a post about something that is becoming increasingly rare on British streets,
public toilets, as UK councils across the land close them down to save money, but in Japan city councils, councilors and non-profit organisations work for the people, to make the peoples lives better, and in that vein earlier
this year, the non-profit Nippon Foundation launched “The Tokyo Toilet Project”
in a creative attempt to cure people’s toilet phobia, the project tasked 16 experienced architects
with renovating 17 public toilets located in the public parks of Shibuya
District, one of Tokyo’s busiest commercial areas. According to a Nippon
Foundation statement, the main goal of this endeavor was “that people will feel
comfortable using these public toilets and to foster a spirit of hospitality
for the next person”,
Pritzker
Prize-winning architect Shigeru Ban’s creations have been getting the most
attention so far, mostly because his design seems to go against the main
characteristic of a modern toilet. When most people think about toilets, the
first thing that comes to mind is privacy, but the Japanese architect’s
creations in Haru-no-Ogawa Community Park and the Yoyogi Fukamachi Mini Park
both have see-through walls,
but the
transparent nature of these revolutionary public bathrooms is by design, as
they allow potential users to see inside before venturing in, thus laying their
two main concerns to rest – “the first is whether it is clean inside, and the
second is that no one is secretly waiting inside,” according to the Nippon
Foundation, consisting of several adjacent cubicles, each sporting a different
color, the ingenious public toilets rely on the latest smartglass technology to
turn the transparent walls opaque whenever the door is locked, and transparent again
when the door is unlocked, “This allows users to check the cleanliness and
whether anyone is using the toilet from the outside. At night, the facility
lights up the park like a beautiful lantern,” the Nippon Foundation statement
mentioned,
along with
Shigeru Ban’s transparent creations, three other public restrooms designed by
participants in The Tokyo Toilet Project also opened this month, and two more
innovative designs are set to be showcased in the coming week. The remaining
public toilet renovations are set to be unveiled in spring of next year, as an aside, transparent toilets have been used in Japan before, back in 2014, the city of
Oita introduced see-through toilets that relied on motion sensors to turn the
walls opaque, however, Kotaku reported that the toilets were risky to use, as
if the sensors didn’t detect any movement for 35 consecutive seconds, they
turned the walls transparent again, now let me think about this, me, and anything electrical = disaster! if they use electricity to make the glass non see through, there I will be sitting there, just as the power cut strikes!
No comments:
Post a Comment