No threshold, no door to fight, nothing to trip over — why curbless wet rooms dominate remodels from Naples to Venice.
Ask a Naples or Venice remodeler what their clients request most and you will hear the same answer: a curbless walk-in shower. In a region where so many homeowners plan to stay in their homes for decades, it is the rare upgrade that is both the luxury option and the practical one.
What curbless actually means
The shower floor is flush with the bathroom floor — no curb to step over. The floor slopes gently to a linear or center drain, and a fixed panel of heavy frameless glass keeps the spray contained without a door if the layout allows.
Why it wins for aging in place
- Zero-step entry removes the single biggest slip-and-trip hazard in the home
- Wheelchair and walker accessible without ever looking clinical
- A doorless opening means nothing to grip, swing, or fight on an unsteady morning
Why it wins for resale too
Buyers read curbless as high-end hotel, not hospital. Paired with low-iron frameless glass and a linear drain, it is the shower that sells the bathroom.
The part that has to be done right
Curbless lives or dies on waterproofing and slope. The pan must be built to fall precisely toward the drain, and the glass must be templated off the finished, sloped floor — which is exactly why our own crew measures after tile rather than guessing from plans.
Can it be retrofitted?
Often, yes. Slab-on-grade construction (most of SWFL) allows the floor to be recessed during a remodel. We coordinate with your tile contractor so the glass, slope, and drain work as one system.
Planning a remodel with one eye on the next twenty years? We will walk the space with you, free: 239-355-9696.
Thinking about a glass project?
Free in-home consultation. Custom quote in 48 hours, installed in 1–2 weeks. Call 239-355-9696.
Get a Free Quote

