
Project · London
Wet Room Shower Enclosure - London
Frameless · 10 mm Ultra Clear Glass · Polished Nickel
We manufactured this frameless wet room shower enclosure for a spacious London bathroom. The marble floor runs level throughout, with a hidden drain concealed beneath the slabs and our glass panels recessed into the walls and ceiling. A matching wet room enclosure sits in the opposite corner around the WC, sharing the same drainage and recessed-glass detailing.
Size · 1500 × 800 × 2450 mm
Includes: Wet Room floor, Full height, Wall recessed panels
01 · Wet Room

Frameless wet room shower enclosure in a marble bathroom
Our team installed this wet room shower enclosure as part of a high-end London project. The bathroom is generous in size with pale stone walls and floors, and the brief asked for shower glass that would disappear into the space rather than sit on top of it. We placed two enormous frameless enclosures in opposite corners — one over the shower zone, a matching one around the WC.
Both enclosures share the same wet room treatment: a level marble floor that runs continuously between the bathroom and the shower, hidden drainage beneath the slabs, and glass panels recessed directly into the walls, ceiling and floor. The result reads as part of the room's architecture rather than something added afterwards.
02 · Hidden Drain

Hidden drain in a level marble wet room floor
The marble floor runs level throughout, with glass panels rising directly from between the stone slabs. Under the door, the shower floor matches the bathroom stone level perfectly. The stone inside the shower conceals a walk-on tray underneath from view. The combination of the drain, tanking, and our glass profiles prevents water from escaping onto the bathroom floor or the ceiling downstairs.
The sophisticated drain in this glass shower enclosure defines the wet room floor. As you can see in the picture, there are 4 mm wide grooves on the floor surrounding the stone slabs. These are the joints where water runs down into the hidden drain and out through the waste pipe. This design hides the drain and the tray entirely, so you see only the marble surface — identical to the bathroom floor — with no visible drain cover or step.
03 · U-Channels

U-channels recessed flush with the marble
The stone company laid the marble slabs and left grooves for our glass profiles. We installed our U-channels flush with the marble surface inside these grooves. The groove was deliberately about 2 mm wider than our channels, which is correct, because we need that gap for a proper sealant joint around the profile. Any wet room floor must have proper tanking and sealing — water always finds its way through anything left unsealed.
This sequencing has to be planned before the stone is laid, because once the slabs are down it is too late to make changes. The safest method is: lay the bathroom stone first, install the profiles flush to that level, tank the shower side of the profiles, then lay the shower stone flush against the profiles and seal the joints. Done in that order, any water that does seep through the surface joints stays contained inside the tanked shower area.
04 · Corner Layout

Corner wet room layout with built-in niche
Corner placement gives a wet room shower its open feel. We sat each frameless enclosure in a corner with the short side fixed against the wall and the door on the long side. The corner placement lets the structural walls carry the shower controls, niche and rainfall head, while our glass simply contains the water without breaking the room's sightlines. We used ultra-clear (low-iron) glass throughout, which reads cleaner than standard clear and keeps the pale marble looking pale.
The short wall holds a built-in niche for shampoo bottles and a handheld shower, and the long wall holds the thermostatic controls directly opposite the door. That control position is deliberate — you reach in to turn the water on without stepping into the spray zone first. The geometry combines a generous wet zone with a dry-entry routine.
05 · Recessed Glass

Wall and ceiling recessed glass panels
For the cleanest frameless look we recessed every fixed panel directly into the walls, ceiling and floor. Our team set glazing profiles flush with the stone on every face. The client's plasterer then brought the wall plaster up to the profile edges and painted over, leaving only a 2 mm metal edge and the sealant line visible.
There are two ways to do this. The standard profile finish leaves a thin 2 mm metal edge running alongside the glass — neat, but visible to a sharp eye. For clients who want zero visible metal we work with the stone or plaster team to create a routed groove that hides the profile completely, leaving only the colour-matched mastic line around the glass edge. Both methods work; the second adds extra coordination time on site.
06 · Hinged Door

Hinged door on the long side with UV-bonded panel
We placed the shower door along the longest wall for the best entry geometry. The door hinges off a small 100 mm fixed panel that is UV-bonded to the short side of the enclosure. UV bonding gives a solid glass-to-glass joint with no visible bracket — the door reads as if it grew out of the panel beside it. The door itself swings both inward and outward, so you can enter without walking into the running water.
Because the door is tall and heavy, we used three polished nickel hinges across its height — two would have flexed under the door's weight. The three-hinge setup also matches the bathroom's other polished-nickel hardware. The rectangular layout divides the shower into a dry entry zone near the door and a wet zone under the rainfall head, so the splash stays away from the door swing.
07 · Rainfall

Ceiling-mounted rainfall over the wet zone
With a wet room shower this size, we took full advantage of the footprint. The ceiling carries an oversized rainfall head that spans almost the full width of the enclosure. Many large showers split the budget across dual heads for two people, but the client preferred one enormous head for an immersive single-bather experience.
Large wet room enclosures like this one are flexible — there is room to move, easy step-in access, and headroom for statement fixtures like this rainfall head. The water pressure, flow rate and drainage have to be planned together at the design stage to handle the volume that comes out of a head this size.
08 · WC Enclosure

Matching glass WC wet room enclosure
Our work isn't only shower enclosures. In the opposite corner of this bathroom, we built a second glass enclosure around the WC using the same frameless detailing and the same level marble floor. The client wanted the toilet area separated for privacy and odour containment without losing the room's open feel — solid walls would have closed the space; glass keeps it airy.
Both enclosures sit in matching corners with the same frameless geometry, the same wet room floor, and the same recessed-glass detailing. They mirror each other across the bathroom and give the room its symmetry. The WC enclosure isn't a shower technically, but the floor still runs level into it for cleaning ease — the whole bathroom acts as one wet zone.
09 · Full Height

Full-height glass with ceiling extraction
The glass panels run full-height up to the ceiling for the strongest visual impact. Above each door we set a 150 mm fixed transom panel — that small piece protects against any long-term ceiling movement that could otherwise stress the door's top edge. The door itself is still a generous 2300 mm tall, with the transom carrying the remaining gap.
The bathroom uses a smart ventilation system. Our door seals contain the water, which would otherwise make the enclosure nearly airtight, so we left a deliberate 20 mm gap above each door for air circulation. The ceiling extractors then pull air through long slot vents that you can see in the picture — 700 mm linear grilles set into the ceiling that match the door geometry. Steam clears quickly, the mirror stays clear, and the door seals still do their water job.
10 · Wet Room Pair

Two matching wet room enclosures in mirror corners
Both enclosures share the same genuine wet room floor — no step, no upstand, no raised tray. Level marble runs from wall to wall, with the drainage hidden underneath. The frameless detailing, the recessed glass into walls and ceiling, the ultra-clear panels and the matching polished-nickel hardware all read as one continuous piece of architecture rather than two add-ons.
Wet rooms at this level need design-stage involvement from the glass company. The drainage, the tanking, the stone-cutting sequence and the profile positions all have to be agreed before the floor is laid. Our team has done this kind of bespoke wet room shower enclosure work alongside builders and designers on complex London projects — and we deliver.
Custom sizes available — contact us for fitted measurements.
How Long Does Wet Room Shower Enclosure Take to Manufacture?
Frameless corner installations rely on precise glass-to-glass connections and minimal hardware. Your Wet Room Shower Enclosure timeline depends on measurement accuracy and wall preparation.
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