Luxury master baths, spa suites & wellness retreats for Tudor estates, Colonials & Mediterranean homes — Beverly Drive to Lakeside Drive

Quick Answer: A bathroom remodel in Highland Park, TX costs $50,000 to $300,000+ in 2026. Upper-mid custom baths with premium fixtures and natural stone start at $50,000–$85,000. Full luxury master spa suites with freestanding tubs, frameless walk-in showers, and heated floors run $90,000–$160,000. Estate-scale primary baths with wellness features (steam, sauna, dressing suite) reach $175,000–$300,000+. UHS Remodeling: licensed, insured, 4.9-star rated, 500+ verified reviews, 3-year written warranty. Free consultation: (469) 850-7087.

A Highland Park bathroom remodel is not the same project as a bathroom remodel anywhere else in DFW. Within the Town of Highland Park’s 2.26 square miles, you will find primary bathrooms inside 1920s Tudor Revival estates that still have their original leaded-glass windows, Georgian Colonials along Armstrong Parkway where the bath needs to feel as formal as the dining room, and Mediterranean villas near Lakeside Drive where the master suite calls for honed travertine and wrought iron. Every one of them demands an approach that honors the home’s architecture while delivering the spa-grade performance and finish level Highland Park homeowners expect.
At UHS Remodeling, we specialize in high-end bathroom renovations across Highland Park and neighboring University Park. We understand the Town of Highland Park permitting process, the expectations of homes valued at $2.8 million to $25 million+, and the coordination required when working with the interior designers, architects, and landscape firms that often manage broader estate renovations. Every UHS bathroom project is delivered with transparent line-item pricing before we start, one dedicated W-2 crew from demo through punch-list, daily photo updates, and a written 3-year workmanship warranty.
Highland Park is an exclusively upper-tier market. Every bathroom project here requires premium materials, architectural sensitivity, and craftsmanship standards that match homes in the $2.8M to $25M+ range. Here is how our Highland Park bathroom work breaks down.
This tier serves Highland Park homeowners updating a guest bath, powder room, or secondary primary in smaller Tudor or Colonial homes under 4,000 sq ft. Scope: full gut renovation with new plumbing rough-in, marble or premium porcelain tile throughout, custom furniture-style vanity with natural stone top, frameless glass walk-in shower with marble or large-format porcelain surround, Kohler or Brizo fixture package, undermount cast iron or high-end acrylic tub, heated tile floors with programmable thermostat, custom niches, recessed and sconce lighting, new ventilation, and upgraded electrical with GFCI outlets. We preserve crown molding, original door casings, and architectural details that define the home’s character. Timeline: 6–9 weeks of on-site work.

The core of Highland Park bathroom remodeling. This tier covers the Beverly Drive and Armstrong Parkway estates where the master bath must match the grandeur of the rest of the home. Scope: full-slab Calacatta or Statuario marble on shower walls and floors, custom dual vanity with furniture-grade cabinetry and integrated sinks, freestanding soaking tub (Kohler, Waterworks, MTI, or Victoria + Albert), frameless walk-in shower with multiple shower heads — rainfall, handheld, body sprays — on a thermostatic Brizo or Kallista valve, linear drain, heated marble floors zoned for the vanity and shower areas, private water closet with elongated one-piece toilet, custom lighting plan with dimmable sconces, recessed LEDs, and a statement chandelier over the tub, and architectural details: coffered or tray ceilings, custom millwork, arched shower alcoves, and unlacquered brass or polished nickel hardware throughout. Timeline: 10–14 weeks of on-site work.

The most ambitious Highland Park bathroom projects do not stop at the bath — they reimagine the entire primary suite. Scope includes everything in Tier 2 plus: steam shower with custom tile bench, rainfall ceiling head, body sprays, aromatherapy dispenser, and Mr. Steam or ThermaSol generator; separate dry sauna with cedar or hemlock interior; dressing room connection with custom built-ins, island, and jewelry drawer; makeup vanity with integrated LED mirror and dedicated task lighting; heated towel bars and in-wall Bluetooth audio; whole-bath Lutron or Savant lighting control integrated with the home’s smart system; and an in-suite laundry or beverage station where the floor plan allows. We coordinate directly with Highland Park architects for any structural modifications — moving closets, raising ceilings, enlarging windows — and manage the full Town of Highland Park permitting and inspection process. Timeline: 14–22 weeks of on-site work.
Where does the budget actually go? Here is how the total breaks down across the three Highland Park bathroom tiers.
| Component | % of Total | Upper-Mid ($70K) | Luxury ($125K) | Estate ($225K) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tile & Natural Stone | 22–28% | $17,500 | $32,000 | $56,000 |
| Plumbing Fixtures | 14–20% | $12,500 | $22,000 | $40,000 |
| Cabinetry & Vanity | 10–14% | $8,500 | $15,000 | $27,000 |
| Labor (install) | 22–28% | $17,500 | $32,000 | $58,000 |
| Plumbing Rough-in | 8–12% | $7,000 | $13,000 | $22,000 |
| Electrical & Heated Floor | 5–8% | $4,500 | $8,500 | $16,000 |
| Permits & Design | 3–5% | $2,500 | $2,500 | $6,000 |


The right bathroom design depends entirely on the architectural language of the home. Here is how we approach the most common Highland Park styles.

Highland Park’s signature style. These 1920s–1940s homes have arched doorways, leaded glass, dark wood millwork, and stone fireplaces downstairs — the primary bath should carry that same architectural language upstairs. We use honed marble (Calacatta Gold, Statuario, or Bardiglio) with brass or unlacquered bronze fixtures, inset or beaded cabinetry in cream, sage, or soft gray, handmade tile or marble mosaic floors, freestanding cast iron tubs, and arched shower alcoves echoing the home’s doorways. Wall sconces and chandeliers in brushed brass complete the look. We preserve original wood floors in the dressing areas whenever possible.
Symmetry and formality define the homes along Armstrong Parkway and Lakeside Drive. Bathroom design follows suit: balanced dual vanity layouts, classic raised-panel doors in white, pale blue, or navy, marble countertops with subtle veining, polished nickel or chrome fixture packages (Waterworks Henry or Brizo Rook), pedestal tubs or undermount cast iron, subway or Versailles-pattern marble floors, and formal pendant lighting. Crown molding profiles match those throughout the home. The vanity typically has a furniture-style skirt and turned legs.
Highland Park has a strong collection of Mediterranean and Spanish Colonial homes near Turtle Creek and Lakeside. Bathrooms lean warm and textural: honed travertine or limestone floors, Moroccan zellige or encaustic tile accents, arched mirrors and doorways, wrought iron sconces and hardware, and richly stained walnut or alder vanities. Freestanding tubs are copper or natural stone. Ceilings often feature wood beams or hand-troweled plaster finishes.
Newer Highland Park builds and full gut renovations increasingly lean modern European. Primary baths feature handleless flat-panel vanities, full-slab book-matched marble walls, minimalist wall-hung toilets, concealed shower valves, ultra-thin large-format porcelain or Dekton, linear drains, integrated LED lighting, and minimal visible fixtures. Even in modern bathrooms, we add warmth through natural wood accents — rift-cut white oak floating vanities, walnut open shelving — to connect with Highland Park’s traditional context.
The biggest shift in 2026 Highland Park bathroom projects is the move from a separate standalone tub and shower to a multi-function wellness shower that does everything. Our clients are choosing large walk-in enclosures with steam generators, ceiling rainfall, multiple body sprays on thermostatic valves, integrated aromatherapy, bench seating, and mood lighting — replacing the freestanding tub entirely in households where nobody actually takes baths.
Pure Calacatta and Statuario still dominate the top tier, but more Highland Park homeowners are selecting warmer natural stones — honed Taj Mahal quartzite, Super White dolomite, travertine, and limestone. Warm stones pair better with the wood and brass palette trending in Highland Park Tudor and Mediterranean homes.
Matte black and slate-grey freestanding tubs are replacing all-white in Highland Park master suites. The contrast against marble floors and brass fixtures creates a modern-meets-traditional look that reads luxurious without feeling dated.
Radiant heated floors are now standard on every Highland Park bathroom project above $80,000. Heated towel bars have become equally expected. Fog-free heated mirrors with integrated LED task lighting are the newest addition — no more wiping down a steamy mirror after a shower.
The largest Highland Park estate bathroom projects now combine the primary bath with the dressing room and an in-suite stacked laundry. Homeowners want one continuous morning-routine space — shower, dress, final touches — without crossing the home to reach a laundry or closet.



“Our Highland Park master bath was a gut job — original 1930s plumbing, cast iron stacks, lath and plaster walls. UHS handled every surprise behind the walls without a single change order. The Statuario marble shower, brass Waterworks fixtures, and heated floors turned out exactly like the renderings. Three years later everything still works flawlessly.”
— Verified Google review, UHS Remodeling
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Primary bathrooms in Highland Park’s Beverly Drive estate homes present the full luxury renovation opportunity: large square footprints, often generous ceiling heights, and original fixtures from eras when craftsmanship was assumed rather than negotiated. UHS Remodeling transforms these bathrooms into private spa environments calibrated to the scale and quality level the home itself demands. The material selection process for a Highland Park primary bathroom begins with stone sourcing: we work with slab yards to select book-matched marble or quartzite panels that will be cut and installed as continuous wall cladding in the shower surround, not as 12-inch tiles from a pallet. Fixtures are specified at the professional-grade level — thermostatic valve systems with dedicated body spray zones, heated mirror panels with integrated lighting, floor warming systems with programmable thermostats, and freestanding tubs positioned as the visual anchor the room is large enough to accommodate properly. The result is a bathroom that functions as architecture rather than infrastructure.
The estate properties along Armstrong Parkway and the Turtle Creek corridor in Highland Park contain bathrooms that frequently need complete reconstruction rather than incremental updating — the plumbing in a 1935 home has typically been modified multiple times, the waterproofing is pre-membrane generation, and the layout reflects household patterns from a different era. UHS Remodeling rebuilds these bathrooms from the structural level, coordinating with licensed plumbers on supply and drain line modernization before any finish work begins. The architectural intent in these renovations is almost always period-sensitive: hexagonal marble mosaic floors, subway or beveled tile walls with chair rail profiles, nickel fixtures with cross-handle valves, and shower enclosures with brass-framed glass that references the home’s original era without pastiche. Our team has completed multiple Highland Park bathroom renovations recognized for their balance of period authenticity and modern performance.
The French Norman and Period Revival homes in Highland Park’s interior streets require bathroom renovations designed with the same care as a museum restoration — the architectural integrity of these properties is part of their value, and a bathroom that ignores the building’s character in favor of generic contemporary tile is a renovation that undermines rather than enhances the home. UHS Remodeling works with the French eclectic architecture of Versailles and Bordeaux corridor homes by specifying materials with authentic provenance and visual character: encaustic cement tile for bathroom floors, handmade ceramic wall tile with dimensional variation, stone countertops with hand-applied edge profiles, and soaking tubs in cast iron or stone that feel as if they belong to the home’s decade of construction. These are not inexpensive projects — a bathroom in a home of this caliber is not a functional upgrade, it is a contribution to the property’s long-term architectural story.
Southern Highland Park’s bathroom remodeling market spans from the meticulous historical renovation of 1920s-era homes to the contemporary luxury upgrade of post-war properties that have the square footage and location to justify significant investment. UHS Remodeling works across this full range in the Mockingbird Lane corridor, adapting our approach to the home’s specific architecture and the homeowner’s intent. Contemporary bathroom renovations in this area tend toward clean material palettes: large-format porcelain slabs used as floor-to-ceiling shower panels with minimal grout lines, matte black or brushed nickel fixtures throughout for material consistency, curbless walk-in shower entries at the full width of the shower footprint, and vanity cabinetry in natural wood tones with the kind of hardware that signals furniture quality rather than commodity construction. Every Highland Park bathroom we complete — regardless of its architectural era — is held to the finish quality standard the address commands.
Free in-home consultation. Fixed-price quote. 3-year workmanship warranty.