The Victorians and Edwardians made public toilet provision a matter of civic pride; British public toilets were the best in the world. Local authorities would compete to create beautiful facilities which demonstrated the latest developments in sanitary engineering and architecture.
See four of Lucinda Lampton's favourites
here (old and new) including the spectacular Wesley's chapel in London
Alas, today's public toilets are likely to be poorly maintained and poorly designed resulting in unsanitary facilities, anti-social behaviour and vandalism. The Edwardian toilets of this area and across the country such as those
once opposite Duckett's Common are either locked up, re-assigned to other jobs or have been torn down. Their replacements are rarely places I'd like to take my child or send my grandmother to use.
This has a real effect on those people’s lives who are directly affected by the lack of public toilet provision: findings from Help the Aged's 2006 report "Nowhere to Go" show that people do not readily leave their homes without the reassurance that they will have access to public toilets.
This means that 12% of older people feel trapped in their own home and about 100,000 never go out. Disabled people and their carers, those with chronic health problems, and carers with young children also lack the freedom to leave their homes without adequate toilet facilities being available.
RIBA and BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme have unveiled a range of architectural designs to revive the tradition of the great British public toilet, a project organised as part of the RIBA’s 175th anniversary celebrations
See the designs
here on the
Today website