

What just launched
Dansani published two product‑specific EPDs covering Mido 64×60×35 cm vanity unit variants, including a Plain White matt finish and a melamine option. The declarations are verified and published with EPD Hub. Issue month is August 2025, with validity running through 2030 based on the records we reviewed.
Why it matters for specs
Bathroom furniture shows up on schedules next to sinks, WCs and showers, yet many brands only verify the ceramics and brassware. With product‑specific, third‑party verified EPDs in hand, a furniture line becomes easier to keep on shortlists when projects model embodied carbon. No more defaulting to conservative generics that quietly penalize selection.
Who Dansani is, in one look
The company designs and manufactures bathroom furniture, mirror cabinets, lighting and shower solutions aimed at residential renovations and multi‑unit housing. That mix sits squarely in Division 12 and 22 conversations where EPD requests are now routine across Nordic and UK tenders.
Work for Dansani or competing with them?
Follow us for product-by-product EPD analysis to see how Mido vanity units stack up against Svedbergs and Geberit.
Competitive snapshot
As of January 2026, Svedbergs lists product EPDs for vanity units in comparable sizes and price bands, giving specifiers a furniture‑to‑furniture benchmark. Geberit focuses its EPD coverage on frames, piping and select ceramics rather than vanity furniture, which still helps their bids but does not close the gap in cabinetry (Geberit profile on EPD Guide). Duravit’s current EPDs emphasize sanitary ceramics, not vanity cabinets. Net effect, Dansani’s new declarations narrow the field where few rivals verify bathroom furniture at SKU level.
Scope notes that help submittals land fast
The Mido EPDs read as product‑specific, not a vague portfolio average. That clarity reduces back‑and‑forth in submittals since the model, materials, and finishes match what goes on the purchase order. We have seen that precise scope tends to speed reviewer acceptance and lowers the risk of last‑minute swaps when carbon targets bite.
What procurement teams will ask next
Two questions usually follow a first EPD. Do other sizes or drawer configurations share the same declaration, and are companion pieces like mirror cabinets or worktops covered. Extending coverage to your top movers keeps the whole set spec‑ready, which is where the commercial payoff shows up most.
Website discoverability
We looked for these new EPDs on Dansani’s sustainability pages and could not find direct links to the PDFs as of today. Here is their current sustainability hub in English and Danish for reference: https://www.dansani.co.uk/about-dansani/corporate-social-responsibility-csr/sustainability-and-environment and https://www.dansani.dk/om-dansani/corporate-social-responsibility-csr/baeredygtighed-og-miljoe/ . Visibility matters. Adding an EPDs section with live links will help sales teams, dealers and specifiers find and reuse them without email chassing.
The takeaway for product teams
Dansani’s bathroom furniture now speaks the language of specs, not just design. That closes a real gap against brands that only verify ceramics or hardware, and it creates room to win on measured impact rather than price alone. Keep the momentum by expanding coverage to adjacent sizes and companion units, and by making the EPDs one click away on the website. It is a small operational lift that pays back quickly on bid day. This is definately a strong first step.


