
Curbless Showers in Emmett, Idaho
Emmett's housing leans older — historic homes near downtown and modest mid-century houses through the orchard district — with floor framing that predates slab construction almost entirely, so a curbless shower here typically means forming the recess into the joists rather than cutting it into concrete.
Curbless Showers for Emmett homes
Emmett's housing leans older — historic homes near downtown and modest mid-century houses through the orchard district — with floor framing that predates slab construction almost entirely, so a curbless shower here typically means forming the recess into the joists rather than cutting it into concrete. Because so many Emmett homes still have just one bathroom, that single room carries the household's daily traffic, and a flush, no-lip entry has real practical value beyond its look — nothing to trip over after a day working the orchards, and no curb collecting water or grime from wet boots. Freezeout Hill winters add snow and mud to that equation for months at a time, which is part of why the request comes up even in a town where most bathrooms are still original. Because a curbless shower usually accompanies a broader bathroom rebuild here, the recess and waterproofing get built in while the floor is already open rather than as an isolated retrofit.
What's included
Curbless Shower Installation
- Structural floor recess built and sloped to a linear drain
- Flush, zero-threshold entry with no curb or lip to step over
- Full waterproofing membrane across the entire recessed pan
- Frameless glass panels sized to an open, continuous sightline
- Large-format tile laid to keep grout lines minimal at the transition

What affects cost in Emmett
Honest pricing, no guesswork
Emmett's older raised-floor construction means curbless work usually includes structural framing for the recess alongside the drain, glass, and tile — more than a slab-built home would need for the same feature.
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.
Emmett questions, answered
Frequently asked
- With only one bathroom in our Emmett home, is a curbless shower a good fit?
- Often it is, especially for daily practicality — a flush entry with no curb to step over or trap water is easier to keep clean and safer to use every day, which matters when one bathroom serves the whole household.
- Does Emmett's older housing make curbless showers harder to install?
- It adds a step, not a barrier — most homes here have raised floor framing rather than a slab, so we build the recess into the joists, which takes more work than cutting into concrete but is a routine part of the older-home projects we do throughout Emmett.
Request a free estimate
Curbless Showers in Emmett, 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 (208) 779-5551

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