May 1, 2007

When You Gotta Go, Get Out Of Town

flickr_davebushe_Reflecting.jpgThis morning DCist Ryan found a story in the New York Times about the lack of public restrooms in Gotham City. DCist Michael said he'd recently observed a tourist relieving himself in Washington Circle, and theorized that this might also be a problem in our nation's capital.

I then asked if I could come forward and tell a story I had never told anyone. Way back in the twentieth century, as a high school kid growing up in the Virginia suburbs, I rode down with my friends to walk around the Mall and see the monuments all lit up at night, like they are in all the postcards.

On the way downtown, someone cracked open a twelve-pack of cokes, and I gratefully chugged first one and then another, and even a third. When we got downtown, I was thrilled by the sights, and everything looked better with my caffeine buzz, but I really just wanted to find a bathroom. With a trusted friend in a similar predicament, I wandered off to find the nearest one.

We tried the doors at the museums and memorials. We tried doors at government buildings and restaurants. Everything was closed. There was no comfort facility anywhere. After a half hour of knocking and running, which is hard with crossed legs, we decided to use--and I'd like to point out here that we acted in no connection with DCist, which did not even exist at the time--the closest facsimile of appropriate and familiar conditions we could find: the Reflecting Pool.

Photograph of empty Reflecting Pool before tourist season by Flickr user davebushe.

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The bank of the Pool was suitably dark and sheltered from the quiet night streets by thoughtful privacy hedges. The ducks swimming peacefully by gave an added sense of comfort and luxury. We were only disappointed by the lack of modern hand washing facilities. We overcame this by tearing some grass off the Mall and rubbing it between our hands. This would have felt even more sanitary if we could have been sure that a stranger in a similar situation hadn't recently assigned opposite meanings to the same two spaces.

In later years of wandering D.C. at night, I became adept at walking calmly into hotel lobbies to use restrooms. Nothing beats the Four Seasons, but every place has its charms. However, the city is always full of tourists and other transient persons. The thought of what everyone does to that mall is enough to make one hesitate to march there, let alone lay down on the grass for a free concert.

The Times lists Sydney, Australia as the nearest place where public bathrooms are available, modern and clearly marked. We would like to point out that here, in America, there is a city that puts even Australia to shame. Los Angeles has free public restrooms and even free public showers on its free public beaches.

Clearly everyone in Los Angeles is high. The water, alone, must cost the city hundreds of dollars per day. That's like each resident paying up to a dollar a year out of their taxes just to avoid catching hepatitis from a tourist who stinks of urine. Obviously it's better to be surrounded by a small stream of human waste than a giant river of government waste like that.

Worse yet, with the water fountains attached to these facilities, LA is only encouraging more joggers and bikers to leave their gyms and exercise in their city streets. D.C. already has enough trouble with these dangerous hazards to pedestrian traffic, thank you. That's why we limit our bikers to those strong enough to carry their water, so to speak.

Of course, D.C. also has built hundreds of public restrooms at costs of untold millions of dollars, and we plan to some day build even more. We just have higher standards for where we will put such an important facility. It has to be in the stadium of a losing team.

Sadly, even stadiums can't help the average bar crawler. After last call, those who have broken the seal are always going to be challenged by those long metro waits, and the stadiums tend to close before the bars. This means that the last train to the suburbs is full of knees tightly pressed together, fists clenched on laps and chins tucked in determination. We've even seen one tipsy young lady hold onto the handrail, hitch up her skirt, laugh wryly and let fly right in the middle of the car.

Here we'd like to take an editorial position in favor of keeping those absorbent yellow carpets on the floors of our trains. We'd also like to take a stand against adding any more public restrooms to the Metro system and against marking the few that exist on Metro maps. We especially hope that Metro won't start running trains later, which would allow pretty drunk girls to ride to a restroom, find relief, and still be sure they could ride safely home. A show that hot deserves an encore.

Photograph of full Reflecting Pool, late in tourist season by Flickr user Angel's Lens.


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Comments (22)

Why did you publish this?
This is awful.

 

Amen.

And did you really think we all wanted to know that you're turned on by drunken public urination?

 

Up until the mid 1950s, most public parks in downtown DC had public restrooms. I think the only one left is in Lafayette Park across from the White House. Anyway, I read in the classic potboiler DC Confidential that Congress closed them all down as "dens of vice" based on unsubstantiated reports that gays were using them for anonymous sex. The fact that they didn't do squat about the dozens of openly-operating straight brothels in DC speaks volumes.

 

I think that Lafayette Park one is closed now, too.

 

Don't believe anything Metro flacks tell you about available bathrooms. It's just a lie. I've a couple of little kids and have repeatedly been told by Metro guards that the bathrooms are out of service. One -- at metro center -- actually directed me to the local McDonalds.

 

This can be a serious problem for people with various forms of IBD (which requires facilities for, erm, #2). Hotel lobbies are usually a good bet, offering well kept facilities that are open most, if not all, night. However, it can still be an uphill battle.

 

If you're in the Washington Circle area and need to use the restroom, there's always the GW Hospital Emergency room lobby. Just walk inside and go down the hall to your left. Not that I've had to do that or anything.

 

you ever want to just take a nap in the middle in the city?

Idea: public beds!

Deliciously sanitary.

 

Nate:

Do you believe everything you read on the internets? Time to get your sarcasm meter checked, buddy. Try not to take everything so literally, you'll find you may actually enjoy life a little more.

I thought the bit about the urination fetish was fucking hilarious.

I love how people treat things they read here like it is (or should be) the New York Fucking Times. Lighten up, folks.

 

Damn son, ever heard of a tree? There's a whole grove of them along Constitution.

 

This is a great article as I can relate. Once, after I drank too many *ahem* cokes... I had to pee so badly, and was too far away from my house, so I popped a squat over some wood chips in a tree planter, behind a concrete, security barrier right next to Cannon House. Keep in mind, I am usually a very clean, polite, female professional. I still can't believe, two years later, that I had resorted to nature peeing right on the Hill. I still feel a little guilty inside... and a little un-patriotic.

 

The Lincoln Memorial and the FDR Memorial both have bathrooms. The Lincoln Memorial bathroom has been accessible pretty late at night on a few long walks I've taken.

 

Why don't we just cut to the chase and say what many are thinking? We don't have clean and decent public restrooms because we've fostered a never-ending population of people that live on the street.

You can't have both - an actively and endlessly supported homeless population and clean and accessible public restrooms.

 

It's not only Sydney that has the abundance of available, modern and clearly marked public restrooms. Each and every public toilet in Australia is collected on a map compiled by the Australia Government Department of Health and Ageing. OK - so not all of the public toilets are modern, but c'mon a national map of toilets?! That's wonderful!

www . toiletmap . gov . au/

 

There is also a public restroom on the side of the reflecting pool close to the World War Memorial.

 

Excellent posting on a normal human need, one of many our society chooses to ignore.

Why can't those "Ask Sams" and other uniformed BID employees act as "Monsieurs et Madames PiPi" in some new public restrooms? That would save wear-and-tear on the plumbing of both business restrooms and their legitimate customers.

 

This is a topic that neither the public nor the private sector has addressed very well.

This reminds me of a NYC trip where my 2 companions and I basically spent most of your day in the city looking for the next place to go to the bathroom.

I pray I never get caught in one of those 1 or 2 hour Beltway or I-95 shutdowns. Had some close calls due to Metro delays...

 

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If you've visited Venice,Italy, you'll clearly remember that ALL the public washrooms cost €1 per visit. If you can find them.

for some reason this doesn't keep tourists away either.

 

Metro did a test run a few years back using a European-made self-contained bathroom. Walk in, do your business, wash your hands, exit, and the unit closes up and washes itself. I believe the test was ended abruptly because the unit wasn't ADA compliant (some wheelchairs didn't fit in). Then 9/11 happened and they were convinced that this was the next big al Quaeda target. Since then not a pee(p) from Metro.

I saw a bit online about an vertical unisex urinal they're using in Vienna. Kinda cylinder shaped and after dark, it descends into the ground where its cleaned.

 

1. leave the suburbs.
2. move to the city.

damn virginians.

 

adubyailkinson, thanks for the encouragement. If you're offering space, e-mail me.

Thanks to everybody for your comments, and your support of my sick, wierd drunken-public-urination fetish.

You guys are the best!

Hillman, I'm not sure one can say that one endlessly supports the homeless population when one refuses to provide them with basic human necessities like sanitation. I've actually heard of law enforcement officials arbitrarily depriving homeless people of their property, so I guess I'm missing the endless support. Unless you mean that there's endless political support for the idea of keeping people homeless. I guess I see plenty of that.

Personally, I'd rather share public bathrooms and showers with homless people than do without public bathrooms and showers, and share germs with people who would rather keep themselves clean.

 

Oh, yay, an opportunity to share my "Peeing at the Pentagon" story.

When I was 9, my mother and I accompanied my stepfather on a business trip to DC. One evening, after dinner in Georgetown, where I consumed a large quantity of Coke, we did a little sightseeing. I nearly soiled myself in the Washington monument elevator (I don't know if this was due to a lack of facilities or my mother's overwhelming public bathroom anxiety) and was turning yellow by the time we climbed into the car to head back to our Arlington hotel. My stepfather was well known for his poor sense of direction, and he took a wrong exit in VA. By then, I was howling with discomfort. The only option, evidently, was to pull into the parking lot of the Pentagon. I think wistfully about how easy that was to do in that pre-9/11 world. I jumped out of the car and squatted on a patch of grass, seeing the security guards approaching out of the corner of my eye. I leaped back into the car, and we squealed out of the parking lot in our 1982 Toyota Tercel. My mother teases me about that to this day.

 
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