Designers and developers of public spaces and venues are being urged to go to the toilet when planning new build or refurbishment projects.
The urge is the result of a new report, which claims the nation’s health, mobility and equality is being threatened by lack of toilet provision away from home.
The headline of the Taking the P*** survey, by the Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH), is that the provision of public toilets should be made compulsory: fewer than 4,500 now exist across the UK.
The survey is published just weeks after the Government announced consultation on making assisted accessible toilets aka Changing Places obligatory.
The RSPH findings are supported by Closomat, Britain’s leading provider of enabling toilet solutions at home and away and instrumental in delivery of many of the 1500 or so Changing Places assisted accessible toilets across the country.
“Numerous reports have been done already demonstrating that people make a conscious decision NOT to go places where they believe they cannot find a suitable toilet,” says Robin Tuffley, Closomat marketing manager. “Locations that DO have good toilet provision find more people visit, they stay longer, and spend more money. That applies across the spectrum of places we go- from town centres to visitor attractions.
“The RSPH survey found that 70% of people wanted more, better toilets in supermarkets; almost as many listed cafes, restaurants, bars. That mirrors our experience in accessible toilet provision. We go to the toilet on average eight times a day, so the chances are that, if and when we are out and about, we WILL need to the toilet. All involved in the construction process are essential to answering the call, and meeting the need, to design, build and operate more toilets for the public.”
Find out more about Changing Places provision here: