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">A Better Alternative in Many Homes</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Often, the most functional solution is one compact hall bathroom with bedrooms accessed from a short, efficient hallway and clear separation between sleeping and bathing zones. It is simpler, easier to live with long term, and often no larger overall.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">Bottom Line</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Jack and Jill bathrooms are not bad design, but they are not the space-saving miracle they are often sold as. They trade square footage efficiency and long-term flexibility for fewer fixtures and slightly easier cleaning.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">If you are designing for young kids and a tight plan, they can work. If you are designing for longevity, privacy, and resale, two simple bathrooms or a hall bath often win.</p><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Like most things in residential design, the right answer depends less on theory and more on how people actually live in the house.</p><h2 style="font-weight:normal;margin-bottom:15px;">Need Help with Your Bathroom Layout?</h2><p style="margin-bottom:20px;">Every home is different, and the right bathroom configuration depends on your family's specific needs, your floor plan constraints, and how you plan to use the space long term. If you are working through layout decisions for a new build, we can help you evaluate the tradeoffs and design a solution that actually works for how you live. Contact Whole Construction Solutions to talk through your project.</p></div><br/></span></div><p></p></div>
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