Toilet Map
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toiletmap.bsky.social
Toilet Map
@toiletmap.bsky.social
310 followers 11 following 19 posts
15000 publicly accessible toilets in the UK and beyond. toiletmap.org.uk. Created by Royal College of Art and Neontribe. Account run by @gaillyk.bsky.social. Data available under open licence.
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My book is published today 📚. It’s called Designing Inclusive Public Toilets: Wee the People, written with @jo-anneb.bsky.social. It’s part inclusive design guide, part manifesto for better public toilets 🚽. Buy copies for all your friends! 🎁. Here’s what you’ll find inside 🧵
For five years, we’ve mapped gender neutral toilets. But for 4 in 5 public toilets, we just don’t know what loos exist. Can you help find more?
How many gender neutral / unisex toilets are there in the UK? www.toiletmap.org.uk/posts/gender... (spoiler: we don't know, but here are 1447 of them)
Toilet Map: Gender Neutral Toilets on the Toilet Map
www.toiletmap.org.uk
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Reposted by Toilet Map
Fascinating new report from AgeUK London, 'Lifting the Lid', about #publictoilets and #localgov in the capital. Full of great data, such as:
- 97 toilets closed in ten years.
- but 32 opened (I know that sounds bad, but I'm pleased it's any).
www.ageuk.org.uk/london/publi...
www.ageuk.org.uk
Reposted by Toilet Map
From a community toilet in Friockheim, Scotland, to London loos in Tower Hamlets and Trafalgar Square, check out our 🚽 stars of 2024!🌟
🚽✨ Our 2024 Toilet Roll of Honour is here! 🏆

@gaillyk.bsky.social and I have rolled out the red carpet for the most interesting loo related stats from the past year.

Check out our first @toiletmap.bsky.social blog post to discover the 2024 LOO OF THE YEAR.

www.toiletmap.org.uk/posts/our-20...
Toilet Map: Our 2024 (Toilet) Roll of Honour
www.toiletmap.org.uk
We’re proud to be a member of the London Loo Alliance. We want to hear form Londoners about their experiences of finding a public toilet when they are out and about this festive season. Please help us by completing this short survey bit.ly/LondonLooAll... #LondonLooSurvey
Public toilets in London
Take this survey powered by surveymonkey.com. Create your own surveys for free.
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Great question from a visitor - 'I'll be in London for Christmas Day and I would like to know which toilets are open around Buckingham Palace, Westminster and Oxford Street?'
#London, what've we got?
Euston, we have a problem.
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Access to public toilets/bathrooms is a means of control. In the late Victorian period, public urinals for men started appearing but nothing for women. This has a name - the urinary leash. It restricted how far women could travel, preventing them from doing many things that men could easily do.
Huge contribution this week from a member of the public - nearly 100 toilets updated for Richmond-upon-Thames long-running Community Toilet Scheme. Thank you!
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It’s the ambulant cubicle, a larger space with grab rails for anyone less physically able to sit/stand or who needs extra room. The outward opening doors increases the space, but if all doors did that, extra room would be needed to not whack people waiting! Hence at the end of the row. - Gail
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More people have a mobile phone than have access to a toilet...

Sanitation is a human right. It protects everyone’s dignity, and especially transforms the lives of women and girls. More investment and better governance of sanitation are critical for a fairer, more peaceful world. #WorldToiletDay
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Toilet dignity is a serious issue for many transport workers.
For example, many bus services operate along routes where drivers don't have guaranteed access to a suitable toilet.
This #WorldToiletDay we're calling for guaranteed toilet dignity for all workers 🧻
Petitions are cool, but have you ever seen workers air their collective grievances over lack of toilet access directly onto loo rolls? 🧻 🧻 🧻

#WorldToiletDay
Thank you for your support over the years, especially our star contributors and those who let us know the map has helped. Your feedback keeps us going!
We’ve big plans for the next ten years! We just switched to a clearer OSM basemap. Then we trimmed our name to The Toilet Map. Next, our indefatigable volunteer developer @olliethinks.bsky.social is building a blog so we can shout louder about new loos (and highlight where the map needs more love).
And what about that data? It’s available for reuse under open licence (CC-BY, like an Open Government Licence). And it’s used by bus drivers, delivery drivers, cyclists, local councils and continence charities, as well as by developers and university researchers keen to see what else it can reveal.
Piloted from RCA research (2012), version-1 was funded by Social Tech Fund. In 2016, with @odihq.bsky.social funds, we made toiletmap.org.uk/Explorer (recently prettified by a Github volunteer) to interrogate the data. We had lots of help from #opendata enthusiasts in Twitter’s happier days, too.
We’ve been able to grow despite 34% of ‘public toilets’ being closed since 2000 (Valuation Office Agency Data, via Hansard). The UK’s toilet provision is complicated and until now, unmapped. We want to make it easy to know where to go when you need to go.
Because of you! Adding, editing (and removing) toilets through our website toiletmap.org.uk. This helps everyone, particularly people who need to know there will be toilets to get to work, go to new places, enjoy the outdoors, and simply go about their daily lives.
On this #WorldToiletDay 🚽 we celebrate our tenth birthday of The Toilet Map!

Launched on 19-Nov 2014 with 9000 loos, The Great British Public Toilet Map has grown to 15000 publicly accessible toilets - any the public can use that aren’t ‘customer-only’.

But how do we keep finding loos? 🧵(1/7)
And what about that data? It’s available for reuse under open licence (CC-BY, like an Open Government Licence). And it’s used by bus drivers, delivery drivers, cyclists, local councils and continence charities, as well as by developers and university researchers keen to see what else it can reveal.
Piloted in 2012 (TACT3/ESRC), version one was funded by Social Tech Fund. In 2016, with @odihq.bsky.social money, we made toiletmap.org.uk/Explorer (recently prettified by a Github volunteer) to interrogate the data. We had lots of help from #opendata enthusiasts in Twitter’s happier days, too.