We can probably all think of a time we’ve desperately searched for the closest loos – a situation made all the more challenging by the ongoing
. But on top of the lack of funding for toilets, a one-size-fits-all model of toilet provision means that, for some disabled, trans and chronically ill people, trips out of the house remain a fantasy, or a constant source of anxiety.
During our
about what makes a safe and accessible toilet space, we have been told about plans aborted and trips ruined because suitable toilet facilities weren’t available. The
explores how a lack of access to toilets that are functional, easy to locate and safe restricts the journeys people are able to make – limiting access to the wider world.
One participant, Nicky, who needs urgent toilet access due to a bowel condition, said that she is scared about leaving the house in case she gets somewhere and there isn’t a toilet. Similarly, for Gill, who has irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), government initiatives encouraging people to get out of the house and do more exercise feel useless without suitable toilet access:
'The government bangs on about exercise [but] going to the park for people like me is a no go, however beautiful it is and however good it is to exercise. If there are no toilets, forget it.'
Toilets on the go
Our research also shows that travelling on public transport was particularly difficult for some people – as Nicky explains:
I used to avoid going on buses because there aren’t any toilets. The very fact that you’re on something that doesn’t have a toilet can be quite stressful. Same with trams. Trains do have toilets but they’re not very good.
We found that train toilets can cause particular problems. For
, for others – including some trans people we spoke to – the conspicuous positioning of toilets and the unpredictable timing of the sliding door rendered the toilets unusable. One trans woman described how she felt unable to walk along the carriage to the toilets “because they’re quite exposed – and you [can] hear people laughing outside and [I’m wondering], are they laughing at me?”
Public transport wasn’t the only problem for trans and non-binary people – many shared with us stories of transphobic hostility and violence in toilets. One trans woman explained that when she felt toilets would be unsafe, she was unable to leave the security of her house, because the toilet “extends to everywhere”. She described how toilets where her identity wasn’t questioned allowed her to take necessary, everyday journeys away from home.