Wee-wee Watering

by Sarah on September 19, 2009

Back in April I took a business trip to the fascinating Indian city of Bengaluru, which is both very like and very unlike big cities in the US. One of the many things I found interesting was the empty decorative fountains littered around the central city — carcasses of a British city aesthetic that did not survive its transplantation. In a place where water is a limited resource and the temperature hovers all summer in the high 80s (°F), evaporation makes public fountains very high-maintenance and expensive. Their empty shells seemed like warnings about the folly of globalizing design without research and cultural awareness.

Lalbagh Gardens in Bengaluru

Trash can at the Lalbagh Gardens in Bengaluru

I also noticed the very common practice of public (or semi-public) wall urination. I was especially struck by the juxtaposition of the overall dryness and this constant but small-scale “watering” of the streets after seeing John Thackara’s keynote address at Interaction ’09. He spoke some about global water conservation, and had one slide showing a spindly plant that had been watered with tap water next to a much larger and more vibrant plant that had been watered with urine. (Here is a video of his talk, Designing for Business as Usual, and the slide I mention is at 41 minutes.)

Then just last week I saw this article on the Wall Street Journal about the Paris police writing tickets and upping their effort to curb wall urination, and I remembered something Robert Fabricant said in his Interaction ’09 keynote, Behavior Is Our Medium*.  He encouraged designers to avoid trying to change learned behavior, but to focus instead on changing the non-human parts of the system.

Laws against public urination (as far as I can tell it’s against the law almost everywhere) are intended to change an entrenched, global behavior. But police enforcement, infraction processing and court time, and installing and maintaining plentiful public bathrooms are all expensive efforts, not to mention the extra water used for every urinal flush. Surely there is room for a more elegant solution that doesn’t try to change the human part of the system? Inspired by this question, I sat down and quickly mind-mapped around the idea of a public wall-urination capture and re-purpose system.

click the image to see full-size

click to see full-size

I enjoyed the exercise immensely, and I got pretty excited by some of the possibilities. I think there is a real opportunity for a low-cost, low-effort solution that would harness that wasted water and simultaneously reduce the mess and stigma of wall urination, without requiring people to substantially change their current behavior. I would really love to drop a prototype or two into a corner of downtown LA and see what happens. Unfortunately, it would still be illegal.

This is obviously not a minor consideration. A facet of this project, if it ever were to become a project, would need to address society’s perception of public urination. But product demos and PR campaigns can’t help if the product is, by definition, both public and completely illegal. And hoping laws change before public perception changes seems pretty unlikely.

So what do you think: am I crazy? Is there NO WAY people would ever accept sanctioned semi-public urination? What about outside the US? I’d love to hear what you have to say about this.

___________________

*Bonus: Sketchnotes on Flickr of the first half of Fabricant’s keynote that I did when practicing sketchnoting at home.

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{ 9 comments… read them below or add one }

George September 19, 2009 at 10:27 pm

Love it. Not only do I think it’s a great idea, but I could see a team of marketers having a field day with what to call the thing. And the US might not be totally out — I’m not entirely sure public urination is illegal in the New York City subway. Maybe you should work w/ MTA on a pilot project to install a wall in that long tunnel leading to the shuttle.

Sarah September 19, 2009 at 10:45 pm

Thanks, George! Yeah, I think the whole naming, marketing and awareness campaign aspect would be pretty fun. Great idea about the subway. That’s a good example of a situation where it’s asking a lot of people to require they enclose themselves in a public bathroom. I didn’t consider the underground, sunless scenario when I was doing the mind map – that presents a whole other set of interesting challenges.

Scott September 21, 2009 at 7:32 am

Sarah, this is a really cool post. When I visited the Netherlands in December 2002, Amsterdam had just instituted portable (yet public) urination stations. They put these out only at night, on the weekend, to help curb the wall urination. Here’s a picture I found from one of those late nights: http://twitpic.com/il6yn

Sarah September 21, 2009 at 8:01 pm

Thanks so much for sharing that, Scott! That’s one way to handle the issue. Although it requires personnel and infrastructure to set them out and remove them, as well as to handle what they collect. :)

Jack September 23, 2009 at 1:45 pm

Check out “Pissoir.” I don’t know what their current status is but these used to be, at the simplest, a small booth with a hole in the floor. They were fairly common in the larger cities in France. One of the jokes was that you had to step out pretty quickly before you pulled the flush handle.

Sarah September 23, 2009 at 3:04 pm

What a great tip, Jack! I searched and found this fantastic page showing pissoir designs around the world: http://www.oobject.com/category/pissoir-designs/ – although none of them do anything with what they collect other then (at best) deposit it into the sewer system.

Steve Portigal September 27, 2009 at 4:58 am

Here’s a picture from Amsterdam showing the same urinal – but during the daytime – and a sign from a different part of town directing pedestrians to a similar (? we didn’t go see it) device

http://www.flickr.com/photos/steveportigal/3644705779/in/set-72157618334996582/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/steveportigal/3627125634/in/set-72157618334996582/

Sarah October 3, 2009 at 4:24 pm

Thanks Steve! I love that sign. I was thinking that working on the signage might be the most fun part of this project.
Also, got a tweet from Bryce Glass (@soldierant) with this link: http://www.boingboing.net/2009/10/02/pee-as-fertilizer-in.html about how urine mixed with ash makes a great fertilizer. I think maybe the world is ready for this idea!

James Taylor October 15, 2010 at 11:19 am

I don’t know what Queen Victoria would make of the state of public fountains in present day Bengaluru, but she has a good view of a different water feature in Reading…

http://www.flickr.com/photos/browniebear/4428245322/

(It even has a Facebook page! http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=4792778906 )

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