$180M Public Restroom could be more user friendly
"I just came from the bathroom on the seventh floor of the Central Library. A homeless man was drying his ass crack with the hand blower. As he left the restroom, he muttered, mechanically, 'This library is a design disaster.' Then I noticed the same phrase, written as graffiti on the door. I dried my hands on my pants."
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Other rules of conduct prohibit “using restrooms for bathing or shampooing, doing laundry, or changing clothes,”
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They should have spent $80m on a new pub bathroom and $100m on the library- separate buildings,
instead of making them one.
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I don't think the library was designed for the way its actually being used- as a public bathroom. They should have built a state of the art 100 million dollar bathroom with automatic dry showers, ultraviolet clothes washers, and 3 classes of stalls. If you want to pay for it, you can get an upgrade. Put that world renowned bathroom next to the library, and don't put any bathrooms in the library. This would put alot less pressure on the rest of the sleek library design straining under the weight of body odor and gunk encrusted patrons.
My point here is not that homeless people shouldn't be allowed access to public restrooms or that the library sucks (it might). It's just the juxtaposition of luxurious hypermodern sterility with primitive forms of human behavior. Unlike what we've always thought of the sleekness of the future and fetishized its design, there is no escape from human folly and basic animal nature. Why build a bathroom at all? True visionary architects will see this problem and wont include bathrooms.
At the other end, what's up with the decision to fork out $180M on an ambitious library (which I'm proud of the daring here compared with the rest of Seattle's lame, safe, visionless buildings) and next to nothing on homeless facilities?
Well, we did spend millions on those automatic bathrooms around the city and that was a failed experiment (incidents of public defecation has actually increased since the opening of these machines). Visionary architects- public bathrooms! Thats the most difficult challenge in your profession. Are you up to it?
http://www.poopreport.com/Travel/shameless_in_seattle.html
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