
Accessible Bathrooms in Camas, Washington
Camas splits sharply between two very different remodeling problems.
Accessible Bathrooms for Camas homes
Camas splits sharply between two very different remodeling problems. In the mill-era homes near Downtown Camas, a single cramped bathroom with a high clawfoot tub and a narrow doorway is often the only bathroom on the main floor, which makes barrier-free access a real layout puzzle rather than a simple fixture swap. Up on Prune Hill and Grass Valley, the newer builder-grade primary baths already have more square footage to work with, so converting a standard tub-shower combo into a curbless entry with built-in seating is more straightforward. Either way, the goal is the same: a bathroom that lets someone age in place near the lake without it looking like a hospital retrofit. We plan the wall reinforcement for grab bars and the floor slope for a curbless pan before anything gets demolished.
What's included
Accessible Bathrooms
- Curbless, zero-threshold shower entries
- Reinforced walls and discreet grab bars
- Built-in shower seating and handheld sprays
- Comfort-height fixtures and slip-resistant flooring
- Wider clearances for easier movement

What affects cost in Camas
Honest pricing, no guesswork
Cost in Camas depends heavily on which side of town you're on — reworking a tight downtown footprint for wheelchair clearance and a zero-threshold shower typically costs more than adapting an already-spacious hillside primary bath, where the work is mostly fixtures, grab-bar blocking, and a curbless pan.
We don't publish one-size-fits-all prices. After a free in-home consultation we give you a clear, fixed quote in writing — no surprise change orders once the project is underway.
Camas questions, answered
Frequently asked
- Our downtown Camas home only has one bathroom upstairs — can it still be made accessible?
- It depends on the layout, but a lot of downtown Camas mill-era homes have more room in a tight single bath than it first appears once the old tub comes out. We look at whether a curbless shower with a wider door swing fits the existing footprint, or whether a modest layout change is needed, before recommending anything.
- Can a grab bar and curbless shower look nice in a Grass Valley or Prune Hill primary suite, not clinical?
- Yes — that's the whole point of doing it well. Reinforced blocking behind the tile means grab bars can be finished to match your fixtures rather than looking bolted-on, and a curbless entry with a built-in bench reads as a design choice, not a medical add-on.
Request a free estimate
Accessible Bathrooms in Camas, done right
Tell us about your space and we'll follow up to schedule a free, no-obligation design consultation with clear, fixed pricing.
Prefer to talk? Call (360) 838-1340

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