Floating Bathroom Vanity | Custom by DBM Factory
Floating Bathroom Vanity
A floating vanity hangs from the wall. The floor stays open underneath, which makes the bathroom read larger and lighter — especially in apartments and smaller modern homes. The shadow line under the cabinet is part of the look. So is the toe-kick that isn’t there. It’s the contemporary alternative to a standard floor-standing piece.
We design and produce each floating vanity around your project. Share the bathroom dimensions, plumbing rough-in positions, and the wall construction. We turn it into a working drawing and build the cabinet ready for shipment.
Hang It Cleanly Off the Wall
Wall-Mount Bracket — Heavy-Duty Steel
The vanity hangs on a concealed steel bracket bolted into the wall studs or solid blocking. Bracket positions and fastener types come on the working drawing so your builder can prep the wall before the cabinet arrives.
Door Material — Veneer / Laminate / Lacquer
Wood veneer for warmth against tile. High-pressure laminate where colour and matching the wall are the priority. High-gloss or matt lacquer where the front should read as a single clean plane — the modern reading.
Drawer Config — Plumbing-Aware Layout
U-shaped drawers wrap around the trap and waste pipe so storage isn’t lost to plumbing. Soft-close runners on every drawer. Touch-latch or recessed J-pull fronts keep the door faces uninterrupted.
Counter Pairing — Integrated / Vessel Sink
Integrated quartz or solid-surface tops read as a single piece with the cabinet. Vessel sinks sit on top for a more sculptural reading. Sink cutout, faucet hole, and counter overhang shown on the working drawing for your stone supplier.
Where It Fits — Four Common Project Types
Modern Villa
A primary or guest bath in a contemporary villa where the architecture leans clean and minimal. Wide floating vanity in matt lacquer or pale wood veneer, integrated counter, single basin — the room reads horizontal and calm.
Apartment Minimalist
A compact bathroom where keeping the floor visible matters. The mop reaches under the cabinet; the room feels less crowded. Common in city apartments where every visual centimetre of floor counts.
Contemporary New Home
Drawn into the architect’s plan with the bracket and stud blocking specified at framing stage. The vanity reads as continuous with the wall tile, no toe-kick break in the geometry.
Boutique Residence
A designed bathroom where the vanity is part of a deliberate composition with the mirror, lighting, and tile. Vessel-sink-on-floating-cabinet is a common combination where the brief calls for visible craft.
From Sketch to Site — Three Stages
Share the bathroom dimensions, the plumbing rough-in positions, and the wall construction — that’s enough to start. We turn it into a working drawing for the floating vanity. It covers the bracket positions, fastener type, mounting height, and the blocking your builder will need behind the wall.
Every vanity is fully assembled and photographed in our Guangdong workshop before being taken apart for shipping. Brackets, drawers, and hardware come matched and labeled, so on-site assembly is straightforward — typically bolt-and-cam, not site-cutting.
Wooden crates built for ocean freight, packed in the order your installer will assemble. Shipped to 60+ countries — including the USA, Australia, the EU, and across Asia.
After delivery, your contractor or installer handles fitting. We provide an assembly guide and a step-by-step video. Where local installation is available in your region, we can help you find a vetted installer.
Floating Bathroom Vanity
The Wall-Hung Install — Where the Cabinet Hangs and the Floor Opens Up.
A wall-hung cabinet earns its keep in a compact bathroom, because the open floor beneath makes the room feel larger. The visible gain is real, yet the work that delivers it sits hidden inside the wall.
Owners reach us at a clear moment, when they want the floating look but worry about how it holds. The concern is sensible, so the brief is rarely about appearance alone. It is about the concealed fixing and the plumbing that both have to disappear into the wall behind the cabinet.
Why the Wall Does the Real Work.
A floating cabinet carries its whole load through the wall rather than the floor. The weight of the carcass, the stone top, and a full basin all transfer into the structure behind. So the fixing detail and the wall it bites into decide whether the installation reads effortless or strains over time.
The wall construction sets what that fixing can grip. A solid masonry wall accepts heavy-duty anchors almost anywhere across its surface. A timber-framed partition needs solid blocking added between the studs first, so the bracket lands on something structural rather than plasterboard alone.
Plumbing position is the quiet partner to the fixing. With no cabinet base hiding the pipes, the waste and supply must route neatly within the wall cavity. We draw the drainage and the bracket together, so the rough-in and the mounting never collide once the wall is closed.
How the Fixing Detail Shifts With the Wall.
A Masonry Wall vs a Stud Partition.
The wall type changes the whole mounting approach. A brick or concrete wall takes the bracket directly, so the builder simply drills and anchors into the solid background. A lightweight stud partition needs blocking or a steel plate fixed between the studs before lining, which the builder must prepare at framing stage. We show the required background on the working drawing for either condition.
A New Build vs a Retrofit.
When you reach us decides how easy the fixing becomes. On a new build, the bracket height and blocking go into the drawing before the wall is lined, so everything sits ready and concealed. On a retrofit, the existing wall is already closed, so the installer may open a section to add backing where the structure is thin. We flag that likelihood early so the schedule absorbs it.
A Single Basin vs a Loaded Span.
The cabinet width changes how the load spreads across the wall. A compact single-basin unit concentrates a modest weight over a short run of fixings. A longer span with a heavy stone top distributes more weight, so it calls for additional bracket points and stronger blocking behind. We size the fixing pattern to the cabinet on the working drawing rather than to a generic default.
What Coordination Looks Like for a Wall-Hung Unit.
Drawing-First Coordination starts with the wall and the plumbing together. We pin the wall construction, the basin centre, and the rough-in position before anyone fabricates the cabinet. The working drawing then locks the bracket positions, the mounting height, and the blocking the builder will prepare, so the concealed work is settled before the wall closes.
Trial Assembly Before Packing then builds the whole vanity upright on our Guangdong workshop floor. We confirm the bracket fit, the drawer travel around the trap, and the door reveal, then photograph the result. We label each part as it comes off, so the build in your bathroom stays a clean bolt-together job.
Export-Ready Crating packs the cabinet, the bracket kit, and the hardware in the order your installer will set them. We protect the faces against knocks for the long ocean leg ahead. The crate lands ready to open, with the heavy carcass seated low for a safe, steady lift.
What to Send Us About Your Wall.
The wall construction is the single most useful thing to tell us. Note whether it is solid masonry or a timber or steel stud partition behind the lining. Add the plumbing rough-in position, which is simply where the waste and supply enter behind the cabinet.
One more line helps us size the fixing correctly. Tell us the vanity width you have in mind and whether the top is stone or a lighter material. From there we turn your notes into a working drawing and a cabinet ready to hang.
After delivery, fitting is on your side. On site, your contractor or installer handled fitting directly from our drawings, with our assembly guide and step-by-step video to follow — or use your own local installer where needed.
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