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{{Short description|Sanitary fixture for urination}} |
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A '''urinal''' is any specialized [[toilet]] or container designed for [[urination|urinating]], generally by men. |
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{{About|the plumbing fixture|the bottle used for urination|Urinal (health care)|other uses}} |
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{{pp-semi-indef}} |
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{{more citations needed|date=December 2019}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}} |
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[[File:Men’s Room Urinals.jpg|thumb|342x342px|Urinals in an office restroom]] |
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A '''urinal''' ({{IPAc-en|US|ˈ|j|ʊər|ə|n|əl}}, {{IPAc-en|UK|j|ʊəˈr|aɪ|n|əl}})<ref>{{cite web|url=https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/urinal|title=urinal|work=Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus|publisher=Cambridge University Press|access-date=30 December 2017}}</ref> is a sanitary [[plumbing fixture]] similar to a [[toilet]], but for [[urination]] only. Urinals are often provided in men's [[public toilet|public restroom]]s in [[Western world|Western countries]] (less so in [[Muslim world|Muslim countries]]). They are usually used in a standing position. Urinals can be equipped with manual flushing, automatic flushing, or without flushing, as is the case for waterless urinals. They can be arranged as single sanitary fixtures (with or without privacy walls), or in a trough design without privacy walls. |
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Urinals designed for females ("[[female urinal]]s") also exist but are rare. It is possible for females to use stand-up urinals using a [[female urination device]].<ref name="restroomsdotorg">{{cite web|url=http://restrooms.org/standing.html|title=A Woman?s Guide on How to Pee Standing|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030604104917/http://restrooms.org/standing.html|archive-date=4 June 2003|url-status=unfit|access-date=22 November 2010}}</ref> The term "urinal" may also apply to a small building or other structure containing such fixtures. It can also refer to a small container in which urine can be collected for [[urinalysis|medical analysis]], or for use where access to toilet facilities is not possible, such as in small aircraft, during extended [[stakeout]]s, or for the [[bedridden]]. |
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Public urinals are normally designed for use while standing upright, and often contains a deodorizing [[urinal cake]] contained within a plastic mesh guard container or a plastic mesh guard without a urinal cake. The plastic mesh guard is designed to prevent solid objects (such as [[cigarette]] butts, feces, or paper) from being flushed and possibly causing a plumbing stoppage. |
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==Description== |
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[[Image:Urinal with urinal cake gsu cit 2004.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Urinal with [[strawberry]] scented [[urinal cake]].]] |
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[[File:Wien 103 (4428544487).jpg|thumb|Urinals with privacy barriers in a men's [[public toilet]] in [[Vienna, Austria]]]] |
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The term may also apply to a small building or other structure, in which such toilets are contained. It can also refer to a small container where urine can be collected for medical purposes, or for use where access to toilet facilities is not possible, such as in small aircraft or for the bedridden. |
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[[File:Sensor-operated-urinals1377p.jpg|thumb|Typical arrangement of sensor-operated urinals in a row without partitions]]A stand-up urinal can be used conveniently and appropriately by someone who has a penis or other adaptive means with which to urinate from a standing position. There is no age restriction, and urinals are commonly used by men and boys of all ages. [[Female urinal]]s also exist but are not common. |
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In busy [[public toilets]], urinals are installed for efficiency. Compared with [[urination]] in a general-purpose toilet, usage is faster and more sanitary because at the urinal there are no fecal germs, no additional doors or locks to touch, and no seat to turn up. Consistent use of urinals also keeps the toilet stalls cleaner and more available for persons who need to defecate. A urinal takes less space, is simpler, and consumes less water per flush (or even no water at all) than a [[flush toilet]]. Large numbers of them are usually installed along a common supply pipe and drain. Urinals may also come in different heights, to accommodate tall and short users. |
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== History == |
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The urinal was first [[patented]] in the United States by [[Andrew Rankin]] on [[March 27]], [[1866]].[http://www.brainyhistory.com/events/1866/march_27_1866_56552.html] |
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Public urinals usually have a plastic mesh guard, which may optionally contain a deodorizing [[urinal deodorizer block]] or "urinal cake". The mesh is intended to prevent solid objects (such as [[cigarette butt]]s, feces, [[chewing gum]], or paper) from being flushed and possibly causing a plumbing stoppage. In some restaurants, bars, and clubs, ice may be put in the urinals, serving some of the same purposes as the deodorizing block without dispensing odorous chemicals. |
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== Flushing == |
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Most public urinals incorporate a flushing system to rinse urine from the bowl of the device to prevent foul odors. The flush can be triggered by one of several methods: |
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=== Arrangement === |
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[[File:Floor standing urinals.jpg|thumb|Urinals that extend to the floor, suitable for users of all heights]] |
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[[Image:Ostia anticave - Vespasiano - foto Stefano Bolognini.JPG|thumb|200px|left|[[Ostia Antica]]. Old roman urinals]]This type of flush might be regarded as standard in the United States. Each urinal is equipped with a button or short lever to activate the flush, with users expected to operate it as they leave. Such a directly-controlled system is the most efficient provided that patrons remember to use it. This is far from certain, however, often because of fear of touching the handle, which is located too high to kick.<ref>In the case of toilets, users often kick the flush lever to avoid the perceived or real possibility of infection from touching the lever.</ref> Urinals with foot-activated flushing systems are sometimes found in high-traffic areas; these systems have a button set into the floor or a pedal on the wall at ankle height.<!-- {{tl|reqphoto}} added to talk page for this article --> Some establishments, often bars, pubs, or nightclubs, fill their urinals with ice cubes during peak hours. As the ice melts, it serves to slowly flush the urinal, and also cools the [[urine]] to prevent smells from rising during use. The [[Americans with Disabilities Act]] requires that flush valves be mounted no higher than 44" AFF (above the finished floor). Additionally, the urinal shall be mounted no higher than 17" AFF, which has a rim that is tapered and elongated and protrudes at least 14" from the wall. This enables users in wheelchairs to straddle the lip of the urinal and urinate without having to "arc" the flow of urine too high. |
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For purposes of space and economic practicality, urinals are not typically placed inside stalls. Unlike in female public toilets that do not have urinals, optimal resource efficiency in male restrooms therefore requires urinating in full visibility of other users. In recent years, it has become more common in some countries for dividers or partitions to be installed between urinals to eliminate any chance of incidental exposure during the process of urination.{{citation needed|date=July 2019}} |
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Urinals in high-capacity public toilets are usually arranged in one or more rows directly opposite the door, so that users have their backs to people entering or standing outside. Often, one or two of the urinals, typically at one end of a long row, will be mounted lower than the others; they are meant for the disabled and other users who cannot reach the regular urinals. In facilities where people of various heights are present, such as schools, urinals that extend down to floor level may be used to allow anyone of any height to use any urinal. |
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=== Voice-Activated Flush === |
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In some regions of Japan, particularly the industrial zones of Honshu, many urinals feature a voice-activated flushing system. These flush systems are triggered by the word "wash!", "fire" or "destroy the grime" in over 30 different languages. |
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Instead of individual fixtures, trough urinals may be installed. These designs can be used by a number of people simultaneously, but they do not allow for much privacy. They are often installed where there is a high peak demand, such as in schools, music festivals, theatrical events, sports stadiums, discos, dance clubs, and convention halls. |
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=== Timed flush === |
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[[Image:CLHSUrinal.jpg|thumb|200px|right|A rather primitive urinal in [[Chung Ling High School]], [[Malaysia]], operated using timed-flush mechanism.]] |
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In the [[United Kingdom]], [[Republic of Ireland|Ireland]], [[Hong Kong]] and some parts of [[Sweden]] and [[Finland]], manual flush handles are unusual. Instead, the traditional system is a timed flush that operates automatically at regular intervals. Groups of up to ten or so urinals will be connected to a single overhead cistern, which contains the timing mechanism. A constant drip-feed of water slowly fills the cistern, until a tripping point is reached, the valve opens, and all the urinals in the group are flushed. Electronic controllers performing the same function are also used. |
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Urinals were once installed exclusively in commercial or institutional settings, but are also now available for private homes. They offer the advantages of substantial water savings in residences with many occupants, and reduction of "splash back", making cleaning easier. |
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This system does not require any action from its users, but it is wasteful of water where the toilets are used irregularly. However, because British men are so used to the automatic system, attempts to install manual flushes to save water are generally unsuccessful. Users ignore them not through deliberate laziness or fear of infection, but because activating the flush is not habitual. |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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To help reduce water usage when restrooms are closed, some restrooms with timed flushing use an electric water valve connected to the restroom light switch. When the building is in active use during the day and the lights are on, the timed flush operates normally. At night when the building is closed, the lights are turned off and the flushing action stops. |
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File:Urinal with urinal cake gsu cit 2004.jpg|Urinal with pink-colored [[Urinal deodorizer block|urinal cake]] |
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File:Many urinals rows with amber lighting in the Tokyo Cinema's toilet.jpg|Urinals in [[Tokyo, Japan]]; one at far right is fitted with handle bars for people with disabilities |
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File:2007-08-cesko-344.jpg|Urinals in the [[Czech Republic]] |
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File:Urinal 3.jpg|Trough urinal in [[Los Angeles]] |
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File:Urinals Munich, Germany.JPG|Train station urinal in [[Munich, Germany]] |
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File:GOMA toilets 02.jpg|Modern trough urinal in an art museum in [[Brisbane, Australia]] |
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File:Wallurinal.jpg|Old-style wall urinal at [[Stetson Bowl Stadium]] in [[Surrey, British Columbia]], Canada |
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File:Historic American Buildings Survey Cervin Robinson, Photographer June 1959 URINAL DETAIL, BOYS' TOILET, BASEMENT SOUTH WING - Mayhew School, Poplar and Chambers Streets, Boston, HABS MASS,13-BOST,67-8.tif|Vintage urinals in [[Boston]] secondary school (c. 1933–1959) |
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File:Urinal at the school ,showing boys and girls side. (5075089050).jpg|Outdoor urinals at school for boys (left) and girls (right) in [[Tamil Nadu]], India |
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</gallery> |
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<!-- |File:Stainless steel urinal.jpg|A stainless steel trough-style urinal --> |
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<!-- File:Deutsches Haus NOLA interior urinal.JPG|Old-fashioned urinal in [[New Orleans]] --> |
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==Urinals with flushing== |
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=== Automatic flush === |
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[[File:A_man_using_a_urinal.jpg|thumb|A man using a urinal]] |
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Most public urinals incorporate a water flushing system to rinse urine from the bowl of the device, to prevent foul odors. The flush can be triggered by one of several methods: |
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===Manual handles=== |
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[[Image:Plumbingsurveillancelightvectorpainting.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Toto battery-powered hands-free automatic sensor operated flush system.]] |
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This type of flush might be regarded as standard in the United States. Each urinal is equipped with a button or short lever to activate the flush, with users expected to operate it as they leave. Such a directly controlled system is the most efficient, provided that patrons remember to use it. This is far from certain, however, often because of fear of touching the handle, which is located too high to kick.<ref>With public sit-down toilets, users often kick the flush lever to avoid the perceived or real possibility of infection from touching it.</ref> Urinals with foot-activated flushing systems are sometimes found in high-traffic areas; these systems have a button set into the floor or a pedal on the wall at ankle height.<!-- {{tl|reqphoto}} added to talk page for this article --> The [[Americans with Disabilities Act]] requires that flush valves be mounted no higher than {{convert|44|in|cm}} AFF (above the finished floor). Additionally, the urinal is to be mounted no higher than {{convert|17|in|cm}} AFF, and to have a rim that is tapered and elongated and protrudes at least {{convert|14|in|cm}} from the wall. This enables users in wheelchairs to straddle the lip of the urinal and urinate without having to "arc" the flow of urine upwards. |
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===Timed flush=== |
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Electronic automatic flushes solve the problems of both previous approaches, and are common in new installations. Active or (more usually) [[passive infrared sensor]]s identify when the urinal has been used( or when someone has stood in front of it and moved away), and activate the flush. Thus the urinal is cleaned, where with a manual flush it might not have been, but water is not wasted when the toilet is not used. |
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In Germany, the United Kingdom, France, the Republic of Ireland, Hong Kong and some parts of Sweden and Finland, manual flush handles are unusual. Instead, the traditional system is a timed flush that operates automatically at regular intervals. Groups of up to ten or more urinals will be connected to a single overhead cistern, which contains the timing mechanism. A constant drip-feed of water slowly fills the cistern until a tipping point is reached, when the valve opens (or a [[siphon]] begins to drain the cistern), and all the urinals in the group are flushed. Electronic controllers performing the same function are also used. |
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This system does not require any action from its users, but it is wasteful of water when toilets are used irregularly. However, in these countries users are so used to the automatic system, that attempts to install manual flushes to save water are generally unsuccessful. Users ignore them not through deliberate laziness or fear of infection, but because activating the flush is not habitual.{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}} |
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Automatic flush facilities can be retrofitted to existing systems. The handle-operated valves of a manual system can be replaced with a suitably-designed self-contained electronic valve, often battery-powered to avoid the need to add cables. Timed-flush installations may add a device that regulates the water flow to the cistern according to the overall activity detected in the room. This does not provide true per-fixture automatic flushing, but is simple and cheap to add because only one device is required for the whole system. |
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To help reduce water usage when public toilets are closed, some public toilets with timed flushing use an electric water valve connected to the room's light switch. When the building is in active use during the day and the lights are on, the timed flush operates normally. At night when the building is closed, the lights are turned off and the flushing action stops. |
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To prevent false-triggering of the automatic flush, most infra-red detectors require that a presence be detected for at least five seconds, such as when a person is standing in front of it. This prevents a whole line of automatic flush units from triggering in series if someone just walks past them. |
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===Door-regulated flush=== |
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The automatic flush mechanism also typically waits for the presence to go out of sensor range before flushing. This reduces water usage, compared to a sensor that would trigger a continuous flushing action all the while a presence is being detected. |
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This is an older method of water-saving automatic flushing, which only operates when the public toilet has been used. A [[push-button]] switch is mounted in the door frame, and triggers the flush valve for all urinals every time the door is opened. While it cannot detect the use of individual urinals, it provides reasonable flushing action without wasting excessive amounts of water when the urinals are not being used. This method requires a spring-operated automatic [[door closer]], since the flush mechanism only operates when the door opens. |
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Alternatively, a flushing system connected to the door can count the number of users, and operate when the number of door opening events reaches a certain value. At night, the door never opens, so flushing never occurs. |
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=== Door-regulated flush === |
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This is an older method of water-saving automatic flushing, which only operates when the room is being used. A [[push-button]] switch is mounted in the door frame of the restroom, and triggers the flush valve for all restroom urinals every time the door is opened. While it can't detect the use of individual urinals, it provides reasonable flushing action without wasting excessive amounts of water when the restroom is not being used. This method requires a spring-operated automatic [[door closer]], since the flush mechanism only operates when the restroom door opens. |
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=== |
===Automatic flush=== |
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[[File:Surveilluminescent Lights in Motion handwash faucets 02.jpg|thumb|Long-exposure photography shows how light sensors work.]] |
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[[Image:Wallurinal.jpg|thumb|A gutter urinal.]] |
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Electronic automatic flushes solve the problems of previous approaches, and are common in new installations. A [[passive infrared sensor]] identifies when the urinal has been used, by detecting when someone has stood in front of it and moved away, and then activates the flush. There usually is also a small override button, to allow optional manual flushing. |
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A more recent innovation is urinals that do not use water at all. Models introduced by [[Waterless Company]] in 1992<ref>http://www.exceldryer.com/TopTen2002.asp</ref> and others in 2001 by [[Falcon Waterfree Technologies]] and [[Sloan Valve Company]], as well as [[Duravit]], utilize a trap insert filled with a sealant liquid instead of water. The lighter-than-water sealant floats on top of the urine collected in the U-bend, preventing odors from being released into the air. Although the cartridge and sealant must be periodically replaced, the system saves anywhere between 15,000 and 45,000 gallons (approx. between 56'800 and 170'000 liters) of water per urinal per year. Other companies do not use a cartridge; instead they have developed an outlet system that traps the odor, preventing the smell often present in toilet blocks. They can be installed in high-traffic facilities and in situations where providing a water supply may be difficult or where water conservation is desired. |
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Automatic flush facilities can be retrofitted to existing systems. The handle-operated valves of a manual system can be replaced with a suitably designed self-contained electronic valve, often battery-powered to avoid the need to add cables. Older timed-flush installations may add a device that regulates the water flow to the cistern according to the overall activity detected in the room. This does not provide true per-fixture automatic flushing, but is simple and cheap to add because only one device is required for the whole system. |
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==Arrangement of urinals== |
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[[Image:Sensor-operated-urinals1377p.jpg|220px|thumb|A typical arrangement of urinals, in a linear array, without partitions: a row of sensor operated fixtures provides for optimal traffic flow and throughput.]] |
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Urinals are usually associated with a commercial, industrial, or high capacity men's [[washroom]], where they are used, together with toilets, for high throughput capacity, as part of an efficiently designed [[washroom architecture]]. For this reason, one seldom finds an individual urinal. Instead, large numbers of them are installed along a common supply pipe and drain. They are always out in the open so that those using them are in plain sight to everyone in the room. They are usually located in the traffic pattern of the room so there is little to no privacy at a urinal. There may be small partitions for [[privacy]] but they only serve the purpose of hiding the exposed private area. The rest of the person will be in plain view. Also, the urinals may be spaced far apart to create an air of comfort. Where urinals are more closely arranged, some men follow the so-called "1-3-5 rule," under which men only occupy the odd-numbered urinals, thus leaving the even ones to serve as barriers. Of course, this rule can be followed only when the facility's instantaneous usage is low enough to permit using only every other urinal. Unlike women's rooms where everything is done privately behind a door, men's rooms require males to become comfortable urinating in plain open view of everyone who happens to be in the room and if the occupants of the room know each other conversation is common at the urinals. However, men will generally stare straight ahead at the wall or down into their own urinal rather than at a man at an adjacent urinal. |
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To prevent false-triggering of the automatic flush, most infrared detectors require that a presence be detected for at least five seconds,{{citation needed|date=September 2012}} such as when a person is standing in front of it. This prevents a whole line of automatic flush units from triggering in succession if someone just walks past them. The automatic flush mechanism also typically waits for the presence to go out of sensor range before flushing. This reduces water usage, compared to a sensor that would trigger a continuous flushing action the whole time that a presence is detected. |
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[[Image:Portable-toilet-Netherlands.jpg||thumb|220px|left|A portable set of four urinals in the Netherlands.]] |
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Often, one or two of the urinals, typically at one end of a long row of urinals, will be mounted lower than the others, for use by short people, often children, who can't reach the urinals that are meant for teenage boys and men. In facilities where males of various heights are present, such as schools, elongated urinals that extend down to floor level may be used to allow anyone of any height to use any urinal. |
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Individual single-user facilities usually do not have a urinal, and instead have just one [[toilet]]. |
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==<span id="waterless"></span> Waterless urinals == |
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Once used exclusively in commercial or institutional washrooms, urinals for private home installation are now available. They offer the advantage of substantial savings of water in homes with multiple male occupants. |
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Since about the 1990s urinals have been available on the market that use no water at all. These are called waterless urinals or flushless urinals. |
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The first waterless urinal was developed at the end of the 19th century by the German-Austrian Wilhelm Beetz using an oil-based syphon with a liquid that he called Urinol.{{citation needed|date=March 2018}} |
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===Street urinals and ''vespasiennes''=== |
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Waterless urinals can save between {{convert|15000|and|45,000|gal|L}} of water per urinal per year, depending on the amount of water used in the water-flushed urinal for comparison purposes, and the number of uses per day. For example, these numbers assume that the urinal would be used between 40 and 120 times per business day.<ref>"Going Green Pays Off", ''Buildings'' magazine, July 2004, www.buildings.com</ref> |
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In some localities, urinals may be located on public sidewalks or in public areas such as parks. These urinals are usually equipped with partitions or dividers to provide some semblance of privacy. They may or may not be equipped with flush mechanisms. |
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Waterless urinals allow the collection of undiluted pure [[urine]] which can be used as a [[fertilizer]].<ref name="Munch">von Münch, E., Winker, M. (2011). [http://www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/875 Technology review of urine diversion components – Overview on urine diversion components such as waterless urinals, urine diversion toilets, urine storage and reuse systems]. Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Chapter 4</ref> |
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[[Image:VespasienneLarge.jpg|thumb|230px|right|The last surviving vespasienne, on the boulevard Arago in Paris]] |
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A city famous for its street urinals is [[Paris, France]]. Until the [[1990]]s, street urinals were a common sight in the city, and in the [[1930]]s more than 1200 were in service. Parisians referred to them as ''vespasiennes,'' the name being derived from that of the [[Roman Emperor]] [[Vespasian]], who imposed a tax on urine. Beginning in the 1990s, the vespasiennes (renowned for their smell and lack of hygiene) were gradually replaced by the far superior [[Sanisette]]s. Today only one vespasienne remains in the city (on the boulevard Arago), and it is still regularly used. They still exist in other French cities, and in other countries. |
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=== Odor control === |
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See also [[Toilet#Public toilets|Public toilets]]. |
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Models of waterless urinals introduced by the Waterless Company in 1991<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.exceldryer.com/TopTen2002.asp |title=XLerator Hand Dryer – Top Ten |access-date=2014-02-05}}</ref> and others in 2001 by Falcon Waterfree Technologies and [[Sloan Valve Company]], as well as [[Duravit]], use a trap insert filled with a sealant liquid instead of water. The lighter-than-water sealant floats on top of the urine collected in the U-bend, preventing odors from being released into the air. The cartridge and sealant must be periodically replaced. |
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Waterless urinals may also use an outlet system that traps the odor, preventing the smell often present in toilet blocks.{{Citation needed|date=December 2013}} Another method to eliminate odor was introduced by [[Caroma]], which installed a [[Urinal deodorizer block|deodorizing block]] in their waterless urinal that was activated during use.{{Citation needed|date=December 2013}} |
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==Makeshift urinals== |
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During the [[Korean War]], [[Vietnam War]], [[Operation Desert Storm]] etc., "piss tubes" were used as make-shift urinals. To make one, soldiers would affix an inverted water bottle on one end of a rigid tube, burying the other end. Removing the base of the bottle made a funnel which would be left at the proper height. Deposited urine simply soaked into the ground. When the area became saturated, the device was relocated. |
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Odor control in waterless urinals is also achieved with simple one-way valves which are manufactured as a flat rubber tube (the tube opens when urine flows through) or with two silicone "curtain" pieces. The former is used in the waterless urinals by the company Keramag<ref>von Münch, E., Winker, M. (2011). [http://www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/1146 Worldwide listing of suppliers for waterless urinals – Appendix 1 for technology review of urine diversion components]. Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH</ref> in Germany (model Centaurus) and the latter is marketed by the company Addicom in South Africa who called it the EcoSmellStop device.<ref>von Münch, E., Dahm, P. (2009). [http://www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/890 Waterless Urinals – A Proposal to Save Water and Recover Urine Nutrients in Africa]. 34th WEDC International Conference, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia</ref> |
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==Urinals for women== |
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[[Image:Female Urinal.jpg|thumb|250px|A modern female urinal at [[Dortmund Airport]].]] |
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<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Male Urinal.jpg|thumb|250px|A pack of urinals that are not female urinals.]] --> |
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=== Applications === |
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Nearly all urinals are intended for use by males, but a few have been designed for use by women. From 1950 to 1974, the [[American Standard Companies|American Standard]] company offered the mass-produced "Ladies' Home Urinal." It did not provide significant advantages over conventional toilets, because it used just as much floor space and flushing water. Its main selling point was that women could use the fixture without touching it. |
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Waterless urinals can be installed in high-traffic facilities, and in situations where providing a water supply may be difficult or where [[water conservation]] is desired. |
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Waterless urinals have become rather common in Germany since about 2009 and can be found at restaurants, cinemas, highway rest stops, train stations and so forth. It was estimated in 2009 that there are about 6 million urinals in Germany, and about 100,000 of those were of the waterless type in that year.<ref name="EcoUrinal">[http://wupperinst.org/fa/redaktion/downloads/publications/EcoInno_Urinals_de.pdf Oeko-Innovationen: Wasserlose Urinale. Kein Wasserverbrauch und mehr Hygiene] (in German), 2009</ref> |
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Several other designs have been tried since then, but they either required the user to hover awkwardly or to bring her genitals into close contact with the fixture. Most have not caught on. Current clothes fashion such as panty hose and slacks inhibit women from using them because they don't want their garments to touch the urinals or the floor. Often American women have little experience with them and don't know whether to approach them forward or backward. |
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Due to high-level [[Water restrictions in Australia#Queensland|water restrictions]] during about 2005-2008 the city council of [[Brisbane]], Australia mandated conversion to waterless urinals. Flush urinals are nowadays rarely seen in Brisbane.{{citation needed|date=March 2018}} |
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More recently, models that use specialized [[funnel]]s have been introduced, with some success, at outdoor festivals (to reduce cycle times and alleviate long lines). |
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{{see|Female urination device}} |
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=== Installation and maintenance === |
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==Popular culture== |
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The drain pipes from waterless urinals need to be installed correctly in terms of diameter, slope and pipe materials in order to prevent buildup of [[struvite]] ("urine stone") and [[calcium phosphate]] precipitates in the pipes, which would cause blockages and could require expensive repairs.<ref name="Munch" /> Also, the undiluted urine is [[corrosive]] to metals (except for stainless steel), which is why plastic pipes are generally preferred for urine drain pipes.<ref name="Munch" /> |
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"''Kisses!''" is a controversial urinal designed by Dutch designer Meike van Schijndel.[[Image:Urinal mouth.jpg|left|thumb|250px|A mouth kiss urinal.]] It is shaped like an open pair of red lips.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bathroom-mania.com/en/endesign/enkisses.html|title=http://www.bathroom-mania.com/en/endesign/enkisses.html}}</ref> In early March of [[2004]] the [[National Organization for Women]] (NOW) took offense to these new urinals [[Virgin Atlantic Airways]] decided to install in the Virgin Atlantic clubhouse at [[JFK Airport]] in [[New York, New York]].<ref>{{cite web |
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| year = [[March 18]], [[2004]] |
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| url = http://www.now.org/issues/media/031804virginatlantic.html |
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| title = Tell Virgin Atlantic: There's Nothing 'Fun' About Exploiting Women | work = Media Activism |
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| publisher = [[National Organization for Women]] |
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| accessmonthday = April 23 | accessyear = 2006 |
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}}</ref> After receiving many angry phone calls from female customers Virgin Atlantic Vice President John Riordan called NOW to apologize.<ref>{{cite press release |
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|publisher= [[National Organization for Women]] |
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|date= [[March 19]], [[2004]] |url= http://www.now.org/press/03-04/03-19.html |
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|title= Outrageous Interruptus: NOW Cheers Decision to Abandon Sexist Urinals |
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|accessdate=April 23, 2006 |
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}}</ref> Protestors surmised a connection to [[oral sex]] and/or [[urolagnia]], and based complaints on the urinals being sexist. |
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Most waterless urinals do not prevent odorous staining on the surface of the urinals, and periodic cleaning of the fixture and its surrounds is still required. When maintained according to manufacturers' recommendations, well-designed waterless urinals do not emit any more odors than flushed urinals do. However, some odor-trapping devices work better than others in the longer term. Regular, thorough maintenance of the respective odor control device is needed for all types of waterless urinals, as per the manufacturer's recommendation. |
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A [[McDonald's]] restaurant in the Netherlands removed them after an American complained to the U.S. head office. Ironically, the urinal in question was designed by a woman.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bathroom-mania.com/en/enwho/endesign.htm|title=http://www.bathroom-mania.com/en/enwho/endesign.htm}}</ref> |
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=== Situation in the United States === |
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In March of [[2006]], the [[Associated Press]] reported that the plumbers [[Trade union|union]] in [[Philadelphia]] had become upset because the developer of the city's newest skyscraper, Liberty Property Trust, has decided to use waterless urinals. Many in the union decided that because of the decision that this would lead to less work for them. The developer cited saving the city 1.6 million gallons (approx 6.06 million liters) of water per year as its deciding factor.<ref>{{cite news |
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US federal law has mandated no more than one gallon per flush since 1994, and the EPA estimates that the average urinal is flushed 20 times per day, which gives an average water use of {{convert|7300|gal|L}} per year.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://epa.gov/WaterSense/pubs/faq_lfu.html |title=WaterSense Labeled Flushing Urinals |publisher=Epa.gov |date=2008-12-22 |access-date=2014-02-05}}</ref> Mechanical traps are not allowed by US [[building codes]]{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} but are allowed in many other countries. |
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| first= Inga (Inquirer Architecture Critic) | last= Saffron |
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| title= Phila. no-flush standoff unclogged, with a catch |
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| publisher=[[The Philadelphia Inquirer]] | pages=A1, A10 | date=April 5, 2006 |
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}} ''Note: available on-line from publisher with account''</ref> |
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Plumbers' [[Trade union|union]]s initially opposed waterless urinals, citing concerns about health and safety, which have been debunked by scientists who have studied the devices. Facing opposition to their attempts to have the devices allowed in plumbing codes, manufacturers devised a compromise. The [[Uniform Plumbing Code]] was modified to allow waterless urinals to be installed, provided that unneeded water lines were nevertheless run to the back of the urinals.<ref>{{citation|url=https://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/06/ff_waterless_urinal/all/1|title=Pissing Match: Is the World Ready for the Waterless Urinal?|author=Joshua Davis|date=22 June 2010|publisher=Wired}}</ref> This allows conventional water-flushing urinals to be retrofitted later, if waterless models were judged to be unsatisfactory over time. |
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*[[Marcel Duchamp]]'s ''[[Fountain (Duchamp)|Fountain]]'' ([[1917]]) is one of the most influential pieces of modern art.<ref>{{cite news |
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|publisher= [[BBC News]] |date= [[December 1]], [[2004]] |
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|url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4059997.stm |
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|title= Duchamp's urinal tops art survey: A white gentlemen's urinal has been named the most influential modern art work of all time |
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|accessdate=April 28, 2006 |
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}}</ref> |
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*On [[January 27]], [[2004]], inventor Eric D Page from [[Sarasota, Florida]] was granted {{US patent|6681419}} for a "Forehead support apparatus". The abstract of the patent makes it clear that this is "...for resting a standing users forehead against a wall above a bathroom commode or urinal or beneath a showerhead." The abstract continues: |
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*:"The apparatus includes a mounting member adapted for attachment to an upright bathroom wall either above the commode or urinal or below the showerhead. A compressible head support member is attached to and extends from the wall and said mounting member. The head support defines an elastically deformable or resilient forehead support surface which is spaced above the floor and from the wall a distance sufficient for the user to lean his forehead thereagainst and be supported while using the commode or urinal." |
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* [[Nassau County, New York|Nassau County]], [[New York]] Police adopt Talking Urinals in a unique Anti-Drunk Driving initiative. Utilizing Wizmark, a talking urinal screen, police can provide bars with free pre-programmed urinal screens urging patrons not to drink and drive.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wizmark.com][http://www.policemag.com/t_newspick.cfm?rank=76670|title=http://www.wizmark.com][http://www.policemag.com/t_newspick.cfm?rank=76670}}</ref> |
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* The [[bullet]] damaged [[brick wall]] from the [[St. Valentines Day Massacre]] was disassembled where it had been originally constructed at 2122 N. Clark Street, Chicago, Illinois<ref>{{cite web|url=http://maps.google.com/maps?oi=map&q=2122+N+Clark+Street,+Chicago,+IL|title=http://maps.google.com/maps?oi=map&q=2122+N+Clark+Street,+Chicago,+IL}}</ref> and reassembled in men's restroom of a bar called Banjo Palace in [[Vancouver, British Columbia]] where it served as a urinal wall. |
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* [[Ernest Hemingway]] converted a urinal from [[Sloppy Joe's]] bar into a water fountain for his cats. The fountain remains a prominent feature at his former home in [[Key West]], [[Florida]]; which remains a popular tourist destination in the city.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hemingwayhome.com/HTML/house.htm|title=http://www.hemingwayhome.com/HTML/house.htm}}</ref> |
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*One example of urinals in popular culture was in a 1990 episode of the sitcom ''[[Roseanne (TV series)|Roseanne]]''. Roseanne Conner is dressed as a man for [[Halloween]] and is somehow forced into using a urinal. While doing so, she looks at and talks loudly to the men next to her, and when she gets silence and uncomfortable looks in return, she then looks straight ahead, and says: "Oh, I get it! It's like an elevator!" In the late [[1990s]], a similar gag was used on ''[[Third Rock from the Sun]]'', when [[Sally Solomon]] and [[Dick Solomon]] switch bodies, and Sally (in Dick's body) has to use a urinal alongside Officer Don (Sally's boyfriend). |
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*Some urinals for men incorporate ''fly targets:'' images of flies that are either printed on labels stuck to the inside of the urinal or embossed directly into the porcelain. Men often feel a compulsion to aim their urine stream at the fly, and thus the fly target helps prevent men from urinating outside the basin or bowl of the urinal. Maintenance crews at [[Schiphol]] airport in Amsterdam reported in [[2005]] that adding a fly target to urinals reduced bathroom cleaning costs by giving men something to aim at. The urinals at terminal 4 of [[John F. Kennedy International Airport]] in New York City have a fly target in the urinals. These are replaced every month because they slide off. |
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*Urinals are mentioned briefly by George Carlin in his routine about sports, in which he comments, about [[ice hockey]], that "the only other place you'll find a [[urinal cake|puck]] is in the urinal to control the smell in the bathroom." |
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*[[Pissoir]], retitled Urinal in some countries, was the first feature film directed by John Greyson. It was released in 1980 and takes place where you might expect. |
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In March 2006, the [[Associated Press]] reported that the plumbers' union in [[Philadelphia]] had become upset because developer Liberty Property Trust had decided to use waterless urinals in the [[Comcast Center (office building)|Comcast Center]]. Many in the union believed that this would lead to less work for them. The developer cited saving the city {{convert|1600000|gal|L}} of water per year as its deciding factor.<ref>{{cite news|first= Inga | last= Saffron| title= Phila. no-flush standoff unclogged, with a catch| work=[[The Philadelphia Inquirer]]| pages=A1, A10| date=5 April 2006}}</ref> |
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==Manufacturers== |
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In February 2010, the headquarters of the [[California EPA]] removed waterless urinals that were installed in 2003 due to "hundreds of complaints", including odors and splashed urine on the floors.<ref>[http://www.news10.net/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=75852 Cal/EPA headquarters flushes waterless urinals]. news10.net (22 February 2010).</ref> Officials blamed the failure of the project on incompatibility with the building's existing plumbing systems.<ref>California Environmental Protection Agency, [http://www.calepa.ca.gov/pressroom/Releases/2010/April1.pdf "CAL/EPA Issues Statement on Waterless Urinals"], 1 April 2010</ref> |
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Some manufacturers of urinals are: |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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* [[Addicom]] |
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File:McDonald's waterless urinal.JPG|Waterless urinals used in British McDonald's restaurants |
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* [[American Standard Companies]] |
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File:Waterless urinals grab bars for disabled.jpg|Waterless urinal (waterless urinal at right is for people with disabilities) |
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* [[Armitage Shanks]] |
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File:Waterless urinals (2921485136).jpg|Waterless urinals in Switzerland |
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* [[Crane Co.|Crane]] |
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File:Sloan Waterfree urinal.JPG|Waterless urinal in [[California]] |
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* [[Dongfeng]] |
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File:Mingitorios secos (6025791175).jpg|Waterless boys' urinals in [[Argentina]] |
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* [[Eljer Corporation]] |
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File:Waterless urinal for females (5880398360).jpg|Waterless urinal for women at a station in Frankfurt, Germany |
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* [[Falcon Waterfree Technologies]] |
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File:The flat rubber tube for odour control in waterless urinal of Keramag Centaurus model.jpg|Flat rubber tube for odor control in waterless urinal of Keramag |
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* [[Gustavsberg]] |
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File:Urine stone in urinals from Uridan (2957167291).jpg|"Urine stone" deposits on plumbing components of a waterless urinal in the Netherlands |
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* [[Ifö Sanitär AB]] |
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</gallery> |
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* [[Kohler Company]] |
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* [[Siam Cement]] |
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* [[TOTO (company)|TOTO Ltd.]] |
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* [[Villeroy & Boch]] |
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== |
== Street urinals == |
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{{Further|Pissoir}} |
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<references/> |
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In some localities, urinals may be located on public sidewalks or in public areas such as parks. These urinals are often equipped with partitions for the sake of privacy, and some are fully enclosed structures. They may or may not be equipped with water flushing mechanisms. |
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The first 'pissoirs' were installed in Paris in the 1830s, and the idea gradually gained popularity in other European cities. From a peak in the 1930s when there were over 1,000 in Paris alone, historic urinals have gradually disappeared, in favour of facilities for both sexes. In the 21st century, public urination by men in some locations was again seen as a nuisance, and modern versions of street urinals have been installed. |
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The Netherlands has a number of strategically placed street urinals in various cities, intended to reduce public urination by drunken men. Amsterdam has the largest collection of historic urinals, with about 30 'Plaskrul' ('pisscurl'), a flushless urinal with a curved privacy screen, in the central city. In recent years, urinals that can be retracted into the ground during the day or between special events have been installed, in order to save space when they are not expected to be needed. When closed they look like a large [[manhole]] in a sidewalk. Similar retractable models, such as the model by the Dutch company Urilift, are also seen in the UK and other countries. At night when bars are open they rise out of the sidewalk; some time after the bars close, the urinals return to their manhole configuration so that they are unseen by people during the day. |
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[[File:Urinoir et WC mobiles.jpg|thumb|Plastic movable urinal at a venue next to a traditional porta-john. The four sides allow for four users at any given time.]] |
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In the Philippines, [[Marikina]] was the first city to install street urinals in the late 1990s. When Marikina Mayor [[Bayani Fernando]] was appointed chair of the [[Metropolitan Manila Development Authority]], he installed street urinals in the rest of [[Metro Manila]] as well.{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}} |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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File:Public urinal, Adelaide Street - geograph.org.uk - 1528654.jpg|Modern street urinal in [[London]] |
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File:Urinal Vauxhall Cross.jpg|Street urinal in [[Vauxhall]], London |
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File:Public urinal Urilift London Charterhouse Street.jpg|Urilift street urinal can be retracted underground when not needed |
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File:Public Urinal, The Parade, Watford - geograph.org.uk - 714173.jpg|Only a circular ring indicates location of a retracted Urilift urinal when not in use |
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File:Dutch street urinal Sarah Stierch.jpg|Movable temporary urinal in [[Amsterdam]] |
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File:Krul urinoir in Amsterdam.jpg|Traditional ''krul'' urinal in Amsterdam |
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File:Stockholm urinal.jpg|Street urinal in [[Stockholm]] |
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File:20111128 Urinoir Hoge der A Groningen NL.jpg|Street urinal in [[Groningen]] |
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File:Pissoir Spielbudenplatz 003.jpg|Modernist street urinal in [[Hamburg]], Germany |
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File:India - Varanasi public toilet - 2118.jpg|"Public Convenience" in [[Varanasi]], Benares, India |
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</gallery> |
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==Special urinals== |
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=== Urinals designed for females === |
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{{Main|Female urinal}} |
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In the Western world, females are generally taught to sit or squat while urinating. Many therefore do not know how – or even that it is possible – for a female to aim her urine stream as would be required to use a stand-up urinal.<ref name="restroomsdotorg"/> Thus, several different types of urinals have been designed for females that do not require the user to aim their urine stream. A typical user could thus theoretically approach such a urinal squatting backwards over it without necessarily trying to aim their stream. |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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File:Femaleurinal.jpg|Urinals designed for females |
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File:Unisex Urinals.jpg|Unisex urinals which can be used by either gender |
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File:Urinating into urinal while standing.jpg|A woman urinating into a male urinal in a standing position |
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File:Mobile leight-weight female urinal (5880032249).jpg|A mobile light-weight urinal for females |
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</gallery> |
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=== Arts and interactive urinals === |
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''Kisses!'' is a controversial urinal designed by the female Dutch designer Meike van Schijndel. It is shaped like an open pair of red lips.<ref>[http://www.bathroom-mania.com/en/endesign/enkisses.html Kisses!]. Bathroom-mania.com.</ref> In early March 2004, the [[National Organization for Women]] (NOW) took offense to the new urinals that [[Virgin Atlantic]] decided to install in the Virgin Atlantic clubhouse at [[John F Kennedy International Airport]] in [[New York City]].<ref>{{cite web| date = 18 March 2004| url = http://www.now.org/issues/media/031804virginatlantic.html| title = Tell Virgin Atlantic: There's Nothing 'Fun' About Exploiting Women| publisher = [[National Organization for Women]]| access-date = 23 April 2006| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130429124528/http://www.now.org/issues/media/031804virginatlantic.html| archive-date = 29 April 2013| url-status = dead}}</ref> After receiving many angry phone calls from female customers, Virgin Atlantic Vice President John Riordan called NOW to apologize.<ref>{{cite press release|publisher= [[National Organization for Women]]|date= 19 March 2004 |url= http://www.now.org/press/03-04/03-19.html|title= Outrageous Interruptus: NOW Cheers Decision to Abandon Sexist Urinals|access-date=2006-04-23}}</ref> Protestors surmised a connection to [[oral sex]] or [[urolagnia]], and based their complaints on the urinals being sexist. A [[McDonald's]] restaurant in the Netherlands removed them after a customer complained to the head office in the United States.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}} |
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[[Interactive urinal]]s have been developed in a number of countries, allowing users to entertain themselves during urination. One example is the Toylet, a video game system produced by the Japanese company [[Sega]] that allows users to play video games using their urine to control the on-screen action.<ref name="Wired">{{cite magazine |author=Geere, Duncan. |url=https://www.wired.com/gamelife/2011/01/sega-urinal-games/ |title='Toylet' Games in Japan's Urinals |magazine=Wired |publisher=Wired UK |date=6 January 2011 |access-date=20 January 2011}}</ref> |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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File:Urinal mouth.jpg|Controversial ''Kisses!'' urinals were designed by a woman. |
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File:CaptiveMedia ExhibitBalham.jpg|Advertising displays for a "captive audience" in London |
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</gallery> |
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===Makeshift urinals=== |
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During military operations, such as the [[Korean War]], [[Vietnam War]], or [[Operation Desert Storm]], "piss tubes" were used as makeshift urinals. To make one, soldiers would affix an inverted disposable [[water bottle]] on one end of a rigid tube, burying the other end. Removing the base of the bottle made a funnel which would be left at the proper height. Deposited urine simply soaked into the ground; when the area became saturated, the device was relocated.{{Citation needed|date=June 2008}} |
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=== In vehicles === |
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{{As of|2008}}, the aircraft manufacturer [[Airbus]] offered its customers the option of installing urinals in its [[Airbus A380|A380]] aircraft.<ref>{{cite web|author=Aimée Turner|url=http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2008/04/10/222871/a380-male-urinals-to-become-bog-standard.html|title=A380 male urinals to become 'bog standard' |date=10 April 2008|work=Flight International}}</ref> |
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==History== |
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{{Main|Pissoir}} |
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[[File:Charles_Marville,_Urinoir_à_1_stalle_fonte_et_maçonnerie,_Faubourg_Saint-Martin,_ca._1865.jpg|thumb|upright|{{lang|fr|'Colonne Rambuteau'}}, photographed 1865]] |
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[[File:Cast_iron_urinal_in_College_Street_Glasgow.jpg|thumb|A cast iron urinal in College Street, Glasgow, installed 1850–1854, photographed in 1866]] |
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[[File:Charles_Marville,_Urinoir_en_fonte_à_2_stalles_avec_écran,_Chaussée_de_la_Muette,_ca._1865.jpg|thumb|upright|A later Paris {{lang|fr|pissoir}} in cast iron, photographed {{circa|1865}}]] |
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In the spring of 1830, the city government of [[Paris]] decided to install the first public urinals on the major boulevards. They were put in place by the summer, but in July of the same year, many were destroyed through their use as materials for street barricades during the [[French Revolution of 1830]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Fierro|first=Alfred|title=Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris|year=1996|publisher=Robert Laffont|isbn=2-221-07862-4|page=1177}}</ref> |
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The urinals were re-introduced in Paris after 1834, when over 400 were installed by [[Claude-Philibert Barthelot, comte de Rambuteau]], the [[Préfet]] of the [[Seine (department)|Department of the Seine]]. Having a simple cylindrical shape, built of masonry, open on the street side, and ornately decorated on the other side as well as the cap, they were popularly known as {{lang|fr|'colonnes Rambuteau'}} ('Rambuteau columns'). In response, Rambuteau suggested the name {{lang|fr|'vespasiennes'}},<ref>{{cite book|last=Pike|first=David L.|year=2005|title=Subterranean Cities: The World Beneath Paris and London, 1800-1945|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-0-801-47256-5|page = [https://books.google.com/books?id=E5Tks7ZileoC&pg=PA234 234]}}</ref> in reference to the 1st century Roman emperor [[Vespasian|Titus Flavius Vespasianus]], who placed a tax on urine collected from [[Public toilet|public toilets]] for use in [[Tanning (leather)|tanning]]. This is the usual term by which street urinals are known in the French speaking world, although {{lang|fr|'pissoir'}} and {{lang|fr|'pissotière'}} are also in common use. |
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In Paris, the next version was a masonry column that allowed for the pasting of posters on the side facing the footpath, creating a tradition that continues to this day (as a [[Morris column]], a column with an elaborate roof and without the urinal). |
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Cast iron urinals were developed in the [[United Kingdom]], with the Scottish firm of Walter McFarlane and Company casting urinals at their [[Saracen Foundry]] and erecting the first at Paisley Road, [[Glasgow]] in October 1850. By the end of 1852, nearly 50 cast iron urinals had been installed in Glasgow, including designs with more than one stall.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Kearney |first=Peter |title=The Glasgow Cludgie |publisher=People's Publications |year=1985 |isbn=978-0906917145 |location=Newcastle |pages=14–15}}</ref> Unlike Rambuteau's columns, which were entirely open at the front, McFarlane's one-man urinals were designed with spiral cast iron screens that allowed the user to be hidden from sight, and his multi-stall urinals were completely hidden within ornate, modular cast iron panels. Three manufacturers in Glasgow, Walter Macfarlane & Co., George Smith (Sun Foundry) and James Allan Snr & Son (Elmbank Foundry), supplied the majority of cast iron urinals across Britain<ref name=":1" /> and exported them around the world, including Australia and Argentina.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Juarez |first=Lucia |date=2014-12-01 |title=Documenting Scottish Architectural Cast Iron in Argentina |url=http://journals.openedition.org/abe/821 |journal=ABE Journal |volume=5 |language=en |issue=5 |doi=10.4000/abe.821 |issn=2275-6639 |doi-access=free}}</ref> |
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Back in Paris, cast iron urinals were introduced as part of [[Georges-Eugène Haussmann|Baron Haussmann]]'s remodelling of the city. A large variety of designs were produced in subsequent decades, housing two to 8 stalls, typically only screening the central portion of the user from public view, with the head and feet still visible. Screens were also added to Rambuteau columns. At the peak of their spread in the 1930s there were 1,230 {{lang|fr|pissoirs}} in Paris, but by 1966 their number had decreased to 329. From 1980 they were replaced systematically with new technology, a unisex, enclosed, automatically self-cleaning unit called the {{lang|fr|[[Sanisette]]}}.<ref name="ABC News (Australia) - 10 June 2018 - 'Wild peeing' on the nose as authorities crack down in Paris">{{cite news |last=Bagamery |first=Anne |date=10 June 2018 |title='Wild peeing' on the nose as authorities crack down in Paris |work=[[ABC News (Australia)]] |publisher=[[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]] |url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-06-10/wild-peeing-on-the-nose-in-paris/9835218 |access-date=10 June 2018}}</ref> |
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In Berlin, the first {{lang|fr|pissoirs}}, in wood, were erected in 1863. In order to provide a design as distinguished as in other cities, several [[Architectural design competition|architectural design competitions]] were organised in 1847, 1865 and 1877. The last design, proposed by a city councillor, was the one adopted in 1878, a cast-iron octagonal structure with seven stalls and a peaked roof, known locally as a [[Café Achteck]] ('Octagon Cafe'). In common with British designs, they provided complete enclosure, and were provided with interior lighting. Their number increased to 142 by 1920,<ref>Bärthel, Hilmar (2000): [http://www.luise-berlin.de/bms/bmstxt00/0011proe.htm "Tempel aus Gusseisen: Urinale, Café Achteck und Vollanstalten"], Berlinische Monatsschrift Heft 11</ref> but there are now only about a dozen remaining in use.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-11-13 |title=Café Achteck - Berlin's Green Pissoir |url=https://withberlinlove.com/2017/11/13/cafe-achteck-berlins-green-pissoir/ |access-date=2019-11-02 |website=Berlin Love |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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A similar design was adopted in Vienna, though simpler, smaller and hexagonal. They were equipped with a novel "oil system", patented by [[Wilhelm Beetz (Bauunternehmer)|Wilhelm Beetz]] in 1882, where a type of oil was used to neutralise odours, dispensing with the necessity for plumbing.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-11-14 |title=Wiens letzte Öl-Klos werden saniert |url=https://wien.orf.at/v2/news/stories/2877922/ |access-date=2019-11-02 |website=wien.orf.at |language=de}}</ref> About 15 are still in use, and one has been restored and set up as a display in the Vienna Technical Museum.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Wiener Pavillon Pissoir, 1908 – Technisches Museum Wien |url=https://www.technischesmuseum.at/objekt/wiener-pavillon-pissoir-1908 |access-date=2019-11-02 |website=www.technischesmuseum.at}}</ref> |
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In central [[Amsterdam]], there are about 35 [[Pee curl|pee curls]], which consist of a raised metal screen that curls in a spiral enclosing a single urinal stall, including some two-person examples with the same details but a simpler shape. Though the design first emerged in the 1870s, an updated design by [[Joan van der Mey]] dates from 1916. All the remaining examples were restored in 2008. |
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{{lang|fr|Pissoirs}} of various sizes and designs, but mostly in patterned cast-iron, can still be found dotted across the UK, with a few in London, but especially in Birmingham and Bristol. A solitary example of Walter McFarlane's one-man spiral urinal remains in Thorn Park, Plymouth.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |title=street urinals |url=http://www.hevac-heritage.org/items_of_interest/public_health/street_urinals/street_urinals.htm |access-date=2019-11-02 |website=Heritage Group}}</ref> A number have been restored and relocated to the grounds of various open-air museums and heritage railway lines.<ref name=":2" /> |
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Rectangular {{lang|fr|pissoirs}}, with elaborate patterned cast-iron panels, similar in design to some of the UK ones, were installed in the city of [[Sydney]], Australia, in 1880<ref>{{Cite web |title=Cast Iron Urinal {{!}} Heritage NSW |url=https://apps.environment.nsw.gov.au/dpcheritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=2424619 |access-date=2021-05-18 |website=apps.environment.nsw.gov.au}}</ref> and [[Melbourne]], Australia, in the period 1903–1918. Of at least 40 that were made, nine remain in place and in use on the streets in and around central Melbourne, and have been classified by the National Trust since 1998.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Cast Iron Street Urinals - Group |url=https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/64990 |website=Victorian Heritage Database.}}</ref> |
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In recent years, temporary {{lang|fr|pissoirs}} with multiple unscreened urinals around a central column have been introduced in the UK.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/threecounties/hi/people_and_places/newsid_8741000/8741294.stm "The Pee Pod - the place to pee in Milton Keynes!"]. [[BBC News]], 15 June 2010.</ref><ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-edinburgh-east-fife-11828580 "Edinburgh to trial 'pee pod' street urinals"]. [[BBC News]], 24 November 2010.</ref> A temporary {{lang|fr|pissoir}} for women called the 'Peeasy' is used in Switzerland.<ref>Salzmann, Claudia. [http://www.bernerzeitung.ch/region/bern/FrauenPissoir-Kein-leichtes-Unterfangen/story/13734221 "Frauen-Pissoir: Kein leichtes Unterfangen"]. ''[[Berner Zeitung]]'', 18 July 2011 {{in lang|de}}.</ref> |
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Until the 1990s, street urinals were a common sight in Paris (France), and in the 1930s more than 1200 were in service. They were famous among foreign tourists.<ref>Harvey A. Levenstein, ''We'll Always Have Paris: American Tourists in France since 1930'', Chicago: University of Chgicago, 2004, {{ISBN|9780226473789}}, [https://books.google.com/books?id=36xgYf4G8JoC&q=famed+pissoirs&pg=PA31 p. 31].</ref> Parisians referred to them as ''vespasiennes'', the name being derived from that of the [[Roman Emperor]] [[Vespasian]], who, according to an anecdote, imposed a tax on urine. Beginning in the 1990s, the ''vespasiennes'' (renowned for their smell and lack of hygiene) were gradually replaced by [[Sanisette]]s. Today only one ''vespasienne'' remains in the city (on Boulevard Arago), and it is still regularly used. They still exist in other French cities and in other countries. |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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VespasienneLarge.jpg|The last surviving ''vespasienne'', on Boulevard Arago in [[Paris]] |
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Vespasienne Honfleur.JPG|''Vespasienne'' in [[Honfleur]], France |
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Vespasienne à Honfleur.JPG|Interior of Honfleur ''vespasienne'' |
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Urinal, Bewdley Station - geograph.org.uk - 1148738.jpg|Vintage British urinal, no longer in service |
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Charles Marville, Urinoir en ardoise à 3 stalles, Chaussée du Maine, ca. 1865.jpg|A [[pissoir]] on [[Avenue du Maine]], [[Paris]] c. 1865. Photographed by [[Charles Marville]]. |
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Pisejo sur Largo de António Calém (Porto, Portugalujo) 002.jpg|Outdoor urinal in [[Porto, Portugal]] |
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BS Pissoir Fallersleber Tor.JPG|Restored [[cultural heritage|heritage]] protected public urinal in [[Braunschweig, Germany]] |
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Cast Iron Pissoir - Miller's Point, Sydney, NSW (7875768066).jpg|Victorian cast iron urinal in [[Sydney, Australia]] (c.1890) |
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Rothesay Victorian Toilets - men's urinals.jpg|Urinals in the Rothesay Victorian Toilets, [[Rothesay, Bute]] (c.1899) |
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</gallery> |
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==Society and culture== |
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Examples of urinals in popular culture include: |
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* [[Marcel Duchamp]]'s ''[[Fountain (Duchamp)|Fountain]]'' (1917), which some have called the most influential modern artwork, is a urinal which Duchamp signed "R. Mutt".<ref>{{cite news|work=BBC News |date= 1 December 2004|url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4059997.stm|title= Duchamp's urinal tops art survey: A white gentlemen's urinal has been named the most influential modern art work of all time|access-date=2006-04-28}}</ref> |
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* Police in [[Nassau County, New York]] adopted talking urinals in an anti-drunk driving initiative. Using Wizmark, a talking urinal display screen, police can provide bars with free pre-programmed urinal messages urging patrons not to drink and drive.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wizmark.com|title=Wizmark}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.policemag.com/Channel/Technology/News/2006/06/15/NY-Police-Use-Anti-DUI-Talking-Urinal-Messages.aspx|title=NY Police Use Anti-DUI Talking Urinal Messages |work=Police Magazine|date=14 June 2006 }}</ref> |
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* [[Ernest Hemingway]] converted a urinal from [[Sloppy Joe's]] bar into a water fountain for his cats. The fountain remains a prominent feature at his former home in [[Key West, Florida]], a popular tourist destination in the town.<ref>[http://www.hemingwayhome.com/HTML/house.htm Home]. hemingwayhome.com.</ref> |
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* ''[[Pissoir (film)|Pissoir]]'', retitled ''Urinal'' in some countries, was the first feature film directed by [[John Greyson]]. It was released in 1980 and takes place in a toilet.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.timeout.com/london/film/urinal |title=Urinal |last=M |first=P |work=TimeOut.com |date=10 September 2012 |publisher=Time Out Group Plc |access-date=2018-08-16 }}</ref> |
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* [[Gabriel Chevallier]]'s 1934 satirical novel ''[[Clochemerle]]'' deals with the ramifications of plans to install a new urinal in a French village. |
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* ''Indiana Urinalysis'' (1988) is a documentary on the subject of urinals. Topics include "types of urinals, urinal etiquette, usage of [[urinal cakes]], why urinals are always white, preference of urinal vs. toilet, and urinals for women, as well as a collection of urinal anecdotes."<ref>{{Citation|last1=Everson|first1=Bart|title=Indiana urinalysis|date=1989|last2=Jones|last3=Griff|first2=Brian|first3=Hanna|publisher=Bloomington Community Access Television|language=en|oclc=56051746}}</ref> It received a Citation Award from the Indiana Film Society in 1990.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://rox.com/other/indiana-urinalysis/|title=Indiana Urinalysis at rox.com|website=rox.com|access-date=2017-09-15}}</ref> |
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* "[[Mystery of the Urinal Deuce]]" is an episode of the American adult animated sitcom ''[[South Park]]'', in which the plot revolves around the elementary school's efforts to establish the identity of a person who defecated in a urinal. |
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=== Gallery of unusual or historical urinals === |
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<gallery mode="packed"> |
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File:Jiangxi Sheng Bowuguan 20120627-54.jpg|Ancient portable urinal, [[Western Jin Dynasty]] (c. 265–316 CE) |
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File:Urinal in the form of a tiger. Stoneware with olive green (celadon) glaze. Southern Dynasties, 500-589 CE. From China, Zhejiang. Victoria and Albert Museum.jpg|Urinal in the form of a tiger. Stoneware with olive green (celadon) glaze. Southern Dynasties, 500–589 CE. From China, Zhejiang. Victoria and Albert Museum |
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File:Duchamp Fountaine.jpg|''[[Fountain (Duchamp)|Fountain]]'', a urinal which [[Marcel Duchamp]] exhibited as a controversial artwork |
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File:Charles Marville, Urinoir en fonte à 2 stalles avec portes, ca. 1865.jpg|Ornate illuminated French urinal, c.1865 |
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File:Charles Marville, Urinoir en ardoise à 6 stalles avec écran surélevé, Place de l'Église, ca. 1865.jpg|Basic six-stall Paris urinal, c.1865 |
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File:Gothic urinal in the men's room at The Mini Bottle Museum in Oslo, Norway.jpg|[[Gothic art|Goth]]-inspired urinal in [[Oslo]] |
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File:Urinal at the Industrial Saloon.jpg|"[[Steampunk]]" styled urinal at a bar |
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File:Hand Wash Sink on the Urinal in Mito-SA 2014.jpg|Japanese sink/urinal saves water and physical space |
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File:Bucket Urinals.jpg|Urinals with a view, at the restaurant [[UFO (restaurant)|UFO]] in [[Bratislava]] |
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File:Madonna inn restroom (5641720565).jpg|Fancy decorative urinal at [[Madonna Inn]] |
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File:Publika necesejo en Jardim do Passeio Alegre (Porto, Portugalujo) 002.jpg|Public urinals in Portugal |
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File:Victorian Toilets Rothesay.jpg|Victorian urinals in [[Scotland]] from 1899 |
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File:Eléments d'architecture - urinoir (Biennale d'architecture 2014, Venise) (15281481685).jpg|Neo-baroque style decorated urinal |
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File:Open plan Men's toilet in Japan.jpg|Open plan public toilet in Japan |
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File:Urinal in Tropfenform.Jpg|Styled urinals in [[St. Peter Port, Guernsey]] |
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File:Brewery urinals.jpg|Brewery urinals in [[Christchurch]], New Zealand |
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File:Cheap waterless urinal in Burkina Faso (2957045465).jpg|Low-cost waterless portable urinal in [[Burkina Faso]] |
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File:JR Tower 38th floor Men's Room -Hokkaido (2008.9.11).jpg|Urinal with a 38th floor view in [[Hokkaido, Japan]] |
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File:Washbasin & Urinal panorama.jpg|Stand-up urinals in open arrangement |
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File:Old-fashioned urinal at AMNH.jpg|Urinals in a bathroom in the American Museum of Natural History |
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File:Duo urinal.jpg|A double urinal. One person can urinate on each side. |
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File:Vista House mens toilets OR3.jpg|An example of floor standing urinals in a men's bathroom |
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</gallery> |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* [[ |
* [[Female urinal]] |
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* [[Interactive urinal communicator]] |
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* [[Female urination device]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Public toilet]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Reuse of excreta]] |
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* [[Pissoir]] |
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* [[Plumbing fixture]]s |
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* [[Plumbing]] |
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* [[Sanistand]] |
* [[Sanistand]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Telescopic urinal]] |
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* [[The Urinals]] (music group) |
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==References== |
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* [[Toilet]] |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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* [[Water closet]]s |
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==External links== |
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{{Commons category|Urinals}} |
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* [http://www.urinal.net Collection of urinals worldwide] (e.g. [http://www.urinal.net/main_st_sta/ Berlin wall], [http://www.urinal.net/naturescall/ flowers] and at the [http://www.urinal.net/south_pole/ South Pole]) |
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* [https://www.flickr.com/photos/gtzecosan/sets/72157613881735035 Photos of waterless urinals worldwide] |
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* [http://www.urilift.com/ Urilift website] |
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{{Toilets}} |
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== External links == |
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{{Plumbing}} |
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*[http://www.urinal.net Collection of urinals worldwide] (eg [http://www.urinal.net/main_st_sta/ Berlin wall], [http://www.urinal.net/naturescall/ flowers] and at the [http://www.urinal.net/south_pole/ South Pole]) |
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*[http://www.falconwaterfree.com/how/index.htm How waterfree urinals work] |
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*[http://www.ecourinalcartridge.com/ Eco Urinal Cartridge system] |
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*[http://nbtsc.org/~ganimede/stp.html Guide to urinal use by female-bodied people] |
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*[http://www.pulppackage.com/english-pulpmolded-Disposable%20Receptacles.htm Photos of Pulp Urinals made by recycled pulp] |
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*[http://www.urinalology.net Urinal etiquette, classification and typology] from urinalology.net.] |
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*[http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a1_255.html Urinals for women] from [[The Straight Dope]]. |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:Restrooms]] |
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[[Category:toilets]] |
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[[Category:Plumbing]] |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Urinal (Restroom)}} |
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[[cs:Pisoár]] |
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[[Category:Public toilets]] |
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[[da:Urinal]] |
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[[ |
[[Category:Toilets]] |
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[[ |
[[Category:Urinals| ]] |
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[[he:משתנה (מתקן)]] |
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[[nl:Urinoir]] |
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[[no:Pissoar]] |
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[[pl:Pisuar]] |
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[[pt:Mictório]] |
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[[ksh:Sikkenß]] |
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[[ru:Писсуар]] |
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[[fi:Pisoaari]] |
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[[sv:Urinoar]] |
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[[uk:Пісуар]] |
Latest revision as of 16:05, 7 December 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2019) |
A urinal (US: /ˈjʊərənəl/, UK: /jʊəˈraɪnəl/)[1] is a sanitary plumbing fixture similar to a toilet, but for urination only. Urinals are often provided in men's public restrooms in Western countries (less so in Muslim countries). They are usually used in a standing position. Urinals can be equipped with manual flushing, automatic flushing, or without flushing, as is the case for waterless urinals. They can be arranged as single sanitary fixtures (with or without privacy walls), or in a trough design without privacy walls.
Urinals designed for females ("female urinals") also exist but are rare. It is possible for females to use stand-up urinals using a female urination device.[2] The term "urinal" may also apply to a small building or other structure containing such fixtures. It can also refer to a small container in which urine can be collected for medical analysis, or for use where access to toilet facilities is not possible, such as in small aircraft, during extended stakeouts, or for the bedridden.
Description
A stand-up urinal can be used conveniently and appropriately by someone who has a penis or other adaptive means with which to urinate from a standing position. There is no age restriction, and urinals are commonly used by men and boys of all ages. Female urinals also exist but are not common.
In busy public toilets, urinals are installed for efficiency. Compared with urination in a general-purpose toilet, usage is faster and more sanitary because at the urinal there are no fecal germs, no additional doors or locks to touch, and no seat to turn up. Consistent use of urinals also keeps the toilet stalls cleaner and more available for persons who need to defecate. A urinal takes less space, is simpler, and consumes less water per flush (or even no water at all) than a flush toilet. Large numbers of them are usually installed along a common supply pipe and drain. Urinals may also come in different heights, to accommodate tall and short users.
Public urinals usually have a plastic mesh guard, which may optionally contain a deodorizing urinal deodorizer block or "urinal cake". The mesh is intended to prevent solid objects (such as cigarette butts, feces, chewing gum, or paper) from being flushed and possibly causing a plumbing stoppage. In some restaurants, bars, and clubs, ice may be put in the urinals, serving some of the same purposes as the deodorizing block without dispensing odorous chemicals.
Arrangement
For purposes of space and economic practicality, urinals are not typically placed inside stalls. Unlike in female public toilets that do not have urinals, optimal resource efficiency in male restrooms therefore requires urinating in full visibility of other users. In recent years, it has become more common in some countries for dividers or partitions to be installed between urinals to eliminate any chance of incidental exposure during the process of urination.[citation needed]
Urinals in high-capacity public toilets are usually arranged in one or more rows directly opposite the door, so that users have their backs to people entering or standing outside. Often, one or two of the urinals, typically at one end of a long row, will be mounted lower than the others; they are meant for the disabled and other users who cannot reach the regular urinals. In facilities where people of various heights are present, such as schools, urinals that extend down to floor level may be used to allow anyone of any height to use any urinal.
Instead of individual fixtures, trough urinals may be installed. These designs can be used by a number of people simultaneously, but they do not allow for much privacy. They are often installed where there is a high peak demand, such as in schools, music festivals, theatrical events, sports stadiums, discos, dance clubs, and convention halls.
Urinals were once installed exclusively in commercial or institutional settings, but are also now available for private homes. They offer the advantages of substantial water savings in residences with many occupants, and reduction of "splash back", making cleaning easier.
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Urinal with pink-colored urinal cake
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Urinals in Tokyo, Japan; one at far right is fitted with handle bars for people with disabilities
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Urinals in the Czech Republic
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Trough urinal in Los Angeles
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Train station urinal in Munich, Germany
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Modern trough urinal in an art museum in Brisbane, Australia
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Old-style wall urinal at Stetson Bowl Stadium in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada
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Vintage urinals in Boston secondary school (c. 1933–1959)
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Outdoor urinals at school for boys (left) and girls (right) in Tamil Nadu, India
Urinals with flushing
Most public urinals incorporate a water flushing system to rinse urine from the bowl of the device, to prevent foul odors. The flush can be triggered by one of several methods:
Manual handles
This type of flush might be regarded as standard in the United States. Each urinal is equipped with a button or short lever to activate the flush, with users expected to operate it as they leave. Such a directly controlled system is the most efficient, provided that patrons remember to use it. This is far from certain, however, often because of fear of touching the handle, which is located too high to kick.[3] Urinals with foot-activated flushing systems are sometimes found in high-traffic areas; these systems have a button set into the floor or a pedal on the wall at ankle height. The Americans with Disabilities Act requires that flush valves be mounted no higher than 44 inches (110 cm) AFF (above the finished floor). Additionally, the urinal is to be mounted no higher than 17 inches (43 cm) AFF, and to have a rim that is tapered and elongated and protrudes at least 14 inches (36 cm) from the wall. This enables users in wheelchairs to straddle the lip of the urinal and urinate without having to "arc" the flow of urine upwards.
Timed flush
In Germany, the United Kingdom, France, the Republic of Ireland, Hong Kong and some parts of Sweden and Finland, manual flush handles are unusual. Instead, the traditional system is a timed flush that operates automatically at regular intervals. Groups of up to ten or more urinals will be connected to a single overhead cistern, which contains the timing mechanism. A constant drip-feed of water slowly fills the cistern until a tipping point is reached, when the valve opens (or a siphon begins to drain the cistern), and all the urinals in the group are flushed. Electronic controllers performing the same function are also used.
This system does not require any action from its users, but it is wasteful of water when toilets are used irregularly. However, in these countries users are so used to the automatic system, that attempts to install manual flushes to save water are generally unsuccessful. Users ignore them not through deliberate laziness or fear of infection, but because activating the flush is not habitual.[citation needed]
To help reduce water usage when public toilets are closed, some public toilets with timed flushing use an electric water valve connected to the room's light switch. When the building is in active use during the day and the lights are on, the timed flush operates normally. At night when the building is closed, the lights are turned off and the flushing action stops.
Door-regulated flush
This is an older method of water-saving automatic flushing, which only operates when the public toilet has been used. A push-button switch is mounted in the door frame, and triggers the flush valve for all urinals every time the door is opened. While it cannot detect the use of individual urinals, it provides reasonable flushing action without wasting excessive amounts of water when the urinals are not being used. This method requires a spring-operated automatic door closer, since the flush mechanism only operates when the door opens.
Alternatively, a flushing system connected to the door can count the number of users, and operate when the number of door opening events reaches a certain value. At night, the door never opens, so flushing never occurs.
Automatic flush
Electronic automatic flushes solve the problems of previous approaches, and are common in new installations. A passive infrared sensor identifies when the urinal has been used, by detecting when someone has stood in front of it and moved away, and then activates the flush. There usually is also a small override button, to allow optional manual flushing.
Automatic flush facilities can be retrofitted to existing systems. The handle-operated valves of a manual system can be replaced with a suitably designed self-contained electronic valve, often battery-powered to avoid the need to add cables. Older timed-flush installations may add a device that regulates the water flow to the cistern according to the overall activity detected in the room. This does not provide true per-fixture automatic flushing, but is simple and cheap to add because only one device is required for the whole system.
To prevent false-triggering of the automatic flush, most infrared detectors require that a presence be detected for at least five seconds,[citation needed] such as when a person is standing in front of it. This prevents a whole line of automatic flush units from triggering in succession if someone just walks past them. The automatic flush mechanism also typically waits for the presence to go out of sensor range before flushing. This reduces water usage, compared to a sensor that would trigger a continuous flushing action the whole time that a presence is detected.
Waterless urinals
Since about the 1990s urinals have been available on the market that use no water at all. These are called waterless urinals or flushless urinals.
The first waterless urinal was developed at the end of the 19th century by the German-Austrian Wilhelm Beetz using an oil-based syphon with a liquid that he called Urinol.[citation needed]
Waterless urinals can save between 15,000 and 45,000 US gallons (57,000 and 170,000 L) of water per urinal per year, depending on the amount of water used in the water-flushed urinal for comparison purposes, and the number of uses per day. For example, these numbers assume that the urinal would be used between 40 and 120 times per business day.[4]
Waterless urinals allow the collection of undiluted pure urine which can be used as a fertilizer.[5]
Odor control
Models of waterless urinals introduced by the Waterless Company in 1991[6] and others in 2001 by Falcon Waterfree Technologies and Sloan Valve Company, as well as Duravit, use a trap insert filled with a sealant liquid instead of water. The lighter-than-water sealant floats on top of the urine collected in the U-bend, preventing odors from being released into the air. The cartridge and sealant must be periodically replaced.
Waterless urinals may also use an outlet system that traps the odor, preventing the smell often present in toilet blocks.[citation needed] Another method to eliminate odor was introduced by Caroma, which installed a deodorizing block in their waterless urinal that was activated during use.[citation needed]
Odor control in waterless urinals is also achieved with simple one-way valves which are manufactured as a flat rubber tube (the tube opens when urine flows through) or with two silicone "curtain" pieces. The former is used in the waterless urinals by the company Keramag[7] in Germany (model Centaurus) and the latter is marketed by the company Addicom in South Africa who called it the EcoSmellStop device.[8]
Applications
Waterless urinals can be installed in high-traffic facilities, and in situations where providing a water supply may be difficult or where water conservation is desired.
Waterless urinals have become rather common in Germany since about 2009 and can be found at restaurants, cinemas, highway rest stops, train stations and so forth. It was estimated in 2009 that there are about 6 million urinals in Germany, and about 100,000 of those were of the waterless type in that year.[9]
Due to high-level water restrictions during about 2005-2008 the city council of Brisbane, Australia mandated conversion to waterless urinals. Flush urinals are nowadays rarely seen in Brisbane.[citation needed]
Installation and maintenance
The drain pipes from waterless urinals need to be installed correctly in terms of diameter, slope and pipe materials in order to prevent buildup of struvite ("urine stone") and calcium phosphate precipitates in the pipes, which would cause blockages and could require expensive repairs.[5] Also, the undiluted urine is corrosive to metals (except for stainless steel), which is why plastic pipes are generally preferred for urine drain pipes.[5]
Most waterless urinals do not prevent odorous staining on the surface of the urinals, and periodic cleaning of the fixture and its surrounds is still required. When maintained according to manufacturers' recommendations, well-designed waterless urinals do not emit any more odors than flushed urinals do. However, some odor-trapping devices work better than others in the longer term. Regular, thorough maintenance of the respective odor control device is needed for all types of waterless urinals, as per the manufacturer's recommendation.
Situation in the United States
US federal law has mandated no more than one gallon per flush since 1994, and the EPA estimates that the average urinal is flushed 20 times per day, which gives an average water use of 7,300 US gallons (28,000 L) per year.[10] Mechanical traps are not allowed by US building codes[citation needed] but are allowed in many other countries.
Plumbers' unions initially opposed waterless urinals, citing concerns about health and safety, which have been debunked by scientists who have studied the devices. Facing opposition to their attempts to have the devices allowed in plumbing codes, manufacturers devised a compromise. The Uniform Plumbing Code was modified to allow waterless urinals to be installed, provided that unneeded water lines were nevertheless run to the back of the urinals.[11] This allows conventional water-flushing urinals to be retrofitted later, if waterless models were judged to be unsatisfactory over time.
In March 2006, the Associated Press reported that the plumbers' union in Philadelphia had become upset because developer Liberty Property Trust had decided to use waterless urinals in the Comcast Center. Many in the union believed that this would lead to less work for them. The developer cited saving the city 1,600,000 US gallons (6,100,000 L) of water per year as its deciding factor.[12]
In February 2010, the headquarters of the California EPA removed waterless urinals that were installed in 2003 due to "hundreds of complaints", including odors and splashed urine on the floors.[13] Officials blamed the failure of the project on incompatibility with the building's existing plumbing systems.[14]
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Waterless urinals used in British McDonald's restaurants
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Waterless urinal (waterless urinal at right is for people with disabilities)
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Waterless urinals in Switzerland
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Waterless urinal in California
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Waterless boys' urinals in Argentina
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Waterless urinal for women at a station in Frankfurt, Germany
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Flat rubber tube for odor control in waterless urinal of Keramag
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"Urine stone" deposits on plumbing components of a waterless urinal in the Netherlands
Street urinals
In some localities, urinals may be located on public sidewalks or in public areas such as parks. These urinals are often equipped with partitions for the sake of privacy, and some are fully enclosed structures. They may or may not be equipped with water flushing mechanisms.
The first 'pissoirs' were installed in Paris in the 1830s, and the idea gradually gained popularity in other European cities. From a peak in the 1930s when there were over 1,000 in Paris alone, historic urinals have gradually disappeared, in favour of facilities for both sexes. In the 21st century, public urination by men in some locations was again seen as a nuisance, and modern versions of street urinals have been installed.
The Netherlands has a number of strategically placed street urinals in various cities, intended to reduce public urination by drunken men. Amsterdam has the largest collection of historic urinals, with about 30 'Plaskrul' ('pisscurl'), a flushless urinal with a curved privacy screen, in the central city. In recent years, urinals that can be retracted into the ground during the day or between special events have been installed, in order to save space when they are not expected to be needed. When closed they look like a large manhole in a sidewalk. Similar retractable models, such as the model by the Dutch company Urilift, are also seen in the UK and other countries. At night when bars are open they rise out of the sidewalk; some time after the bars close, the urinals return to their manhole configuration so that they are unseen by people during the day.
In the Philippines, Marikina was the first city to install street urinals in the late 1990s. When Marikina Mayor Bayani Fernando was appointed chair of the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority, he installed street urinals in the rest of Metro Manila as well.[citation needed]
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Modern street urinal in London
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Street urinal in Vauxhall, London
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Urilift street urinal can be retracted underground when not needed
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Only a circular ring indicates location of a retracted Urilift urinal when not in use
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Movable temporary urinal in Amsterdam
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Traditional krul urinal in Amsterdam
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Street urinal in Stockholm
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Street urinal in Groningen
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Modernist street urinal in Hamburg, Germany
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"Public Convenience" in Varanasi, Benares, India
Special urinals
Urinals designed for females
In the Western world, females are generally taught to sit or squat while urinating. Many therefore do not know how – or even that it is possible – for a female to aim her urine stream as would be required to use a stand-up urinal.[2] Thus, several different types of urinals have been designed for females that do not require the user to aim their urine stream. A typical user could thus theoretically approach such a urinal squatting backwards over it without necessarily trying to aim their stream.
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Urinals designed for females
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Unisex urinals which can be used by either gender
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A woman urinating into a male urinal in a standing position
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A mobile light-weight urinal for females
Arts and interactive urinals
Kisses! is a controversial urinal designed by the female Dutch designer Meike van Schijndel. It is shaped like an open pair of red lips.[15] In early March 2004, the National Organization for Women (NOW) took offense to the new urinals that Virgin Atlantic decided to install in the Virgin Atlantic clubhouse at John F Kennedy International Airport in New York City.[16] After receiving many angry phone calls from female customers, Virgin Atlantic Vice President John Riordan called NOW to apologize.[17] Protestors surmised a connection to oral sex or urolagnia, and based their complaints on the urinals being sexist. A McDonald's restaurant in the Netherlands removed them after a customer complained to the head office in the United States.[citation needed]
Interactive urinals have been developed in a number of countries, allowing users to entertain themselves during urination. One example is the Toylet, a video game system produced by the Japanese company Sega that allows users to play video games using their urine to control the on-screen action.[18]
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Controversial Kisses! urinals were designed by a woman.
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Advertising displays for a "captive audience" in London
Makeshift urinals
During military operations, such as the Korean War, Vietnam War, or Operation Desert Storm, "piss tubes" were used as makeshift urinals. To make one, soldiers would affix an inverted disposable water bottle on one end of a rigid tube, burying the other end. Removing the base of the bottle made a funnel which would be left at the proper height. Deposited urine simply soaked into the ground; when the area became saturated, the device was relocated.[citation needed]
In vehicles
As of 2008[update], the aircraft manufacturer Airbus offered its customers the option of installing urinals in its A380 aircraft.[19]
History
In the spring of 1830, the city government of Paris decided to install the first public urinals on the major boulevards. They were put in place by the summer, but in July of the same year, many were destroyed through their use as materials for street barricades during the French Revolution of 1830.[20]
The urinals were re-introduced in Paris after 1834, when over 400 were installed by Claude-Philibert Barthelot, comte de Rambuteau, the Préfet of the Department of the Seine. Having a simple cylindrical shape, built of masonry, open on the street side, and ornately decorated on the other side as well as the cap, they were popularly known as 'colonnes Rambuteau' ('Rambuteau columns'). In response, Rambuteau suggested the name 'vespasiennes',[21] in reference to the 1st century Roman emperor Titus Flavius Vespasianus, who placed a tax on urine collected from public toilets for use in tanning. This is the usual term by which street urinals are known in the French speaking world, although 'pissoir' and 'pissotière' are also in common use.
In Paris, the next version was a masonry column that allowed for the pasting of posters on the side facing the footpath, creating a tradition that continues to this day (as a Morris column, a column with an elaborate roof and without the urinal).
Cast iron urinals were developed in the United Kingdom, with the Scottish firm of Walter McFarlane and Company casting urinals at their Saracen Foundry and erecting the first at Paisley Road, Glasgow in October 1850. By the end of 1852, nearly 50 cast iron urinals had been installed in Glasgow, including designs with more than one stall.[22] Unlike Rambuteau's columns, which were entirely open at the front, McFarlane's one-man urinals were designed with spiral cast iron screens that allowed the user to be hidden from sight, and his multi-stall urinals were completely hidden within ornate, modular cast iron panels. Three manufacturers in Glasgow, Walter Macfarlane & Co., George Smith (Sun Foundry) and James Allan Snr & Son (Elmbank Foundry), supplied the majority of cast iron urinals across Britain[22] and exported them around the world, including Australia and Argentina.[23]
Back in Paris, cast iron urinals were introduced as part of Baron Haussmann's remodelling of the city. A large variety of designs were produced in subsequent decades, housing two to 8 stalls, typically only screening the central portion of the user from public view, with the head and feet still visible. Screens were also added to Rambuteau columns. At the peak of their spread in the 1930s there were 1,230 pissoirs in Paris, but by 1966 their number had decreased to 329. From 1980 they were replaced systematically with new technology, a unisex, enclosed, automatically self-cleaning unit called the Sanisette.[24]
In Berlin, the first pissoirs, in wood, were erected in 1863. In order to provide a design as distinguished as in other cities, several architectural design competitions were organised in 1847, 1865 and 1877. The last design, proposed by a city councillor, was the one adopted in 1878, a cast-iron octagonal structure with seven stalls and a peaked roof, known locally as a Café Achteck ('Octagon Cafe'). In common with British designs, they provided complete enclosure, and were provided with interior lighting. Their number increased to 142 by 1920,[25] but there are now only about a dozen remaining in use.[26]
A similar design was adopted in Vienna, though simpler, smaller and hexagonal. They were equipped with a novel "oil system", patented by Wilhelm Beetz in 1882, where a type of oil was used to neutralise odours, dispensing with the necessity for plumbing.[27] About 15 are still in use, and one has been restored and set up as a display in the Vienna Technical Museum.[28]
In central Amsterdam, there are about 35 pee curls, which consist of a raised metal screen that curls in a spiral enclosing a single urinal stall, including some two-person examples with the same details but a simpler shape. Though the design first emerged in the 1870s, an updated design by Joan van der Mey dates from 1916. All the remaining examples were restored in 2008.
Pissoirs of various sizes and designs, but mostly in patterned cast-iron, can still be found dotted across the UK, with a few in London, but especially in Birmingham and Bristol. A solitary example of Walter McFarlane's one-man spiral urinal remains in Thorn Park, Plymouth.[29] A number have been restored and relocated to the grounds of various open-air museums and heritage railway lines.[29]
Rectangular pissoirs, with elaborate patterned cast-iron panels, similar in design to some of the UK ones, were installed in the city of Sydney, Australia, in 1880[30] and Melbourne, Australia, in the period 1903–1918. Of at least 40 that were made, nine remain in place and in use on the streets in and around central Melbourne, and have been classified by the National Trust since 1998.[31]
In recent years, temporary pissoirs with multiple unscreened urinals around a central column have been introduced in the UK.[32][33] A temporary pissoir for women called the 'Peeasy' is used in Switzerland.[34]
Until the 1990s, street urinals were a common sight in Paris (France), and in the 1930s more than 1200 were in service. They were famous among foreign tourists.[35] Parisians referred to them as vespasiennes, the name being derived from that of the Roman Emperor Vespasian, who, according to an anecdote, imposed a tax on urine. Beginning in the 1990s, the vespasiennes (renowned for their smell and lack of hygiene) were gradually replaced by Sanisettes. Today only one vespasienne remains in the city (on Boulevard Arago), and it is still regularly used. They still exist in other French cities and in other countries.
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The last surviving vespasienne, on Boulevard Arago in Paris
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Vespasienne in Honfleur, France
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Interior of Honfleur vespasienne
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Vintage British urinal, no longer in service
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Outdoor urinal in Porto, Portugal
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Restored heritage protected public urinal in Braunschweig, Germany
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Victorian cast iron urinal in Sydney, Australia (c.1890)
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Urinals in the Rothesay Victorian Toilets, Rothesay, Bute (c.1899)
Society and culture
Examples of urinals in popular culture include:
- Marcel Duchamp's Fountain (1917), which some have called the most influential modern artwork, is a urinal which Duchamp signed "R. Mutt".[36]
- Police in Nassau County, New York adopted talking urinals in an anti-drunk driving initiative. Using Wizmark, a talking urinal display screen, police can provide bars with free pre-programmed urinal messages urging patrons not to drink and drive.[37][38]
- Ernest Hemingway converted a urinal from Sloppy Joe's bar into a water fountain for his cats. The fountain remains a prominent feature at his former home in Key West, Florida, a popular tourist destination in the town.[39]
- Pissoir, retitled Urinal in some countries, was the first feature film directed by John Greyson. It was released in 1980 and takes place in a toilet.[40]
- Gabriel Chevallier's 1934 satirical novel Clochemerle deals with the ramifications of plans to install a new urinal in a French village.
- Indiana Urinalysis (1988) is a documentary on the subject of urinals. Topics include "types of urinals, urinal etiquette, usage of urinal cakes, why urinals are always white, preference of urinal vs. toilet, and urinals for women, as well as a collection of urinal anecdotes."[41] It received a Citation Award from the Indiana Film Society in 1990.[42]
- "Mystery of the Urinal Deuce" is an episode of the American adult animated sitcom South Park, in which the plot revolves around the elementary school's efforts to establish the identity of a person who defecated in a urinal.
Gallery of unusual or historical urinals
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Ancient portable urinal, Western Jin Dynasty (c. 265–316 CE)
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Urinal in the form of a tiger. Stoneware with olive green (celadon) glaze. Southern Dynasties, 500–589 CE. From China, Zhejiang. Victoria and Albert Museum
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Fountain, a urinal which Marcel Duchamp exhibited as a controversial artwork
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Ornate illuminated French urinal, c.1865
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Basic six-stall Paris urinal, c.1865
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"Steampunk" styled urinal at a bar
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Japanese sink/urinal saves water and physical space
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Urinals with a view, at the restaurant UFO in Bratislava
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Fancy decorative urinal at Madonna Inn
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Public urinals in Portugal
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Victorian urinals in Scotland from 1899
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Neo-baroque style decorated urinal
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Open plan public toilet in Japan
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Styled urinals in St. Peter Port, Guernsey
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Brewery urinals in Christchurch, New Zealand
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Low-cost waterless portable urinal in Burkina Faso
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Urinal with a 38th floor view in Hokkaido, Japan
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Stand-up urinals in open arrangement
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Urinals in a bathroom in the American Museum of Natural History
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A double urinal. One person can urinate on each side.
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An example of floor standing urinals in a men's bathroom
See also
- Female urinal
- Interactive urinal communicator
- Public toilet
- Reuse of excreta
- Sanistand
- Telescopic urinal
References
- ^ "urinal". Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
- ^ a b "A Woman?s Guide on How to Pee Standing". Archived from the original on 4 June 2003. Retrieved 22 November 2010.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ With public sit-down toilets, users often kick the flush lever to avoid the perceived or real possibility of infection from touching it.
- ^ "Going Green Pays Off", Buildings magazine, July 2004, www.buildings.com
- ^ a b c von Münch, E., Winker, M. (2011). Technology review of urine diversion components – Overview on urine diversion components such as waterless urinals, urine diversion toilets, urine storage and reuse systems. Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH, Chapter 4
- ^ "XLerator Hand Dryer – Top Ten". Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- ^ von Münch, E., Winker, M. (2011). Worldwide listing of suppliers for waterless urinals – Appendix 1 for technology review of urine diversion components. Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH
- ^ von Münch, E., Dahm, P. (2009). Waterless Urinals – A Proposal to Save Water and Recover Urine Nutrients in Africa. 34th WEDC International Conference, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
- ^ Oeko-Innovationen: Wasserlose Urinale. Kein Wasserverbrauch und mehr Hygiene (in German), 2009
- ^ "WaterSense Labeled Flushing Urinals". Epa.gov. 22 December 2008. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- ^ Joshua Davis (22 June 2010), Pissing Match: Is the World Ready for the Waterless Urinal?, Wired
- ^ Saffron, Inga (5 April 2006). "Phila. no-flush standoff unclogged, with a catch". The Philadelphia Inquirer. pp. A1, A10.
- ^ Cal/EPA headquarters flushes waterless urinals. news10.net (22 February 2010).
- ^ California Environmental Protection Agency, "CAL/EPA Issues Statement on Waterless Urinals", 1 April 2010
- ^ Kisses!. Bathroom-mania.com.
- ^ "Tell Virgin Atlantic: There's Nothing 'Fun' About Exploiting Women". National Organization for Women. 18 March 2004. Archived from the original on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2006.
- ^ "Outrageous Interruptus: NOW Cheers Decision to Abandon Sexist Urinals" (Press release). National Organization for Women. 19 March 2004. Retrieved 23 April 2006.
- ^ Geere, Duncan. (6 January 2011). "'Toylet' Games in Japan's Urinals". Wired. Wired UK. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
- ^ Aimée Turner (10 April 2008). "A380 male urinals to become 'bog standard'". Flight International.
- ^ Fierro, Alfred (1996). Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris. Robert Laffont. p. 1177. ISBN 2-221-07862-4.
- ^ Pike, David L. (2005). Subterranean Cities: The World Beneath Paris and London, 1800-1945. Cornell University Press. p. 234. ISBN 978-0-801-47256-5.
- ^ a b Kearney, Peter (1985). The Glasgow Cludgie. Newcastle: People's Publications. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-0906917145.
- ^ Juarez, Lucia (1 December 2014). "Documenting Scottish Architectural Cast Iron in Argentina". ABE Journal. 5 (5). doi:10.4000/abe.821. ISSN 2275-6639.
- ^ Bärthel, Hilmar (2000): "Tempel aus Gusseisen: Urinale, Café Achteck und Vollanstalten", Berlinische Monatsschrift Heft 11
- ^ "Café Achteck - Berlin's Green Pissoir". Berlin Love. 13 November 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
- ^ "Wiens letzte Öl-Klos werden saniert". wien.orf.at (in German). 14 November 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
- ^ "Wiener Pavillon Pissoir, 1908 – Technisches Museum Wien". www.technischesmuseum.at. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
- ^ a b "street urinals". Heritage Group. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
- ^ "Cast Iron Urinal | Heritage NSW". apps.environment.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
- ^ "Cast Iron Street Urinals - Group". Victorian Heritage Database.
- ^ "The Pee Pod - the place to pee in Milton Keynes!". BBC News, 15 June 2010.
- ^ "Edinburgh to trial 'pee pod' street urinals". BBC News, 24 November 2010.
- ^ Salzmann, Claudia. "Frauen-Pissoir: Kein leichtes Unterfangen". Berner Zeitung, 18 July 2011 (in German).
- ^ Harvey A. Levenstein, We'll Always Have Paris: American Tourists in France since 1930, Chicago: University of Chgicago, 2004, ISBN 9780226473789, p. 31.
- ^ "Duchamp's urinal tops art survey: A white gentlemen's urinal has been named the most influential modern art work of all time". BBC News. 1 December 2004. Retrieved 28 April 2006.
- ^ "Wizmark".
- ^ "NY Police Use Anti-DUI Talking Urinal Messages". Police Magazine. 14 June 2006.
- ^ Home. hemingwayhome.com.
- ^ M, P (10 September 2012). "Urinal". TimeOut.com. Time Out Group Plc. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
- ^ Everson, Bart; Jones, Brian; Griff, Hanna (1989), Indiana urinalysis, Bloomington Community Access Television, OCLC 56051746
- ^ "Indiana Urinalysis at rox.com". rox.com. Retrieved 15 September 2017.