








We just wrapped up two commercial bathrooms in Charlotte, and this one came together really clean. The goal was a space that feels polished and intentional - not just functional. Floor-to-ceiling glossy grey tile on the walls, large-format stone-look tile on the floors, and matte black hardware throughout. When all those elements line up, the whole room reads as a cohesive design rather than a collection of individual parts.
The tile work was a big part of getting this right. We used a laser level to keep every course straight across both rooms - no drifting grout lines, no awkward cuts where the walls meet. That kind of precision matters more than people realize. On a wall with this much glazed tile, even a slight deviation is going to catch the eye. We kept it tight from floor to ceiling.
Once the tile was set, we moved into the Division 10 work - powder-coated metal partitions in matte black, coordinated mirrors, grab bars, and dispensers. The black hardware against the cool grey tile gives it a sharp, modern contrast that works really well in a commercial setting. Nothing looks like an afterthought. The grab bars and dispensers were spec'd to match the partition finish, so everything stays consistent.
Commercial bathrooms get heavy use. That means the materials and the installation both need to hold up - not just look good on day one. Glazed ceramic wall tile is easy to clean and resists moisture far better than painted drywall. The large-format floor tile means fewer grout lines to maintain. And powder-coated metal partitions are built to take a beating. We think about longevity on every commercial job we take on, not just aesthetics.
Details like this don't happen by accident. They come from a crew that knows how to coordinate tile installation with fixture placement and partition layout all at once. If you've got a commercial remodel coming up in the Charlotte area, this is the kind of work we do every day.