
Many of you may have noticed the new pay-per-use public bathrooms in New York City. We saw the first one at Madison Square Park, and have read a lot of criticism on the loos, which are larger than some of the neighborhood's studio apartments...

Many of you may have noticed the new pay-per-use public bathrooms in New York City. We saw the first one at Madison Square Park, and have read a lot of criticism on the loos, which are larger than some of the neighborhood's studio apartments...
Brought to us by Cemusa, the same folks behind the city's new bus stops and newpaper stands, the toilets were introduced early this year. Has anyone seen one, or better yet used one, yet? Via: The NYT's Greetings, Earthlings. Your New Restroom Is Ready.
I know it is civilised and all that to have public toilets. But as someone who has lived and worked here since 1964 I have always cherished the special talent of "real" New Yorkers to know where they can find facilities in any area of the city - including some really nice ones in certain hotels, bars and restaurants. I imagine that like me most folks will go on using that system.
view Lavren's profile
Haven't used one, but I love the picture of the three people gathered around the toilet, smiling at it.
view brookberrys's profile
are they going to be well maintained?
view erinorea's profile
The idea reminds me of the ones I've seen in Paris. I also saw a lot of guys urinating outside in the streets (well they were really trying to hide behind cars or against buildings), so maybe it isn't the greatest idea. Maybe it was just the area I was in, who knows.
Matt @ http://www.goodnightmoonfuton.com
view aikidomatt's profile
erinorea, they're self-cleaning. industrial strength-wise.
say, Lavren reminds me to ask this question: I heard that anyone off the street may use the bathrooms in the lobbies of hotels in the city. Is this true?
view *heather leaf*'s profile
Looks like the neo metro toilet!
I think these things are for tourists. Like Lavren, I don't need the city to build me another bathroom.
In SF I've heard of people doing the nasty in there.
view art's profile
yea, 15 minutes for just 25 cents? how are they gonna make sure it is only used as a bathroom?
view foodinmouth's profile
I don't mean this to sound rude, but...besides the "eww" factor, does it make a difference if it is not only used as a bathroom?
view JohnnySlimane's profile
Not if you don't mind the litter of needles and used condoms, which I'm sure sophisticated New Yorkers have no problem with. San Franciscans tended to be bothered by it, but we Westerners always struggle with the glamor of big-city life.
view wende in the twin cities's profile
Are they going to be well-maintained? Of course not. And the "self-cleaning" toilets in SF are some of the nastiest places imaginable--right up there with the restrooms at the old main public library.
view Shawn's profile
Why are they gazing so lovingly at it??
view Sleek's profile
As a tourist with young kids finding a convenient bathroom has been a problem so this will be helpful. That picture is hilarious. It looks like it might be baptismal fount, they way those well dressed people are gathered round.
view Kate (NC)'s profile
They look like they're praying at a shrine. ahahahahah
view anne's profile
"heather leaf" That's just about every city that anyone off the street can use the bathrooms of hotel lobies. Every city that I've been to, at least. I use hotel lobby restrooms all the time.
I like these public ones though. You can do a quick change of clothes or anything in them, it seems. How much are they to use though??
On the flip side, they could turn into a place where women and men of ill repute go to fornicate. LOL.
view orangejuce's profile
these were installed because NYC was way behind everywhere else in this particular civility. I think NY'ers, like Parisians, will have to overcome the strangeness of it. Those who know how many awful public restrooms there are (Macys, Lord & Taylor before the reno, NYU buildings) will have a reflexive tendency to think of the horrors that could go on.
I believe the time limit is set for those changing babies and the disabled, giving them time to get it together before the door opens.
view Lady J's profile
Don't they have something similar to these in London?
view slod_wick's profile
They should make self-cleaning "rooms" that spray down and everything goes down a big drain. Then no nastiness can survive.
view Marbargarbo's profile
We've had them for years in London. Not quite as big as the ones in your pic look. I've only used them v rarely (outside Cafe Nero on The Strand before my evening class) - but always found them just fine. From memory they're "timed" but it seemed non-scarily ample. You do have to pay so I normally use the free facilities elsewhere... (sort it out, Cafe Nero on The Strand, eh?)
view Lesley - London's profile
@Marbargarbo,
I believe that these things are self-cleaning.
view art's profile
25 cents: Thank God! It's so hard to find a bathroom in the city, this is my new favorite toy.
view milkjam's profile
They're self-cleaning. I used one in London, when I fell down some muddy steps during a visit in '92 and needed some place to wipe & wash the mud off. It seemed very clean - well, at least 'till I got done spraying mud everywhere. But I'm sure it was clean again after I left and it went thru its cleaning cycle.
view sunspot42's profile
If these are like the ones in train stations in Paris, be sure to pay. My mom grabbed the door as someone came out and went in. Unfortunately, the timer went off, the lights went out, she was showered with bathroom cleaner mist, and she couldn't unlock the door. Someone had to put money in just to let her out. Let that be a lesson not to cheat! hahaa
view DLT's profile
That's great that people now have an option to use a public restroom in New York. They installed a few of those in downtown San Francisco a few years ago, and when I lived there, I continued my habit of going to the restrooms that only the locals knew about - hotels, department stores, etc. Just as Lavren mentioned it is indeed a "special talent." These public restrooms are especially great for tourists and those who don't know of any other facilities to use in the City.
view HulaGirl's profile
Paying 25 cents is a good deal compared to having to buy something you don't really need or want just so you can use the restroom of a fast-food place. And they are usually uber gross. Hotels, on the other hand, are free and mostly clean. I love using to use the bathroom at the Plaza Hotel best.
view nazrd's profile