• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

Throned - Rethinking public toilets

Registration Deadline:  Monday, Oct 4, 20218:30 PMIST

Submission Deadline:  Tuesday, Oct 5, 20218:30 PMIST

PREMISE

We all love to attend carnivals and other events in outdoor open areas, go camping, or so on, but the one comfort that we miss from back home is our toilet privileges! The invention of toilets came about as people required a safe and hygienic space to defecate, instead of doing it in the open. In 1596, the first flush toilet was invented and has been in widespread usage even today. 

Since the early ages, toilets have taken different forms from being a simple hole in the ground to chambers and now, to automated ones. While toilets fulfill a basic need, there is scope for design and variation that can be brought about in the space they are placed in, to create 

Toilets and washrooms in residences receive special treatment, wherein this small space is equipped with many additional services, almost making the facility a luxury for its users. But when it comes to toilets in the public realm, efforts made to provide comfortable and efficient solutions have been lacking. 

CONCEPT

Public toilets were invented in ancient Rome as just a cluster of holes, with seats lined against a wall, where men sat and talked. These spaces were feared since they were prone to fires and rodents. Fast forward to the 1850s, during the great exhibition shows, where the concept of flush toilets was introduced and they became a commercial commodity, in the following year.

Today we have better versions of these public toilets, both single and multiple capacity. The single occupancy, portable toilets are used in large numbers, during outdoor events, in remote tourist spots, or in slum areas, where access to hygienic, city public toilets may be limited. 

Portable toilets can accommodate one person anthropometrically and are self-contained. They are functional, but their design scale is restricted due to mobility constraints, which may make the occupant feel claustrophobic and uncomfortable.

How can the design of public toilets be improved?

BRIEF

Public toilets are often viewed as functional entities that are not particularly appealing or hygienic. This image of the public toilet can be changed by improving its efficiency and comfort.  

Brief: Propose a new design for a portable toilet for 5 simultaneous occupancy stalls that can be used by any type of user, with ease. Anticipation of additional needs of certain occupants must be done. Resources on site like daylight and passive ventilation techniques can be used to enhance the quality of the design of the stall. The maintenance and upkeep are also important facet participant should look at. 

The aim of the design is to understand how the design of even the most functional unit of space can be enhanced with thoughtful inputs. The portability or mobility of this toilet stall is the most important factor. The effort needed in transportation and its technical details is to be included in the proposal.

OBJECTIVES

Access: The toilet stall must be accessible to disabled people with a barrier-free design. 

Modular: The designed stall must be easy to fabricate, and can be manufactured in large numbers. 

Services: It must be equipped with services for self-containment. Additional equipment can be installed by justifying its need. 

Sustainability:  Energy-efficient and eco-friendly choices must be made, using natural resources.

Image: the lighting and material choice can be used to change the look to be more inviting.

SCALE

The module size of a single stall is restricted to 1.3m x 1.3m x 2.4m. Participants can use this module size and replicate it multiple times for various conditions and scenarios. The submission looks at creating a set of 5 stalls and related elements like a basin, circulation, mirror, etc. within the collective unit comprising several modules in the given size above.

Prizes / Deadlines / Registration 

For complete information on active prizes and details on the entry fee, visit the Awards & Fees section of the competition here:- Awards&Fees; . 

Learn more about this competition here: https://uni.xyz/competitions/t... 

Follow us on - Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/unide... 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/uni.... 

Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/compa... 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/uniQxyz

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Throned - Rethinking public toilets

Register: Mon, Oct 4, 2021

Submit: Tue, Oct 5, 2021

2026 Modernism in America Awards

Register/Submit: Thu, Jun 11, 2026

Douglas Haskell Award for Student Journals

Register/Submit: Fri, Jun 12, 2026

Genius Loci Festival Competition Open Call 2026: Democracy & Society

Register/Submit: Sun, Jun 14, 2026

The House of Oil

Register: Mon, Jun 15, 2026

Submit: Wed, Jul 1, 2026

Open Call: Golden Pin Design Award 2026

Register/Submit: Mon, Jun 15, 2026

OPEN CALL: Reconstruct missile-damaged Pavlov City house in Kharkiv

Register/Submit: Mon, Jun 15, 2026

Designing with Lower-Impact Materials? Submit Your Project to revalu

Register/Submit: Mon, Jun 15, 2026

Dutch Design Week 2026: Call for Entries

Register/Submit: Tue, Jun 16, 2026

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Kinderspace: Architecture for Children's Development competition / Edition #4

Register: Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit: Mon, Nov 30, 2026

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8

Register: Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit: Mon, Jul 20, 2026

Envision Resilience National Design Studio Grant

Register/Submit: Fri, Jun 19, 2026

Mass Timber Innovation and Design Center of Canada - Call for Entries

Register/Submit: Sun, Jun 21, 2026

Open Access: Exploring 130 Years of American Design

Register/Submit: Sun, Jun 28, 2026

2026 Taipei Design Award

Register/Submit: Tue, Jun 30, 2026

SMALL PROJECT BIG IMPACT

Register/Submit: Tue, Jun 30, 2026

Next page » Loading

Throned - Rethinking public toilets

Registration Deadline:  Monday, Oct 4, 20218:30 PMIST

Submission Deadline:  Tuesday, Oct 5, 20218:30 PMIST

Share

Related

#low cost design ● #infrastructuredesign ● #internationalcompetition ● unidesigntogether ● toilet

PREMISE

We all love to attend carnivals and other events in outdoor open areas, go camping, or so on, but the one comfort that we miss from back home is our toilet privileges! The invention of toilets came about as people required a safe and hygienic space to defecate, instead of doing it in the open. In 1596, the first flush toilet was invented and has been in widespread usage even today. 

Since the early ages, toilets have taken different forms from being a simple hole in the ground to chambers and now, to automated ones. While toilets fulfill a basic need, there is scope for design and variation that can be brought about in the space they are placed in, to create 

Toilets and washrooms in residences receive special treatment, wherein this small space is equipped with many additional services, almost making the facility a luxury for its users. But when it comes to toilets in the public realm, efforts made to provide comfortable and efficient solutions have been lacking. 

CONCEPT

Public toilets were invented in ancient Rome as just a cluster of holes, with seats lined against a wall, where men sat and talked. These spaces were feared since they were prone to fires and rodents. Fast forward to the 1850s, during the great exhibition shows, where the concept of flush toilets was introduced and they became a commercial commodity, in the following year.

Today we have better versions of these public toilets, both single and multiple capacity. The single occupancy, portable toilets are used in large numbers, during outdoor events, in remote tourist spots, or in slum areas, where access to hygienic, city public toilets may be limited. 

Portable toilets can accommodate one person anthropometrically and are self-contained. They are functional, but their design scale is restricted due to mobility constraints, which may make the occupant feel claustrophobic and uncomfortable.

How can the design of public toilets be improved?

BRIEF

Public toilets are often viewed as functional entities that are not particularly appealing or hygienic. This image of the public toilet can be changed by improving its efficiency and comfort.  

Brief: Propose a new design for a portable toilet for 5 simultaneous occupancy stalls that can be used by any type of user, with ease. Anticipation of additional needs of certain occupants must be done. Resources on site like daylight and passive ventilation techniques can be used to enhance the quality of the design of the stall. The maintenance and upkeep are also important facet participant should look at. 

The aim of the design is to understand how the design of even the most functional unit of space can be enhanced with thoughtful inputs. The portability or mobility of this toilet stall is the most important factor. The effort needed in transportation and its technical details is to be included in the proposal.

OBJECTIVES

Access: The toilet stall must be accessible to disabled people with a barrier-free design. 

Modular: The designed stall must be easy to fabricate, and can be manufactured in large numbers. 

Services: It must be equipped with services for self-containment. Additional equipment can be installed by justifying its need. 

Sustainability:  Energy-efficient and eco-friendly choices must be made, using natural resources.

Image: the lighting and material choice can be used to change the look to be more inviting.

SCALE

The module size of a single stall is restricted to 1.3m x 1.3m x 2.4m. Participants can use this module size and replicate it multiple times for various conditions and scenarios. The submission looks at creating a set of 5 stalls and related elements like a basin, circulation, mirror, etc. within the collective unit comprising several modules in the given size above.

Prizes / Deadlines / Registration 

For complete information on active prizes and details on the entry fee, visit the Awards & Fees section of the competition here:- Awards&Fees; . 

Learn more about this competition here: https://uni.xyz/competitions/t... 

Follow us on - Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/unide... 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/uni.... 

Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/compa... 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/uniQxyz

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Promoted Competitions

Kingspan MICROHOME 2026

Register by Wed, Sep 30, 2026

Submit by Mon, Nov 2, 2026

Chicago Architectural Club 2026 Burnham Prize: The Future of State

Register by Wed, Jul 15, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jul 20, 2026

2026 Fall 2x8 Exhibition and Scholarship Program

Register by Mon, Sep 14, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

Underbridge / Edition #2

Register by Thu, Jul 16, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

100,000 € Prize / Buildner's Unbuilt Award 2026

Register by Thu, Jul 9, 2026

Submit by Tue, Oct 20, 2026

Kinderspace: Architecture for Children's Development competition / Edition #4

Register by Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit by Mon, Nov 30, 2026

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8

Register by Thu, Jun 18, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jul 20, 2026

Pavilion Atlas 2026

Register by Wed, Sep 16, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 19, 2026

Valli Wine Tasting Room

Register by Thu, Jul 30, 2026

Submit by Mon, Feb 15, 2027

50,000€ Prize / Mujassam Watan Urban Sculpture Challenge #8

Register by Thu, Jul 23, 2026

Submit by Thu, Aug 27, 2026

Portugal Long Table Restaurant

Register by Wed, Jul 8, 2026

Submit by Mon, Jan 11, 2027

Re:Form - New Life for Old Spaces / Edition #3

Register by Thu, Jul 2, 2026

Submit by Mon, Oct 12, 2026

Next page » Loading