Windsor Star

Japan’s game of thrones

Ahead of Olympics, country spruces up its public loos with modern toilets

- SAKURA MURAKAMI

TOKYO On southweste­rn Japan’s Miyajima island, a short walk from one of the country’s most famous ancient temple sites, there’s a brand new attraction for tourists — a state-of-the art public toilet block nearly as big as a tennis court.

The 183-square-metre facility — created jointly by the local municipali­ty and Toto, Japan’s biggest toilet maker — is just one of hundreds that have been spruced up across the country ahead of this summer’s Olympic Games in Tokyo, removing old-school squat toilets to welcome foreign tourists.

The challenge is dwarfed by that faced by planners for Tokyo’s previous Olympics. Before the 1964 games, only 20 per cent of the city had a sewerage system, pit toilets festooned the city and trucks dubbed “honey wagons” patrolled neighbourh­oods to suck human waste into tanks for disposal elsewhere.

But the refurbishm­ent program for 2020 plugs into a public concept of advanced cleanlines­s that has become embedded in the Japanese psyche since the ’60s, Masakazu Toki, professor emeritus in cultural anthropolo­gy at Edogawa University says.

“Japan wanted to become a ‘leading country’ in the eyes of its visitors by making the country pristinely clean,” evident in a campaign to make the streets cleaner ahead of the 1964 Olympics, said Toki.

Bullet trains, a strong economy, hygiene — these were all part of the process of creating a new identity “as an advanced nation” of which cleanlines­s still remains an integral part of the national identity, he added.

This year’s Olympics are no exception.

With a government survey showing roughly 40 per cent of Japan’s public restrooms hosted squat stalls in 2016, the government started a campaign to help municipali­ties — particular­ly in popular destinatio­ns like Kyoto — fund conversion to sit-down toilets, anticipati­ng Olympics tourists will explore Japan beyond Tokyo.

Statistics from the Japan Tourism Agency show a total of 332 restrooms were refurbishe­d between fiscal 2017 and 2019.

As well as establishi­ng gold-medal hygiene, Japan’s restroom revolution has fostered a toilet culture that has evolved to embrace a popular anime character with buttocks for a head (Butt Detective) and “poop museums” offering a cute tribute to bathroom visits — as well as restrooms packed with high-tech gadgetry.

Toto has played a leading role in developing the latter.

Heated seats, lids that open and close automatica­lly, bowls that self-deodorize — these features have become standard in tens of millions of Japanese homes since Toto sold its first buttock-cleansing Washlet toilet seat at the dawn of the 1980s.

At its base in Kitakyushu in southweste­rn Japan, a museum documents Toto’s progress from squat porcelain to its latest model, a design that squirts water out at different speeds with larger droplets to maximize cleanlines­s for a princely 604,000 yen (around US$7,100). During a recent trip, 82-year-old museum visitor Tsunekazu Orii vividly recalled his first encounter with the Washlet in the early 1980s.

“I was taken aback when I first saw it, but there was so much talk about how it would clean you,” he said. “I knew it was going to be the next big thing.”

 ?? SAKURA MURAKAMI/REUTERS ?? A worker sprays glaze onto a toilet at a Toto toilet factory in Kitakyushu, Japan. New western-style toilets are being installed in public facilities all over the country to prepare for the deluge of tourists expected to visit the country for the 2020 Olympics.
SAKURA MURAKAMI/REUTERS A worker sprays glaze onto a toilet at a Toto toilet factory in Kitakyushu, Japan. New western-style toilets are being installed in public facilities all over the country to prepare for the deluge of tourists expected to visit the country for the 2020 Olympics.

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