Designing Wellness Spaces: A Reference for Architects and Designers
This is a working reference for the architect or interior designer briefed to programme a wellness space — home, hotel, resort or day spa. It covers spatial layout, equipment adjacencies and the practical integration decisions that recur across projects.
- · Direct-from-manufacturer
- · Worldwide delivery DDP
- · CE certified
- · FCC certified
- · RoHS certified
- · ISO 9001 manufacturing
Spatial layout
Wet and dry zones separate cleanly. Bath, shower and sauna in wet; inhalation, meditation, and rest in dry. Circulation between the two supports the natural rhythm of the ritual.
Equipment adjacencies
Hydrogen bath concealed alongside the tub. Hydrogen inhalation on a side console in an adjacent dry zone. Sauna and cold plunge programmed as a paired zone with drainage detailing.
Services coordination
Electrical requirements are modest for hydrogen equipment; the primary coordination burden is with sauna and plunge, not with hydrogen. Bath equipment requires ventilation to the joinery cabinet.
Matched to this brief
Bath One™ (WZ-1)
Residential and hospitality hydrogen bath chassis. Millwork-concealable, quiet, in-bathroom-rated.
View →QY-A1200 Hydrogen Inhaler
Single-occupant default for wellness rooms and treatment suites.
View →QY-A3000 Hydrogen Inhaler
Two-cannula chassis for couples suites and higher-throughput environments.
View →Frequently asked questions
Programme a wellness space
Send the brief and floor plan. We'll return equipment layout notes and specification support.
Canonical · https://hydrogenmachines.com.au/designing-wellness-spaces