Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Windows In Public Toilet Entrance Doors
Is it legal to put a clear window in the main door into a toilet area with 6 actual toilets and urinals within it ?
My son's college is going to install windows in all main toilet block doors and it seems a gross invasion of privacy to me.
My son's college is going to install windows in all main toilet block doors and it seems a gross invasion of privacy to me.
Answers
I found this but it is specific to public toilets: Section 307 Privacy 307.1 Public toilet entry. Entry to public toilets should be designed with offset entries, cubicles, vestibules or lobbies capable of allowing entry and exiting without making physical contact with surfaces such as walls, doors or people. Occupants in waiting areas or halls should not...
14:14 Wed 19th Nov 2014
I found this but it is specific to public toilets:
Section 307
Privacy
307.1 Public toilet entry.
Entry to public toilets should be designed with offset entries, cubicles, vestibules or lobbies capable of allowing entry and exiting without making physical contact with surfaces such as walls, doors or people. Occupants
in waiting areas or halls should not be able to see through such entry area into the actual toilet. Toilet cubicles, urinals and mirrors should be sited away from the line of sight from the main entrance. Mirrors should be sighted away from sanitary fixtures (water closets, urinals, etc.) whenever possible.
In my opinion clear glass windows could be a good idea to prevent people opening a door into someone's face. Providing the window doesn't give visibility to the actual toilet area this would be perfectly acceptable.
Section 307
Privacy
307.1 Public toilet entry.
Entry to public toilets should be designed with offset entries, cubicles, vestibules or lobbies capable of allowing entry and exiting without making physical contact with surfaces such as walls, doors or people. Occupants
in waiting areas or halls should not be able to see through such entry area into the actual toilet. Toilet cubicles, urinals and mirrors should be sited away from the line of sight from the main entrance. Mirrors should be sighted away from sanitary fixtures (water closets, urinals, etc.) whenever possible.
In my opinion clear glass windows could be a good idea to prevent people opening a door into someone's face. Providing the window doesn't give visibility to the actual toilet area this would be perfectly acceptable.
I remember many years ago when I was in the Royal Navy and the captain warned the crew a number of times about people writing on the walls and doors of the toilets. He said either it stops or all the doors would be removed. It didn't stop so he was true to his word and all of them were taken off and it stayed that way for a long time. As this was on the old Ark Royal you can imagine there were many doors as the crew numbered over 2500.
You think that's bad, you want to see the toilets in Romania, and I'm not talking the tourist area (if there actually is a tourist area in Romania). You have to fit your own cubicle door and lock if you want privacy. They just have open traps for the toilets in some 'dinners'. You have to roll your trousers up as well to make sure they don't soak up the urine on the floor. The French have it luxury compared to them!
Blackadder - that type of urinal may now be rare in France, but others remain (quite a few in 'aires' on the motorways) where there is a clear view into the urinals from most angles. There remains the difficulty of the restaurant toilets where you pass the urinal to reach the cubicle.... one peeps in to check that it's not being used and scuttles in to the cubicle, but on exiting, oops!! The horrible 'holes in ground' are still plentiful and even some new motorway areas have a long row of 'normal' cubicles (in the ladies toilets) and one of the old sort at the end - often obscured by a large plant as they remain unused. Still build them though. A strange notion - and nation.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.