This luxury Westfield primary bathroom remodel transformed a dated vanity area and water closet into a refined, storage-focused retreat with Shiloh cabinetry, MSI quartz, polished chrome fixtures, architectural molding, and York Wallcoverings floral wallpaper, creating a brighter, more cohesive room for daily routines.
The Challenge & The Vision
The original primary bathroom had generous square footage, but the vanity wall lacked the architectural presence and refined storage expected in a luxury owner’s suite. Worthington’s scope focused on a high-impact primary bathroom refresh rather than a full-gut remodel, preserving the existing layout while reworking the vanity wall, lighting, trim, wall finishes, mirrors, plumbing fixtures, and water closet details. The project included demolition of the existing vanity sconces, plumbing fixtures, countertop, cabinetry, hardware, mirrors, and base/shoe molding at the vanity wall.
The design vision was to create a bathroom that felt lighter and more finished within the same footprint. Instead of relying on one dramatic change, the remodel layered cabinetry, millwork, wallpaper, countertop veining, mirror shape, lighting, and polished chrome finishes into one cohesive composition.
Rebuilding the Vanity Wall with Custom Storage
For homeowners exploring bathroom remodeling in Indianapolis, this Westfield project shows how much can change when the vanity wall is rebuilt with better proportions, storage, and finish detail. The new vanity cabinetry gives the room a more anchored focal point, with a center drawer stack, side sink bases, and a tall center cabinet that adds vertical presence without overwhelming the room.
The remodel includes new vanity cabinetry and molding, mirror inserts for the vanity wall cabinet doors, and new cabinet hardware. The selected cabinetry was Shiloh maple in Pure White with Ward 350 Edge door and drawer fronts, dovetail hardwood drawer boxes, and full-extension soft-close drawer glides.
The vanity area adds strong storage and a more finished furniture like quality. Shiloh cabinetry in a dark Harbor finish grounds the room and contrasts with the lighter tile and Cambria Dovestone quartz. This balance gives the bathroom visual depth without making the room feel heavy.
The Pure White cabinetry keeps the room bright, while the tall cabinet adds symmetry between the two sinks. Mirrored cabinet inserts help the center storage element feel elegant instead of heavy, reflecting light and continuing the polished quality of the oval mirrors on either side.
Layering Quartz, Chrome, and Soft Reflection
The vanity was finished with MSI Calacatta Ocellio quartz and an ogee edge. The quartz brings soft movement to the countertop and backsplash, complementing the floral wallcovering without competing with it. The bathroom also incorporates Delta Cassidy widespread faucets in chrome and Kohler Caxton undermount sinks.
The polished chrome finish carries through the plumbing fixtures, Top Knobs pulls and knobs, towel rings, and Designers Fountain vanity sconces. This continuity gives the room a crisp, collected look and allows the softer materials, including wallpaper and painted millwork, to remain the visual focus.
Architectural Trim That Makes the Room Feel Finished
One of the strongest design upgrades in this primary bathroom refresh is the trim package. The project included new molding throughout the bathroom and water closet, including panel molding, chair rail, crown molding, and round-over molding below the crown.
The lower wall paneling gives the bathroom a classic architectural base, while the floral wallpaper above the chair rail adds movement and personality. Together, the two finishes create a balanced look: tailored below, expressive above.
Wallpaper as the Connecting Design Element
The wallpaper became one of the defining features of this primary bathroom refresh. What started as an accent for the water closet was thoughtfully carried into the main bathroom as well, helping both spaces feel connected. The homeowner selected York Wallcoverings Moon Flower wallpaper in soft white, neutral, and blue tones, bringing a graceful floral pattern above the painted chair rail while keeping the shower area clean and simple.
The result is a bathroom that feels connected from the vanity wall into the water closet and shower approach. The botanical pattern softens the polished chrome fixtures and white cabinetry, while the blue-gray tones relate naturally to the existing floor tile and the veining in the quartz.
In a primary bathroom refresh, the strongest results often come from aligning the details homeowners see every day: cabinetry proportions, mirror placement, lighting height, countertop movement, hardware finish, and trim transitions. When those elements are planned together, the room feels custom even when the existing footprint stays in place.
Larry Greene
Product Selections
- Project Type: Luxury primary bathroom remodel and refresh
- Location: Westfield, Indiana
- Designer: Megan Stare, Worthington Design & Remodeling
- Project Developer: Cathryn Brassfield, Worthington Design & Remodeling
- Cabinetry: Shiloh maple cabinetry
- Cabinet Finish: Pure White
- Door and Drawer Style: Ward, 350 Edge
- Drawer Construction: Dovetail, 5/8 hardwood
- Drawer Glides: Full-extension soft-close
- Countertops: MSI Calacatta Ocellio quartz
- Countertop Edge: Ogee
- Faucets: Delta Cassidy widespread bathroom faucets in chrome
- Sinks: Kohler Caxton undermount sinks in white
- Cabinet Pulls: Top Knobs Kara 12-inch center-to-center handles, Serene Series, polished chrome
- Cabinet Knobs: Top Knobs Ellis 1-1/4-inch mushroom cabinet knobs, polished chrome
- Vanity Lighting: Designers Fountain Evi 17-inch wall sconces with crystal accents
- Towel Rings: Delta Cassidy towel holders in chrome
- Mirrors: Homeowner-provided Pearlette oval beveled frameless vanity mirrors
- Wallpaper: York Wallcoverings Moon Flower Wallpaper, White, Neutral, Blue, SKU BL1715
- Trim Details: Crown molding, chair rail, panel molding, and round-over molding below crown
For homeowners in Westfield, Carmel, and the surrounding north Indianapolis communities, Worthington’s Carmel Remodeling Showroom offers a place to explore cabinetry, countertops, fixtures, and finish details with a design-build team before construction begins.
Reviews from homeowners
Frequently Asked Questions About a Primary Bathroom Remodel in Westfield
What is included in a luxury primary bathroom remodel in Westfield?
A luxury primary bathroom remodel can include a new shower, freestanding tub, custom vanity, quartz countertops, tile flooring, plumbing fixtures, lighting, ventilation, glass, accessories, and storage improvements. Worthington coordinates these details through one design build process.
How much does a primary bathroom remodel cost in Westfield?
A high end primary bathroom remodel in Fishers often starts around $80,000 and can increase with custom cabinetry, tile complexity, plumbing changes, quartz details, lighting, and fixture selections. Worthington defines scope early so homeowners understand the investment before construction.
How long does a primary bathroom remodel take once construction starts?
Most primary bathroom remodels take several weeks once construction begins, depending on demolition, plumbing, electrical work, tile installation, cabinetry, countertops, glass, and inspections. Worthington provides project management and weekly updates so homeowners understand each phase.
Do I need permits for a primary bathroom remodel in Westfield?
Permits may be needed when plumbing, electrical, structural, or layout changes are involved. Worthington coordinates permitting with the municipality and has an architect on staff when formal drawings are required for the project.





