It can help your ensuite become a peaceful oasis where you can relax and express your own aesthetic. Smart tech, crystal glass and marble make the latest plumbing trends so you can design spaces that are both functional and luxurious.
More homeowners are incorporating sustainbale features into their homes. These include low-flow toilets, aerated faucets and other eco-friendly features like rain barrels. Homes are now being designed with these features to save water without sacrificing use or quality.
Matte Black Finishes
Matte black faucet finishes are an attention-grabbing accent that will add drama to contemporary kitchens and bathrooms. Unlike chrome fittings that reflect surrounding light sources, matte black does not highlight drops of water or grind against wear in the same way. Ideal for heavily used spaces, this finish will stand the test of time in the busiest home.
The matte black, widespread bathroom vanity faucet from Delta Stryke bathroom fixtures stands out against the white tile backsplash, with upturned hot and cold handles adding a distinctive touch that looks beautiful against the sleek matte finish.
Want an easier way to join the trend? Swap out the hardware in your kitchen cabinets with matte-black knobs and pulls. It will instantly update your look – and the matte finish hides fingerprints better than polished metal hardware.
Eco-Friendly Materials
When it comes to plumbing in 2023, it’s not just about function and efficiency anymore. Think about the style that makes your daily experience more beautiful. Whether it’s touchless faucets that help avoid germs, smart toilets with bidet features to save water and money, or rain shower heads with wellness features that turn your bathing mode into destressing, restoring experience.
The improvement of environmental management also involves the use of materials from environmental-friendly sources. Eco-friendly pipes and fixtures are now available in the market, which helps homes reduce their carbon footprint.
Use non-toxic and 100 per cent recyclable pipes, like PEX pipes, to reduce your plumbing system’s ecological footprint by at least 60 per cent. Since the material requires less energy to produce and install, installations are faster on-site and longer lasting compared with PVC or metal pipes. Last but not the least, water-efficient toilets and faucets can cut your annual water consumption by hundreds, saving hundreds of dollars in your utility bills; this kind of savings is a bold statement on the high current water consumption in our societies.
Smart Technology
Smart plumbing fixtures provide touch and motion sensors that let users start a shower, which then adjusts water and steam temperatures based on preferences, tracks usage profiles, and alerts owners when service is needed.
These devices are part of the Smart Home concept and further contribute to the idea of saving resources by encouraging responsible use of a precious resource: water. In addition, they can help save on utility bills by curbing wasteful use and prevent the expensive costs of water damage by detecting leaks early on.
Tools such as drain inspection cameras mean that plumbers can easily detect damage and get it fixed right away. Customer apps allow companies to communicate with customers faster, to keep track of appointments, inspections, and estimates. All this technology is allowing plumbers in Mississauga, Etobicoke, Burlington and Oakville to build long-term relationships with homeowners and businesses.
Curb Appeal
It’s known as curb appeal, the ‘first impressions’ potential homebuyers get when they pull up to a property. A well-maintained, attractive home, yard, sidewalk, and driveway are as important when preparing a house for sale as is the interior itself – and an attractive exterior might even be enough to trigger a kind of halo effect, when potential buyers assume based on what they see from the main road that the inside is similarly well maintained or even entirely new.
Add curb appeal on the quick by simply painting the house and landscaping the property; make fixtures in the bathroom – such as faucets – that go in and out of style (think modern versus traditional) simply interchangeable through the purchase of different fixtures in different finishes; or take bathroom fixtures (once tied to the idea of a water closet) and place them in other rooms in the home by simply painting.
Modern bathrooms are now focal points of leisure, as water and convenience have been redefined along the indulgent lines of spas and hot tubs. With water controlled by automated smart-tap technologies, rainfall showerheads and thermostatic baths, it’s difficult to discern whether the water stays in the plumbing or splashes onto you, as when you walk into your own spa. This ethereal chill is further enhanced by styles that are sleek and understated, with minimalist touches such as gloss-white floors and walls.