Urinals why




















You can follow him on Twitter scottmuska or e-mail him at srm gmail. Weight Loss. United States. Type keyword s to search. Today's Top Stories. Taraji P. Accessible Beauty Products For All. This content is imported from Instagram. The University of Louisville in Kentucky has been particularly inventive in this respect—placing the emblem of the rival University of Kentucky at the bottom of the urinal in some of their changing rooms.

As men have the tendency to aim at the little piece of wood, the splashing is reduced significantly. A recent visit to the airport revealed golf flags in some of the urinals instead. It is difficult to know for certain how much having a urinal target reduces cleaning needs. Schiphol is often cited as the source of studies done into spillage reduction, but it appears that no such studies have taken place.

While the urinal fly has proved inspirational for countless people who first noticed it when travelling through Schiphol, the idea of giving men something to aim at is far older. However, the most intriguing use of a urinal target is by the Victorians, dating back at least as far as the s.

Simon Kirby , owner and manager of Thomas Crapper, which manufactures period sanitary ware, is something of an expert on the use of toilets through the ages. Two old Victorian urinals stand outside his office door in Stratford-on-Avon , both embossed with a small bee. A Victorian urinal target dating back at least as far as the s features a bee. The Latin for bee is apis , a vulgar joke understandable to Victorian gentlemen, but almost certainly lost on 21st-century men.

Often cited as an example in lectures on user-centred design. The inventor of the etched target has even been traced: it apparently came from Jos van Bedaf , manager of the cleaning department at Schiphol airport in the Netherlands. The pleasure of watching ice dissolving under the steady flow of urine now seems to be all but extinct. Not so, says a Kenyan friend. This question is taken up by a Capetonian remember the Cape Town drought? At my Virgin Active gym in Cape Town there is a sign encouraging patrons not to flush.

Maybe the Pretoria sign is aimed at visitors from Cape Town? Woah… wait! Secondly, waterless urinals exist that employ various systems instead of an onrush of water. These generally come in the form of replaceable cartridges or trips, both of which are being courted as possible solutions to help save more water in the future. There are a few reasons I can think of.



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