The Sunday Telegraph

Public buildings must have Ladies and Gents

Single-sex lavatories will be compulsory in setback to those campaignin­g for gender-neutral facilities

- By Christophe­r Hope CHIEF POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

PUBLIC buildings will have to have separate “ladies” and “gents” lavatories in the future in a blow for campaigner­s who want more gender-neutral facilities.

Robert Jenrick, the Communitie­s Secretary, is to amend building regulation­s and planning guidance to ensure separate “ladies” and “gents” facilities are installed in new buildings or those being developed, The Sunday Telegraph can disclose.

Buildings that already had unisex lavatories also face having to install partitions to ensure the privacy of the occupants is “fully respected”, sources said.

Mr Jenrick’s department launched a review last November to “ensure better provision of toilets for women and men”. That came after an outcry over the way that companies and authoritie­s had ripped out male and female lavatories and replaced them with genderneut­ral ones.

Evidence has shown that women face increasing difficulti­es accessing singlesex lavatories because many have been converted into “gender neutral” ones.

The Home Office installed genderneut­ral lavatories in 2018. The BBC has gender-neutral lavatories in all of its buildings, in addition to lavatories for men and women. Channel 4 installed gender-neutral facilities in 2017.

The changes apply to offices, shops and entertainm­ent venues, as well as publicly funded buildings such as hospitals. They apply to new buildings or existing buildings undergoing major refurbishm­ent when building regulation consent is required for the works.

Under the changes, the buildings will have to provide separate lavatories for women “given the particular health needs of women, and the fact that men’s urinals can serve more customers at a quicker pace”, department­al sources said. Buildings with so-called “unisex provision” will have to offer men and women entirely self-contained cubicles, with basins inside, to protect the privacy of occupants.

A source close to Mr Jenrick said: “It’s a necessity for women to have access to their own provision of toilets, but too often separate sex toilets are being removed by stealth – causing great distress. We’ve listened to the concerns raised by women and the elderly about their security, dignity and safety and are going to maintain and improve safeguards by updating regulation­s in order to ensure that there is always the necessary provision of separate toilets for everyone in the community.

“These changes will help to maintain safeguards that protect women and the proper provision of separate toilets, which has long been a regulatory requiremen­t, will be retained and improved. We recognise there needs to be a public service provision for everyone in our community, and want to help to deliver on that objective.”

Mr Jenrick’s “technical review” looked at the ratio of female lavatories needed against those for men given “the obvious need for women to always use cubicles”, according to a source.

The Government’s response will “address misconcept­ions that removing sex-specific toilets are a requiremen­t of equality legislatio­n”, an insider said.

“The proposals will also bring building rules in line with existing statutory requiremen­ts for mixed sex toilet provision in schools,” he added.

The Old Vic Theatre in central London was criticised in 2019 when it converted all of its male and female lavatories to gender-neutral toilets.

One user complained after the refurbishm­ent: “Patrons are, in theory, free to self-select from blocks labelled stallsonly and blocks containing urinals.

“The problem is obvious: women cannot use urinals.”

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