Why this matters
A well-built shower cubicle quietly makes the entire bathroom more usable, easier to clean, and noticeably more premium. A badly built one leaks, fogs, and ages within a year.
ARITSAN Note
A shower cubicle is a small civil project disguised as a glass installation. Slope, drainage, sealing, and hardware decide whether it stays dry, looks crisp, and feels premium five years in. ARITSAN coordinates the cubicle with the bathroom design, not as an afterthought.
Best suited for
- Modern bathrooms and wet area upgrades
- Projects aiming for a lighter, hotel-style look
- Homes wanting easier cleaning around the shower zone
- Layouts where visual openness is important

A reference image for a typical Shower Cubicles application. Final design, configuration, and hardware will always be matched to your actual site.
Why clients choose it
- Improves the look and perceived size of the bathroom
- Cleaner detailing with fewer bulky frame lines
- Can be customised for fixed, sliding, or hinged layouts
- Works well with premium hardware finishes
What to check before finalising
- Wall straightness and slope levels matter a lot
- Frameless systems need accurate hardware fixing support
- Glass thickness should match size and hardware selection
Specifications to Check
What separates a great installation
from a disappointing one.
Glass thickness
8mm and 10mm toughened are the working standards; thinner glass feels flimsy.
Toughened safety glass certification
Non-negotiable; tempered glass is a safety requirement, not an upgrade.
Hardware finish
Hinges, clamps, and channels should match tap and accessory finishes.
Door type
Hinged, sliding, or fixed-panel — decided by space and bathroom layout.
Channel and seal quality
Bottom seals, side wipes, and water deflectors decide whether water leaks out.
Anti-limescale glass coating
Worth specifying in hard-water regions; reduces cleaning effort significantly.
Floor slope and drainage
Must be planned with the cubicle, not after.
Plan Carefully
What to think through before you sign off.
- The bathroom floor slope must direct water to the drain, not away from the cubicle door.
- Door opening direction must respect the bathroom layout; a hinged door swinging into the WC is a daily annoyance.
- Sealing at the corners and bottom is the single biggest source of leakage; insist on quality silicone and gaskets.
- Hardware finish should match the bathroom's tap and accessory finish for a coherent look.
- Cleaning access must be considered upfront — both sides of the glass have to be reachable.
- For frameless cubicles, glass thickness and hinge quality are the foundations; do not compromise either.
Works Well In
Where this system makes the most sense.
- 01Master bathrooms with separate wet and vanity zones
- 02Compact bathrooms where curtains feel cramped
- 03Premium guest bathrooms
- 04Children's and senior-friendly bathrooms
- 05Hospitality-style bathrooms in farmhouses and second homes
Core Build
Core materials and build choices
Toughened Safety Glass
The core shower glazing material used for safety and structural reliability.
316-Grade Hardware
Better suited to constant moisture, cleaning chemicals, and daily handling.
Clear Seals and Channels
Help manage splash control while keeping the enclosure visually light.
Common Questions
Questions people ask
about shower cubicles.
Get a Quote
Interested in Shower Cubicles?
- Free site visit for projects in Delhi NCR.
- Detailed product specifications and samples provided.
- Transparent, itemised pricing with no hidden costs.