Thing is, he picked a very (by NYC MTA standards) clean station. Try the Q station at Canal St. Incredible smell in that one, along with all sorts of seepage, rats and other mysterious formations.
Seoul has the sense to have hundreds of public restrooms. Does NOT smell like pee.
Central Park fixed up a pair of bathrooms near Bethesda Fountain. A couple weeks after they re-opened, the men's room was closed. Someone took a dump on the floor and smeared it all over the walls. There are a lot of things NYC needs to fix in order to even think about public bathrooms.
Or as a friend said when told NYC needs public bathrooms, "What, you don't like sidewalks? That's pretty public if you ask me."
I guess Seoul had the sense to be full of Koreans, too.
There are plenty of Koreans here, but NYC also has a porous mental health care infrastructure and it does no one any great service, not least of which in the inability to provide and maintain good public restrooms.
Not excusing almost total mismanagement by the state government and the MTA, but NYC does have the only 24 hour subway system in the world. And it is one of the largest. Most subway systems shut down for at least 6 hours every day, and that creates an opportunity for maintenance and cleaning that doesn't exist for NYC. But still....
San Francisco poop map:
(Human) Wasteland
-g
EPOst hoc ergo propter hoc
When I first moved to Boston and took the T, there was a guy who stared at the tracks while waiting for the train, every morning. After a few weeks of watching him, I asked what was doing. He told me if you stared at the grey gravel rocks between the rails, you could see the rats...
So I did, and he was right. Rats or big mice, they were the same color as the gravel, perfect camouflage. If you looked long enough, you could see them move. I bet its the same in every big city.
I was just hoping for not experiencing human feces in the street.“It wasn’t a bad experience,” Mr. Biederman said. “It just wasn’t a great experience, and we wanted it to be great.”
I didn't realize that NYC had tried the automated toilets. I guess that like Seoul, Paris has the advantage of being filled with Parisians.
This trial run was done by a public-private partnership I believe and wasn't profitable, but there was no destruction of the units. People were just afraid of getting stuck in one. Or robbed. They wanted attendants. Made them feel safer.
Paris has plenty of public urination. I have with my own eyes seen men peeing on the Eglise Sainte Medard when there is a nearby public restroom. Come to the park, eat your lunch, pee on the church, go back to work.
But for NYC, until the city devotes the financial resources to subsidizing public restrooms and removes the requirement for them to break-even in order to qualify as valuable enough (there are a lot of things that are valuable as part of the fabric holding together communities that are not best measured by double-entry bookkeeping) to continue providing and maintaining, there won't be public restrooms.
Last edited by j44ke; 03-10-2019 at 12:44 PM.
Restrooms should be "sacred ground" - like a church in "Highlander".
No crime, no funny stuff, just a place for humans to do what's needed, and feel safe about it. Hmmm, maybe if anything illegal happens within 100 feet of a public restroom, penalties are multiplied by 1000x.
Where's my congressman, I need to draft a letter.
Oh man, the bathrooms are exactly what you thought they were: Subway Bathrooms: Are They as Bad as You Think? - The New York Times
I like the antique wet paint signs. Classic.
These actually look pretty good. I wouldn't spend any extra time there, but I think the purpose of these restrooms is to make you not want to use them, which is probably better/easier than trying to clean them.
You should see the elevators. Whatever you do, do not get in a subway elevator unless you absolutely need to.
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