Design Trends: Inclusion, Privacy, Efficiency, & Convenience
We’ve been taking a closer look at contemporary restrooms and see some excellent trends in their design, namely inclusion, privacy, efficiency, and convenience.
INCLUSION Inclusive, gender-neutral restrooms serve everyone from those caring for opposite-sex children or elders to gender non-conforming people. Unlike single unisex ADA toilet rooms, new space-efficient facilities bring everyone into the same space. Unlike traditional facilities with quite different cultures in the men’s and women’s, inclusive restrooms are fostering a fresh culture of mutual respect.
PRIVACY When men and women, kids, wheelchair users, and everyone else uses the same restroom, privacy is a key requirement. Out are stalls with panels that start nearly at knee level, rise a bit above your head and have peek-a-boo gaps. Inclusion calls for privacy – no urinals insight and individual rooms with doors that have no more than a 2-inch gap at the bottom. Cities such as Portland and Seattle, with their respective All User and Gender Neutral policies in place, are leading the way.
EFFICIENCY Inclusive restrooms have built-in potty parity. As soon as a stall is vacated the next user is served. Lines that form outside the ladies room unfairly cause women to miss part of a sporting event or the initial scene of a film or play. When there’s no similar line at the men’s room, the one at the women’s underlines the startling inefficiency of the traditional layout.
CONVENIENCE All of the above make it easier for users to meet their essential physiological needs. And we’re pleased to see additional features in our “public conveniences”. Hands-free options include doorless and S-shaped entries, stalls large enough to accommodate a travelers’ baggage, and sensors that flush, dispense soap, run warm water in the sink, and deliver towels or warm dry air. Enhanced with clean sightlines, quality wood and tile work, interesting artwork, live plants, and flowers, contemporary restrooms can put people at ease. In time, the free provision of menstrual pads and tampons in the washrooms of schools and workplaces will be seen as an integral part of restroom service.
PRIVACY When men and women, kids, wheelchair users, and everyone else uses the same restroom, privacy is a key requirement. Out are stalls with panels that start nearly at knee level, rise a bit above your head and have peek-a-boo gaps. Inclusion calls for privacy – no urinals insight and individual rooms with doors that have no more than a 2-inch gap at the bottom. Cities such as Portland and Seattle, with their respective All User and Gender Neutral policies in place, are leading the way.
EFFICIENCY Inclusive restrooms have built-in potty parity. As soon as a stall is vacated the next user is served. Lines that form outside the ladies room unfairly cause women to miss part of a sporting event or the initial scene of a film or play. When there’s no similar line at the men’s room, the one at the women’s underlines the startling inefficiency of the traditional layout.
CONVENIENCE All of the above make it easier for users to meet their essential physiological needs. And we’re pleased to see additional features in our “public conveniences”. Hands-free options include doorless and S-shaped entries, stalls large enough to accommodate a travelers’ baggage, and sensors that flush, dispense soap, run warm water in the sink, and deliver towels or warm dry air. Enhanced with clean sightlines, quality wood and tile work, interesting artwork, live plants, and flowers, contemporary restrooms can put people at ease. In time, the free provision of menstrual pads and tampons in the washrooms of schools and workplaces will be seen as an integral part of restroom service.