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RESTROOM FACILITIES SOLUTIONS
In the late '70's municipalities began closing public
toilet facilities based of the expectation that strengthened 'customer
restroom building codes' would fill the need. As it becomes
apparent that many people hesitate to visit areas that lack public toilet facilities,
there is now trend to provide year round public restroom facilities. These
facilities can be designed and built by the municipality, or they can rely
on newer standard solutions that reduce both install and recurring
cost. In the near future expect to see companies that also specialize
in cleaning and maintaining public restroom facilities. TURN
KEY DESIGN AND BUILD Companies
that specialize in building public restrooms are typically able to provide
more effective facilities at a lower initial and recurring cost then
custom designs. Typically these facilities have less down-time,
are
easier to service and are less prone to vandalism.
TURN KEY DESIGN AND BUILD
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AUTOMATED PUBLIC TOILETS (APT's)
Automated
Public Toilets
are high-tech self cleaning public restrooms. They require a
service contract but for the most part are
unattended. Unlike portable sanitation units
(PSU) or 'porta potties', these unit are fixed location and require electrical,
water and sewer connection. While more expensive then a PSU, they
provide clean seats, floors and actually look nice.
WARNING!
Almost all APT's installed in the U.S. are single toilet units with only
limited ability to accommodate the public during high use times.
Because they are clean and have lavatory fixtures, individuals will remain
in them for longer periods then they would when using a PSU. One person can
lock out others for 15 - 20 minutes. This can lead to unacceptable queuing
and wait-times. After an initial 'pilot test' of single toilet
APT's, Atlanta ordered 'quad toilet' APT's for their
main MARTA station.
APT procurement cost analysis
is often flawed when single toilet APT are cost-compared to traditional
multi-stall facilities that accommodate the sanitation needs of many
people at once.
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So the five fancy-pants, self-cleaning automated public toilets (APTs) that landed in 2004, the ones that
came with a mind-blowing price tag, are being sent away ... ... It will cost $500,000 plus about $50,000 per toilet for removal, a somewhat extortionate amount of
money for an exit agreement --
Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer
'Downtown toilets have got to go'
3/14/2008
...Councilman Richard Conlin voted in favor of acquiring the toilets but now says,
"They haven't worked out the way we'd hoped. ... We're going to have to go back to the drawing
board." "They've become dens of illegal behavior,"
....
Source: 'Seattle's automated public toilets now haven for drugs'
Associated Press 10/06/2006
...high-tech public toilets are not as reliable
as someone who really needs a restroom would hope...
a little observation showed that plenty of people couldn't get the computerized lock to open with their quarters.
Other people have had the opposite problem. A bus driver told the newspaper the doors opened on one of his passengers just as she was pulling her pants up.
Source: 'Boston's High-tech toilets problematic'
United Press Intl 06/08/07
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Vendors and
Manufactures - APT's
"When Nature Calls" Video (2:51) 10/8/03 - Beth Parker
WTTG-TV FOX 5 News Washington, DC
Broadband Video | 56K
Modem Video
"Automatic for the People" Video (4:08) 9/03 -
Kristen Lee TelestraClear Business
TV One
Auckland, New Zealand
Broadband
Video | 56K
Modem Video
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PREFABRICATED 'BRICK & MORTAR PUBLIC
RESTROOMS
Prefabricated 'brick & mortar'
restroom are often the least expensive public restroom solution.
Their design have been refined over time, they meet ADA requirements and
they typically incorporate toilet and lavatory fixtures hardened against vandalism.
The designs have good ventilation and many facilitate provide limited
heating for extended or full year-round operation.
In the near future units will be available that incorporate the automated
technology found in APTs.
Vendors and
Manufactures - Prefab
Toilet
Cleaning Technology
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Arguments Against Pay Toilets
Often APT's are configured as Pay Toilets. The
American Restroom Association is strong proponent of free public
restrooms. Likewise the National Model Building Code developed by
consensus among the States, does not allow pay toilets unless mandated toilets are
also available without charge. Typical State Code ...
Required [toilet] facilities shall be free of charge and designated by legible
signs for each sex. Where pay facilities are installed, such
facilities shall be in excess of the required minimum facilities
2000 INTERNATIONAL PLUMBING CODE Para 403.6.2
Pay facilities. Published by the 50,000-member
organization
International Code
Council (ICC), whose membership includes all voting members of BOCA,
SBCCI, and ICBO (International Conference of Building Officials), the
IPC incorporates much of the language of the BOCA National Plumbing Code
and the SBCCA Standard Plumbing Code.
Even when the cost is minimal, -- $0.25 -- it presents
a problem for those caught without the necessary
coinage.
March Fong Eu, California Politician
March Fong Eu became famous for smashing a toilet bowl on the state Capitol's steps during her
successful campaign to ban pay toilets, which she said discriminate against women.
She was elected to the California legislature in 1966 as a Democrat representing Oakland and Castro Valley. Eu served four terms and was elected California secretary of state in 1974, making her the first Asian American woman ever elected to a state constitutional office in the United States.
source:www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0880736.html
'Urinetown'
The award winning musical about a place violators are carried away to when they're caught in the act of not using the "pay - per - use" public toilet.
Additional
information
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| RESTROOM ADVERTISING
"In a restroom for one to three minutes we own you. It’s a liability to turn left or right at a urinal."
– Marc Miller, president of New York-based InSite Advertising.
Is
restroom advertising a straight flush or just money down the
drain?
Pittsburgh Business Times - July 5,
1999
Restrooms are a welcome break from the message assault
According to research
noted by Media Life
78 percent of restroom visitors interviewed recalled one or more of the restroom ads, according to an Audits & Surveys Worldwide study. The sample consisted of 14 locations in New York City, Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia. Interviews were conducted as patrons exited restrooms.
Of those interviewed 75 percent reported that they viewed restroom advertising as "a good idea". Additionally, 43 percent reported finding it "very good" and only 2 percent called it "very poor”.
The same study found 24 percent of interviewees felt more positive toward a brand after viewing the restroom advertising. Negative responses were 5 percent, with the remainder reporting not being affected by the ad.
Nearly 75 percent of interviewees felt that ads in restrooms are more noticeable than or equally as noticeable as ads appearing in other media, according to the Audits and Surveys study.
Demographics: From Media Life, Apr 28, 2003
The gender of bar and nightclub customers using restrooms broke down to 55 percent male and 45 percent female, according to the Audits & Surveys study. Additionally:
35 percent of respondents were ages 18-24
44 percent were ages 25 to 34
14 percent were ages 35 to 44
7 percent were 45 and older.
The education breakdown was:
12 percent with high school or less
26 percent with some college
47 percent college graduates
12 percent with graduate degrees
3 percent with postgraduate work.
Activities in the past 30 days, according to the Audits & Surveys study, broke down to:
Accessed the internet at home or work, at 67 percent
Went to a movie theatre, at 66 percent
Bought a music CD or tape, at 61 percent
Went to a health club, at 45 percent
Attended a concert or show, at 35 percent
Made a purchase over the internet, at 31 percent
Also 26 percent of respondents visit a bar or nightclub twice a week, 24 percent once a week, 20 percent three times a week, and 13 percent four times a week. Daily visits were reported by 3 percent. Groups can be tightly targeted. For instance, Hispanics, African Americans, gays, sports fans and ravers can be singled out. "The most interesting thing about restroom advertising is micro-targeting," Roche says. "There’s a highly targeted delivery of demographics and psychographics."
Restroom Advertising Companies
BillBoardZ
Flush
Media
Jonny Advertising
Insite Advertising, Inc
Wall AG USA
ADpower
NextMedia and AlivePromo
NextMedia and AlivePromo Collaborate for Networked Restroom Advertising
Monday September 13, 8:07 am ET Press Release Source:
AlivePromo, Inc. MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 13 /PRNewswire/ --
NextMedia, the nation's largest provider of indoor advertising, today announced that it has collaborated with digital sign company AlivePromo to install networked digital advertising boards in Minneapolis/St Paul area restrooms. The digital boards, displaying high-resolution, animated advertising, will be managed using AlivePulse, a patent-pending AlivePromo process that allows for content to be changed from anywhere with access to the Internet.
The deployment of digital restroom advertising is expected to extend and diversify NextMedia's indoor advertising reach; the addition provides more options for advertisers while making the concept more attractive to certain venues.
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