UPDATE! Public Toilets in Paris and New York
NEW YORK, NY. March 23, 2006. New York City's Department of Transportation yesterday unveiled prototype designs for new bus shelters, newsstands, and public toilets. Here is Bradley Hope's piece in the New York Sun. Steve Donleavy's report appeared in the New York Post. And finally, you can read right here what I posted yesterday about the elegant public toilets in Paris versus the dire absence of toilets in New York City. Little did I suspect that on that very same day DOT Commissioner Iris Weinshall was announcing that New York has taken another step towards providing public toilets, after 20 years. Note that the toilets in Paris are free, while the prototypes DOT proposes for New York City will charge a quarter.
My report from yesterday follows:
If there is one public facility that teaches the importance of a common culture, it is the free public toilet. To share a toilet, people must trust others' understanding of how to behave, even under test conditions, when there is no one else around. The public toilets in the Paris Metro and elsewhere in Paris are justly renowned. Parisian toilets are clean, they are safe, and they are everywhere.
One instance of the freestanding Parisian facility stands just outside the Jardin des Plantes on the Rue Buffon. It looks like an oval metal container.
On the side is a range of buttons, along with instructions. One button will be either orange or green, indicating whether the toilet is or is not in use. Press the green button, and the door slides open. Slide the door closed and latch it from the inside. One is in a neatly-designed private space-capsule for excretion, with a clean toilet, a supply of toilet paper, a wash basin with a slender stream of water always running, and an air dryer for the hands. There is even a little ledge for setting down a cigarette.
Step outside again and close the door. The orange button on the outside does not turn back to green immediately. The instructions assure the visitor that after every use, the toilet will clean itself and make itself sanitary. One hears whooshing noises and gurgling noises. Only after the machine has whooshed and gurgled for a couple of minutes does the orange button become green again.
New York City nowadays offers only a few public toilets, among them the damp and ratty ones near the boathouse in Central Park. The City no longer has freestanding toilets or toilets in the subways. A political fight about the City's contract to buy freestanding toilets for the streets has gone on for a decade. Nor do the public toilets that were built into public places like subway stations remain available to the public. Today the City leaves it to private businesses like Starbucks and Barnes & Noble to provide these basic humane amenities.
I don't understand the political fight that has kept New York City from buying new toilets for the streets. I do think, however, that the breakdown of the common culture explains why New York City's subway stations no longer provide rest rooms.
When I told my assistant about the public toilets in Paris, she said, I think rightly, "In New York City, someone would figure out a way to live in them."
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