Millennium Post

Unisex toilets may reduce LONG QUEUES FOR LADIES

As sharing the toilet capacity across sexes is more efficient, the average waiting time decreases, says scientists suggesting more use of unisex toilets in public spaces

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Scientists have found why queues at restrooms are longer for ladies than for men and suggest that unisex toilets could help reduce waiting times for ladies from over six minutes to less than a minute and a half.

Already a symbol for transgende­r equality, unisex toilets can help battling female-unfriendly toilet culture, researcher­s said.

Queueing theorists from the Ghent University in Belgium found that there are three main causes for the difference in waiting time between men and women.

A first factor is that the net number of toilets for women is smaller than that for men.

This is because the total surface area is often divided equally while a toilet cabin inevitably takes up more space than a urinal.

Overall, an average toilet area can accommodat­e 20 to 30 per cent more toilets for men including urinals and cabins - than for women.

A second reason is that according to scientific studies women spend one and a half up to two times as long on the toilet.

This is because in contrast to a urinal, a door must be opened and closed twice, a toilet seat needs cleaning, and more difficult clothes have to be taken off and on.

This results in an average time spent at the toilet of 1 minute for men and 1 minute and 30 seconds for women.

A third factor is the overall activity at the restroom, researcher­s said.

As long as it is not too busy, the overall effect of ladies having a smaller number of toilets and spending more time on those toilets does not lead to long queues.

However when if everybody heads to the restroom at the same time, more women arrive at the toilets than the system can handle.

This condition amplifies the above effects and results in outrageous waiting times for women.

Based on these three major causes, six different but comparable layouts were simulated using a scenario of alternatin­g busy and calm periods. A layout with comparable waiting times for men and women is possible, yet requires that for each male toilet at least one and a half and up to two female toilets are present.

The holy grail, however, is to use unisex toilets, researcher­s said.

In these mixed toilets layouts, the toilet cabins are available for both sexes and optionally complement­ed with extra urinals for the men.

As sharing the toilet capacity across sexes is more efficient, the average waiting time decreases.

The available toilet surface can be used most efficientl­y when an ideally balanced layout with about two cabins per urinal is chosen.

In this layout, men are still privileged, but to a much lesser extent than in the basic situation.

The overall waiting time is reduced with 63 per cent, which cannot be achieved by any other mixed layout, and definitely not by a separated layout.

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