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- Feb 12, 2020
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This ties in to my thread on the guest bathroom/laundry room renovation and the one on my Ensuite renovation.
We've already replaced the toilet in Mom's bathroom to be ADA height. It wasn't cheap. We still have 2 standard height toilets (re-using the one from her bathroom & have another unboxed one). I've gotten accustomed to the taller toilet & rather than try to buy new toilets, I wanted to build platforms to raise them up a few inches.
I've been trying to think of the best way to do this. I was initially thinking 2x4s but I saw that pressure treated 3x4 landscaping timbers are under $5 and would provide more support.
I would have them so they are 4" wide and 3" tall (they are supposedly exact height). I can use the table saw and someone said they saw band saws in my workshop that I could use to trim things up if need be. I also have multiple sanders.
I was thinking of making a sort of rectangle, leaving the back squared off, and having the front rounded to the contour of the toilet. There can be a little lip sticking out from under the toilet to make sure it doesn't ever slip off.
I would secure the frame to the floor somehow and make sure it is level. The toilet flange would then be installed in the frame (possibly recessed). I would have parts notched for the flange/drain to fit.
Dimensions along with my sketch of the frame (which is not to scale)
I need to do a better drawing, but I know the widest point of the toilet is 9-1/4". The boards would be 4" wide. If I spaced them so they were 9-1/2" wide on the sides, I would basically have to notch out in the middle for the flange.
I'm debating whether or not to have luan or thin plywood over the top and let the flange recess into it-- but I will want to have a notch for the toilet bolts and have something under them so the don't fall out of reach. Granted, they will be secured with nuts.
This is my rough sketch of base framing before cuts:
Obviously, I will have to compensate for the curved edges of the timbers. I can put the toilet base on some large poster paper and trace out the shape for a template to cut & sand it to the right size/shape. I will mark where the bolt holes are to make sure I get the flange right. It might not be so easy to drill in to the self-leveling flooring stuff I put down, but I might find some masonry bits that will do the trick. The other bathroom won't have that problem. I can level the platforms independently of the floor if need be so the toilet will be level even if the rest of the floor isn't. I will paint the platform and seal it up well.
Has anyone tried something like this? Any better ideas? does this seem feasible?
We've already replaced the toilet in Mom's bathroom to be ADA height. It wasn't cheap. We still have 2 standard height toilets (re-using the one from her bathroom & have another unboxed one). I've gotten accustomed to the taller toilet & rather than try to buy new toilets, I wanted to build platforms to raise them up a few inches.
I've been trying to think of the best way to do this. I was initially thinking 2x4s but I saw that pressure treated 3x4 landscaping timbers are under $5 and would provide more support.
I would have them so they are 4" wide and 3" tall (they are supposedly exact height). I can use the table saw and someone said they saw band saws in my workshop that I could use to trim things up if need be. I also have multiple sanders.
I was thinking of making a sort of rectangle, leaving the back squared off, and having the front rounded to the contour of the toilet. There can be a little lip sticking out from under the toilet to make sure it doesn't ever slip off.
I would secure the frame to the floor somehow and make sure it is level. The toilet flange would then be installed in the frame (possibly recessed). I would have parts notched for the flange/drain to fit.
Dimensions along with my sketch of the frame (which is not to scale)
![1637445150822.png 1637445150822.png](https://cdn2.imagearchive.com/homesteading/data/attach/75/75835-1637445150822.png)
I need to do a better drawing, but I know the widest point of the toilet is 9-1/4". The boards would be 4" wide. If I spaced them so they were 9-1/2" wide on the sides, I would basically have to notch out in the middle for the flange.
I'm debating whether or not to have luan or thin plywood over the top and let the flange recess into it-- but I will want to have a notch for the toilet bolts and have something under them so the don't fall out of reach. Granted, they will be secured with nuts.
This is my rough sketch of base framing before cuts:
![1637446506171.png 1637446506171.png](https://cdn2.imagearchive.com/homesteading/data/attach/75/75842-1637446506171.png)
Obviously, I will have to compensate for the curved edges of the timbers. I can put the toilet base on some large poster paper and trace out the shape for a template to cut & sand it to the right size/shape. I will mark where the bolt holes are to make sure I get the flange right. It might not be so easy to drill in to the self-leveling flooring stuff I put down, but I might find some masonry bits that will do the trick. The other bathroom won't have that problem. I can level the platforms independently of the floor if need be so the toilet will be level even if the rest of the floor isn't. I will paint the platform and seal it up well.
Has anyone tried something like this? Any better ideas? does this seem feasible?