Room details
Town, postcode, room type and whether the job is refurbishment, new build, adaptation-led, or part of wider works.
Survey guide
The survey stage is there to make the next decision clearer, not to slow the project down. The better the starting information, the faster the route becomes sharper and more reliable.
What to send first
Town, postcode, room type and whether the job is refurbishment, new build, adaptation-led, or part of wider works.
Who the room is for, what matters most and whether the project is premium-led, hospitality-led, or independence-led.
Photos, sketches and room plans are often the fastest way to make the first review more useful.
It helps to know whether you are researching, preparing specification, or already moving into active bathroom works.
What gets reviewed
A proper review looks at the room brief, the intended user, the likely product direction and whether the project is ready to move into a clearer recommendation path. It is about creating confidence around the next decision, not just collecting information for the sake of it.
What clients usually receive
The project can move into a better shortlist, a more detailed review, or a firmer specification route depending on what the room shows.
Good review work helps narrow the field so the project is not trying to carry too many theoretical options forward.
The point is to make later recommendations and quotations feel more grounded in the room reality from the start.
What helps the day go well
If photos, plans, preferred brands, room intent and the likely user are already clear, the review becomes faster and more focused.
Some clients need to know if the category fits at all. Others need to narrow the lane, confirm direction, or move toward specification.
Ready to move forward?
Homeowners, trade teams, hospitality projects and adaptation-led bathrooms can all begin with the same enquiry route.