Toilets In Motion — Bus ToiletsGreeceKTEL, the national bus company in Greece, has some buses with on-board toilets. Most of the on-board bus toilets I have seen are at the right rear, replacing maybe two rows of seats. The Greek ones, however, are down in the center stairwell. They look like they would be awfully small. I don't know, and I can't put the blue Sani-Flush border around this picture, because they seem to routinely be locked shut. Yes, they have toilets. But you can't use them. TurkeyIf you're moving about Turkey, it's probably by bus. Which means you'll eventually need to find the tuvalet when you're at an otogar. An actual Turkish otogarlu tuvalet can get pretty disgusting, even by Internet standards. So here is just the indication of one. See the sign? United KingdomNational Express buses in the U.K. also have on-board toilets. This is from an overnight bus from Edinburgh to London (about 7 hours). They are not as nasty as Greyhound on-board toilets. A flap seals off the holding tank.
Also notice the sign — Citylink buses connect cities and towns within Scotland. As bus toilets go, these are the nicest that I have encountered. They are constructed about like aircraft toilets, and they are very clean. Below is a picture of a Citylink bus passing through Pitlochry, Scotland on the route from Edinburgh to Inverness. United StatesYes, Greyhound buses in the U.S. have on-board toilets. They have a holding tank with the traditional blue juice. I was surprised to see that the design is just a straight drop down a wide shaft into the tank. I would think that the toilet could get awfully smelly on a long hot trip. There is a small air vent directly to the exterior just to the right of your head if you were sitting on the seat. The toilet compartment occupies the right half of what would be a full-width rear bench seat and what would be the pair of seats just in front of that on the right side of the aisle. Note to self — do not sit in the back two rows of a Greyhound bus, where the door to the toilet is directly across the aisle. The above is from a Greyhound bus between Lafayette, Indiana and Chicago. Megabus, one of Greyhound's competitors, connects major cities with luxury buses that you can board without venturing into the always dicey Greyhound terminal. Really, Greyhound's market seems partially based on brand loyalty based on fond memories of rides home from prison. Anyway, the buses are quite nice, and they include an on-board lavatory. But as you see here, they're very similar to the Greyhound ones. There are only so many things you can do with the design of a long-haul bus toilet. This example is from a bus from Washington DC to New York. Rose George's The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why It Matters is a fascinating description of sanitation conditions around the world. "2.6 billion people don't have sanitation. [....] Four in ten people have no access to any latrine, toilet, bucket, or box." In September 2009, Morna Gregory and Sian James published a book titled Toilets of the World. It's pretty much the same theme that you find here — photographs and commentary on other people's plumbing.
How long have my Toilets of the World pages been around? I'm not exactly sure, although they started in the mid 1990s as a single page on a Purdue University server. The Internet Archive Wayback Machine lets you see what that looked like as far back as January 17, 1999. My cromwell-intl.com domain appeared in September, 2001, although the Wayback Machine didn't notice its one enormous Toilet of the World page until January 17, 2002. Some time soon after that I split it into categories, and the collection has grown ever since. If you're not bored yet, you might be interested in (or at least tolerate): |
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