However, the vanity fits against the back wall right where the vertical
member holding the drawer slides will obstruct the drain coming out of the
wall.
Are there any plumbing tricks in order to be able to hook a unit up? I
could move it a few inches to the right, but then I'd have a gap between the
vanity and the wall, which would not look very nice. Or would a plumber
have to re-position the drain, which is not something I want to get into.
Thanks.
You dont want to reposition the drain. That becomes a big ordeal and
will cost you plenty. You can either rework the pipes coming of the
main drain to the sink if you can or you should consider modifiying or
shortening the drawer in question. I had a similar problem in that I
wanted to install a 60" inch dual sink vanity in my bathroom, but the
drawers were right in the center and only gave me 3" to work with on
the drain pipes. I used every special flex tubing I could find and
still have to take 1" off the drawer to get everything to fit. Unless
you look under the vanity you would never know the drawer is shorter.
Yes, I thought about shortening the drawer. Or building a custom
vanity....when I retire...
I found shortening the drawer to be rather easy with either a table saw
or circular saw as long as you do not need to modify the rails. I
simply removed the rails from the drawer, cut off the back panel flush
and then removed my 1" of drawer sidewalls and bottom. 4 screws later
+ wood glue and my drawer was all back together under 15 minutes. When
you look under the vanity it still looks like the drawer is dovetailed
from the manufacturer. Depending on how your drain pipe is connected
you might be able to remove a chunk of drywall and get in there and
divert your drain enough to get by the drawer. Mine was all soldered
copper which made that a tougher endeavor without removing lots of
drywall and insulation to get a torch in there. Good luck