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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
August
Authors advocate more and better
women's restrooms in public facilities
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
8/30/04
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Architecture
professor Kathryn Anthony, right, has been exploring problems
associated with inadequate public restroom facilities for
two years as an outgrowth of her research for that book. In
an article co-written with graduate student Meghan Dufresne,
left, and published recently in the journal Licensed Architect,
the pair argue that “it is now time for architects,
facilities managers and building code officials to revisit
public restrooms – and they need a major overhaul.” |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Women have made significant strides in their fight for
equal rights, but they’re being kept in line by inadequate restroom
facilities.
Restroom parity is not a frivolous issue, says Kathryn Anthony, a professor
of architecture at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The author of “Designing for
Diversity: Gender, Race and Ethnicity in the Architectural Profession”
(University of Illinois Press, 2001), Anthony has been exploring problems
associated with inadequate public restroom facilities for two years
as an outgrowth of her research for that book.
There has been progress in recent years on the parity front, Anthony
notes. More than 20 states and a number of municipalities have passed
laws requiring the doubling, tripling and even quadrupling of the ratio
of women’s-to-men’s toilets in public buildings. Most legislation,
however, applies only to new construction, major places of assembly
or major remodeling projects.
Parity isn’t the only problem that need to be addressed when considering
public-restroom design flaws and inadequacies, according to Anthony.
“Although we are all forced to use them whenever we’re away
from home, many of today’s public restrooms raise a host of problems
for women as well as men, adults as well as children,” she noted
in an article co-written with graduate student Meghan Dufresne and published
recently in the journal Licensed Architect. In the article, Anthony
and Dufresne argue that “it is now time for architects, facilities
managers and building code officials to revisit public restrooms –
and they need a major overhaul.”
While the authors advocate the inclusion of more toilets in women’s
restrooms – as well as larger stalls that can better accommodate
pregnant and obese women – they note that a wider set of gender-neutral
issues involving safety, access, hygiene and public health also must
be addressed.
For starters, Anthony said, more public buildings should have family-friendly
or companion-care restrooms that allow opposite-gender caregivers to
provide assistance to children or to elderly or disabled persons. The
need for more of these facilities becomes increasingly obvious, when
considering changing demographics in the United States, she said.
“As the baby boomer population reaches retirement age, the numbers
of those with Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and
other mental and physical disabilities will increase,” Anthony
said. “Those afflicted by such infirmities are often unable to
use a restroom alone – yet now are often forced do so.”
Meanwhile, “an anxious family member of the opposite gender must
wait outside,” said Anthony, who experienced this situation firsthand
when her husband, who has since died, required assistance while confined
to a wheelchair.
And in a world where child-safety is on the minds of most parents 24/7,
family-friendly restrooms meet needs that go beyond simple convenience.
Case in point, Anthony says, is the fate of a young California boy killed
in 1998 in a public restroom while his aunt waited outside for him.
“Today’s restrooms don’t bode well for many men, either,”
said the U. of I. architecture professor. “Although few discuss
it publicly, some men question the lack of privacy in the standard men’s
room lineup of urinals, with users in full view of each other. In fact,
a disorder called paruresis, or shy bladder syndrome, making it impossible
for someone to urinate in public if others are within site or hearing
distance, affects over
1 million Americans.” Nine out of 10 of them are men, she noted.
Despite improvements that have surfaced in various locales nationwide,
Anthony doesn’t expect to see dramatic changes in public-restroom
design anytime soon. In part, that’s because public-restroom users
aren’t an organized or politically powerful constituency –
unlike those who lobbied for accommodations through the Americans With
Disabilities Act.
Before real change can occur, she said, architects need to speak out,
and legislators must draft laws. In the meantime, women will likely
keep standing in lines and shrugging it off. And people will be grateful
when they happen to find family restrooms.
“Like it or not, most of us use public restrooms every day,”
Anthony said. “Consequently, even the slightest improvements to
this part of our built environment can have a tremendous positive impact
on all segments of our population.”
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