Public toilets for accessible and inclusive cities: disability, design and maintenance from the perspective of wheelchair users
Abstract
Purpose
Design policy and regulations within our cities can significantly impact the accessibility and social participation of people with disability. Whilst public, wheelchair-accessible bathrooms are highly regulated spaces for this reason, very little is known about how wheelchair users use them or what wheelchair users think of current design standards.
Design/methodology/approach
This exploratory inquiry adopts an embodied approach to investigate the perspectives of powered and manual wheelchair users on public bathroom usage and design. The study encompasses twelve interviews, delving into how participants utilise accessible bathrooms based on mobility, disability, support levels, wheelchair types, urinary/bowel regimes and catheter use.
Findings
A thorough analysis of individual public bathroom elements (layout, toilet, handwashing and grab rails) discussed in the interviews reveals themes of safety, hygiene, planning/avoidance and privacy and dignity. Strikingly, many wheelchair users invest significant effort in planning for bathroom use or avoid public bathrooms altogether. The ongoing maintenance and regular cleaning of bathrooms, something not captured in regulatory standards, has been highlighted as something of critical importance to the ongoing accessibility and safety of public bathrooms for wheelchair users. This points to a relationship between the design and the maintenance of public bathrooms as influencers of health, well-being, community inclusion and the social participation of people with disability.
Research limitations/implications
This qualitative research is exploratory and contributes to a growing body of evidence that explores how public spaces are experienced by diverse members of our communities, including people with disability. To date, there have been very few investigations into the embodied perspectives of wheelchair users about public bathroom design.
Practical implications
The findings can potentially drive innovative and inclusive approaches to bathroom design regulations that include operational and maintenance guidance.
Social implications
The research aims to inform design regulations, standards development and practices of designers, architects, facilities managers, developers and planners, ensuring public spaces are designed to support more accessible, inclusive and socially sustainable cities.
Originality/value
Whilst wheelchair-accessible bathrooms have been designed and constructed for public use (in many countries) for many years, we know very little about how wheelchair users actually use them or what wheelchair users think of current design standards.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
We would like to express our gratitude to the many individuals and organisations that contributed to this research.
Community partners: Special thanks to Serena Ovens from the Physical Disability Council New South Wales (PDCN) and Suzie Stollznow and Diane Lucas from Spinal Cord Injuries Australia (SCIA) for their invaluable support and collaboration.
Industry advisors: We are grateful for the expertise and guidance provided by our industry advisors: Farah Madon from Vista Access Architects, Mark Relf from Accessibility Solutions (NSW) Pty Ltd and Robyn Thompson from Access Associates Sydney.
Wider research team: We would also like to acknowledge the wider research team for their significant contributions to the overall bathrooms project: Sid Newton, Kristelle DeFreitas, Adam Hannouch, Josh Harle, Andrew Hartwells, Maryam Houda, Parisa Kalali, Elaheh Samandi and Susan Wood.
Funding: This work was supported by UTS Special Initiatives Grants (2712018 and 2748012). The funding source was not involved in the conduct of the research and/or preparation of the article.
Citation
Carnemolla, P., Mackinnon, K., Darcy, S. and Almond, B. (2024), "Public toilets for accessible and inclusive cities: disability, design and maintenance from the perspective of wheelchair users", Smart and Sustainable Built Environment, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/SASBE-01-2024-0035
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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