Thanks people,
I think the 'bulkhead return' (as I've always thought of it) creates a great little nook that just begs for a couple of bookshelves. or a heater
The boat came with a bulkhead mounted heater and it will definitely be going back in there. Otherwise I agree that it begs for a bookshelf. I was thinking the heater might do the same aesthetically as the 'bulkhead return' but I would get better heating airflow through the area. As I think about it, the mini-bulkhead would keep me from leaning into a hot stove which might be nice as well.
The doors are definitely out of my boat for good too!
why not just build out the settee front ...
That was definitely an idea I was considering. The downside is that the narrow walking space just gets narrow-er - and it just seems sloppy to add a chunk of dead wood in front of the settee just to fill space in a space starved boat.
After adding the filler I am still left with an ugly surface on the bulkhead in question that would take some fairing to make pretty. If I wanted to add a veneer, or more likely a thin decorative plywood to blend with the main saloon decor, then I need to build out the surface even further. Thinking about all this is what made me consider ripping the thing out in the first place.
I agree that hiding the toilet is a good thing - as far as practical at least.
I have a short return (2-3") on the aft end of that bulkhead that extends inwards into the door opening. Maybe you had one of these too
Nope. I just had a one inch piece of teak molding stuck on the end.
I love that photo, Tim
Me too, it is one of the photos I pause on the most when surfing through the
Glissando site. Clean and elegant. My decision to go with a Triton was probably heavily influenced by that photo.
-Britton