Old Fort is a small McDowell County town of about 555 people at the foot of the eastern Continental Divide, and its accessibility story is sharper than the raw size suggests. Census ACS flags a mobility difficulty for 18.9% of residents here — roughly one in five — and 25.8% of the town is already 65 or older. Layer that human picture over the housing: the median home was built in 1965, 67% of homes predate 1980, and the median value is just $135,900. High need plus modest values is the combination that defines our work here, and it is why we plan accessibility around the dollar, not the catalog.
Why the budget leads the design in Old Fort
In a higher-value market a homeowner can absorb a luxury curbless rebuild and barely move the needle on resale. Old Fort is not that market. When the median home is worth $135,900 and the median household earns $47,500 a year, a project's job is to deliver the safety a mobility difficulty demands without swallowing the home's equity. That is the case for the one-day acrylic tub-to-shower system at $1,200 to $9,500 and the prefab walk-in shower at $1,000 to $8,000: both drop the step-over to a few inches, both reuse the existing plumbing, and both leave room in the budget for grab bars and a seat. We treat the $12,000 to $17,000 curbless rebuild as the right call only when an owner specifically needs a true zero threshold for a wheelchair or rollator, and we say so out loud at the estimate.
Three honest routes to safer bathing
For mobility-driven need, the seated walk-in shower is usually the workhorse. A prefab walk-in shower at $1,000 to $8,000 is the fastest, lowest-cost path; a custom-tiled walk-in shower at $3,500 to $15,000 buys a niche, a built-in bench and tile you actually picked. Where warm-water soaking eases arthritis or circulation, a basic soaker walk-in tub at $3,000 to $7,000 fits the original footprint, with air- and water-jet hydrotherapy models running $7,000 to $15,000 when the therapeutic case justifies the jump. We do not push every Old Fort household toward the same fixture — the right one depends on whether the goal is getting in and out safely or sitting and soaking.
What two-thirds-pre-1980 housing hides
Because 67% of Old Fort homes were standing before 1980, our quotes anticipate what that vintage built in. Homes from the 1950s and 60s often run galvanized steel to the tub valve, and a conversion is the moment to cut that back to copper or PEX instead of sealing aging pipe inside a new wall. A cast-iron tub from the same decades has to be scored and removed in sections rather than carried out whole. Mortar-bed tile floors take real labor to demolish but leave solid framing behind. None of these block a project; all of them are line items we name in the written quote before demolition, which is the only honest way to price a remodel in housing this old.
| Scope | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tub-to-shower conversion — one-day acrylic liner system | $1,200 | $4,500 | $9,500 |
| Walk-in shower — prefab / acrylic kit, installed | $1,000 | $3,500 | $8,000 |
| Walk-in tub — basic soaker model, installed | $3,000 | $5,000 | $7,000 |
| Walk-in shower — curbless / zero-entry (recessed subfloor), installed | $12,000 | $14,000 | $17,000 |
For Old Fort, these are published planning rails from HomeGuide — Tub to Shower Conversion Cost (2026), not Pisgah quotes; the curbless figure draws on Angi / This Old House — Walk-In Shower Cost (2026). WNC labor runs modestly under big-metro averages, and jobs that keep the drain in place land toward the low end of each band. Your number comes from a free in-home measure, sized to a $135,900-median home rather than a showroom display.
Built to anchor and built to last
Every accessible bath we build in Old Fort gets solid lumber backing screwed into the studs at the shower entry, along the control wall and beside the toilet before any wall board goes up, so a grab bar — installed today or a decade from now — anchors into real framing instead of hollow drywall. We use the federal 2010 ADA Standards as our geometry reference on private homes for seat height, bar height and clear floor space, not because a residence is required to meet them but because those dimensions keep working when a walker or chair arrives. Permits run through McDowell County when plumbing or electrical is touched, the license behind the work is checkable at the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors, and the estimate that starts it all is free and in your home. Ready to step up to the whole room instead of a single fixture? See Old Fort bathroom & kitchen remodeling, or compare scopes across the region in our WNC walk-in tub & accessible bathroom guide.