How Inclusion can Exclude: The Case of Public Toilet Provision for Women
Autor: | Gail Ramster, Jo-Anne Bichard, Clara Greed |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Toilet
Public toilet 030505 public health Inclusion (disability rights) business.industry media_common.quotation_subject Geography Planning and Development Public relations Space (commercial competition) Fundamental human needs Urban Studies 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Dependant 0305 other medical science business Built environment Diversity (politics) media_common |
Zdroj: | Built Environment. 44:52-76 |
ISSN: | 0263-7960 |
DOI: | 10.2148/benv.44.1.52 |
Popis: | Our built environment is required to meet human needs at the most basic of levels. If our pavements and roads aff ord our movement across the built environment’s landscapes, then provisions should also be in place to meet the needs of the body in motion. This paper will take a historical perspective of the introduction and design of public toilets to illustrate how certain spaces in the city were defined by the bodies that toilet provision served. It will show how biological functions such as menstruation are not being met by public toilet design and infrastructure, and how overall provision is inadequate for women for both biological and social factors. Public toilets reflect and reinforce a binary gender society, resulting in some users being excluded or their rights to access challenged by others. A new chapter is currently being written regarding the needs of transgender people, raising questions around existing design differences between men’s and women’s toilets and the very notion of segregating public toilets by gender, evident through the growing numbers of ‘gender-neutral toilets’. However, these changes to public toilet design and provision are emerging without expert guidance and with a lack of research into how this might positively or negatively impact different groups. Designers, architects and planners are facing a series of interesting challenges when considering how new and existing UK provision can be inclusive of a diversity of bodies and their rights to access without excluding those socially and culturally dependant on a gender-segregated space. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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