Why the shower system decides the bathroom
In a contemporary bathroom the shower system is rarely the first thing a client asks about, and almost always the first thing they notice once the room is in use. It sets the room's material vocabulary, its water behaviour, and the way daily use is choreographed. A faucet is a detail. A shower system is an installation.
A fixture that has to perform under contract conditions
At VALA we design shower systems to specification-grade standards: brass bodies, ceramic cartridges, thermostatic control where required, and finishes engineered for hotel-grade cleaning cycles. The difference between a consumer-grade shower and a contract-grade one is not visible in the showroom — it appears in year three, under heavy use, against aggressive water and frequent cleaning. That is the horizon we build for.
Four families, one coordinated language
Our shower range is organised into four mechanical families — exposed tall, sliding rail, concealed built-in, and panel — each finished in the same palette as our faucet and mixer range so that a single specification can coordinate across the whole room without cross-brand friction. Every family uses the same cartridge and thermostatic platform, which simplifies maintenance and spare-part logistics on a project.
Specifying beyond the visuals
For hotel, residential tower, and contract work, the questions that matter are flow rate at the worst-case inlet pressure, behaviour under water-hammer, the water group's behaviour when the building circulates at 65°C, and whether the cartridge can be replaced without removing the fixture from the wall. We publish all of that in our specification sheets, and our trade team answers those questions directly rather than through a retail channel.
If you are working on a project and need to evaluate the range against a brief, request physical samples and the 2026 catalogue or open a project inquiry and the specification team will respond from Istanbul.



