Shifting Upstairs Toilet Room Door 5 Inches
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 4:26 pm
Hi,
Our upstairs toilet and bathroom are separate (see current layout). As there is no sink in the toilet, we would like to add one. But the toilet room is tiny so we want to shift the door about 5 inches to add that tiny bit of extra room (as shown in the picture of the layout).
If you look at the attached picture of the toilet there is a like a header (?) on top of the door which covers it up to the ceiling. I am not sure if this is load bearing, BUT, the plan is to keep that bit there and just move the door frame. This would leave a space on top to close off which we can turn into a tiny storage unit or just box it off.
I hope that I've described it well enough for you to visualise. My question is if that wall/header bit on top of the current door is load bearing, would it still be ok to move just the door frame. The current door is width of the toilet so I can't see why it would make a huge difference, but I just want to check.
Thanks
Our upstairs toilet and bathroom are separate (see current layout). As there is no sink in the toilet, we would like to add one. But the toilet room is tiny so we want to shift the door about 5 inches to add that tiny bit of extra room (as shown in the picture of the layout).
If you look at the attached picture of the toilet there is a like a header (?) on top of the door which covers it up to the ceiling. I am not sure if this is load bearing, BUT, the plan is to keep that bit there and just move the door frame. This would leave a space on top to close off which we can turn into a tiny storage unit or just box it off.
I hope that I've described it well enough for you to visualise. My question is if that wall/header bit on top of the current door is load bearing, would it still be ok to move just the door frame. The current door is width of the toilet so I can't see why it would make a huge difference, but I just want to check.
Thanks