Public Bathrooms: Design Things I Hate (And Why)

Toilet rooms, WC’s, bathrooms, the loo, restrooms, water closets, and washrooms- people all over the world use these public spaces multiple times a day.

A great toilet room is an experience that you tell your friends about when you get back to the restaurant table.

A good toilet room doesn’t give you the ‘ick’.

A poorly designed toilet room doesn’t consider the activities that are carried out in that room or the people that are the stars of the show.

Here is a list of toilet room qualities that I, as an architect, absolutely hate- and you probably do too. Architects, designers, and business owners should avoid implementing these!

  • Automatic flushers that don’t flush or are hard to flush

    • This is the issue that spurred this post. I posted on Instagram about a flush activator I was planning to specify and received a HUGE response

    • Most agreed, the Toto side-button flush activators, for example, are very tricky to hit with your foot. I love a good top-mount flusher like this one from Sloan so that I can tap it with a crane kick and be on my way

  • Gigantic vision gaps in the toilet partitions that dispel all notions of privacy

    • This is a huge design flaw! So many toilet partition manufacturers have no-gap designs or add-on panels to cover potential gaps- designers, specify these! There is nothing more awkward than making eye contact with a stranger through the gap

  • Translucent toilet stalls

    • Hell no! I don’t care how trendy these are- they are awkward and uncomfortable to use

  • Two way mirrors at the sinks

    • Again, HELL NO! I need actual privacy as I dislodge spinach from my teeth

  • Horror movie, surgical suite lighting (lighting that is blue and cold)

    • Throw away those 5000K and above light bulbs. Warm light is so much better!

  • Empty dispensers- toilet paper, paper towel, seat covers

    • A single residential roll won’t sustain a commercial bathroom. Let’s be realistic- specify dispensers that can hold multiple or XL rolls!

  • Soap dispensers without a drip tray

    • RIP to the soft surface you placed on the counter in the soap puddle

  • Automatic paper towel dispensers that dispense 1” of paper towel

    • We need more than that- even if we use the Joe Smith TED Talk method for drying our hands with paper towels. I think 6” min is respectable, maybe even a bit more if the building manager wants to get wild

  • Faucets that don’t stay on long enough

    • The CDC recommends at least 20 seconds! This is a SETTING that the owner can change. I understand the need to balance the time for water conservation, so maybe we do 4 sets of 5 seconds? Anything under 5 seconds is ~ germ city ~

  • No unisex toilet room

    • Let’s be real, unisex restrooms are necessary facilities for many people, but also very helpful luxuries for others seeking privacy for #2 (if you know what I mean). Let’s add more of these to our public spaces

  • Gas station bathrooms with wood furniture, fake flowers, and doilies

    • This is an incredibly rare instance, but has anyone else gone to a gas station and the owner has decorated the bathroom with furniture you’d find at your Great Aunt’s house? It all just seems very porous and germy

  • Stalls that aren’t wide enough for the in-swinging door, the paper towel dispenser, and your body

    • As an architect, I know there are a lot of codes that result in this condition, but I hate squeezing past the door and accessories into the stall- it’s even worse at the airport with a carry on suitcase which- gasp! - might touch the toilet as you bring it in the stall. Yuck!

After reading this, you might realize that you’re a toilet room expert too!

What are features that you wished were different in public restrooms? What are features that make bathrooms great? (Perhaps this will be a future post…)

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