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Squatters days are numbered

 
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Ya-ta Boy



Joined: 16 Jan 2003
Location: Established in 1994

PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 2005 1:49 pm    Post subject: Squatters days are numbered Reply with quote

If, like me, you are not a fan of the squatter toilets, you will be heartened to know that Korean public toilets are now world-class. Exclamation This was news to me. I'm looking forward to the day they come and install a twentieth century toilet in my school. I'm not holding out for a twenty-first century one.


Korea's Toilets Rule OK
Korea is becoming a beacon to the rest of the world in an unlikely and more often hidden area -- the toilet. As China looks ahead to the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, it has dispatched officials to Korea to investigate and learn from the lavatories here, and most of the major press outlets -- China Central Television, the People's Daily and Beijing TV among them -- in a nation notorious for the state of its restrooms are urging the world��s most populous country to learn from Korea��s infrastructure for the lower functions.

On the other side of the Pacific, both the Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles Times recently waxed lyrical about the state of Korean toilets, where people do their business amid ��softly lilting violin music and beautiful pictures hanging everywhere.��

It was not always thus. Until five or six years ago, the state of Korean toilets was so bad that guide books commonly suggested tourists take care of business ahead of time at a hotel or department store to avoid being forced to use a public convenience. But progress will stop at nothing.

Opportunity came knocking with the 2002 Korea-Japan World Cup. "Korea hosted the World Cup with Japan, a country famous for its pristine cleanliness, and in comparison our restrooms were just so filthy that they could have turned into a national disgrace. It was a crisis,�� says Uri Party member Sim Jae-duck. ��So many civic organizations as well as the press stepped forward and instigated a large-scale campaign that resulted in the restrooms of today.��

Thanks to the campaign, Korea has become one of the few countries in the world to have a toilet law. The Public Restrooms Law, passed in the National Assembly last December, even prescribes that the number of toilets in women��s restrooms must be greater than all toilets and urinals in men��s restrooms. That brought human rights into the privy, and the law passed with 180 votes in favor and none against.

The ensuing competition between local governments over whose restrooms are more beautiful, too, is unique to Korea. Local authorities vied to install the most recherch� amenities, including perfume dispensers, paintings, flowerpots, bidets and heated toilet seats.

In a country where no subject is too obscure for a passionate civic group to crystallize around it, the Citizens Coalition for Restroom Culture and other groups are making sure that the country does not, as it were, rest on its laurels. Now, they are turning their attention to schools, which they claim still lag behind the rest of the world in this regard. The coalition��s director Pyo Hye-ryeong said, ��Next year, we plan to expand this movement to cover school restrooms and bring conditions to the highest level there as well.��

***

Doesn't it make you feel better, knowing there is a law about toilets, even if it isn't enforced any better than traffic laws? It's just comforting to have it on the books.
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Hater Depot



Joined: 29 Mar 2005

PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 2005 3:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The bathrooms in the highway rest stops are awesome. But pretty much everywhere else the men's rooms are rotten.
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djsmnc



Joined: 20 Jan 2003
Location: Dave's ESL Cafe

PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 2005 4:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'd venture to say that comfortable toilets with violin music are a very limited experience. I have seen them in Outback, TGI Friday's, and other western themed restaurants and cafe's. Also big money places like Avenue L at Myeongdong have some interesting bathrooms.

However, in the long run, I'd say that green walled, shit stained, "hands on" microorganism exhibits with a background soundtrack of phlegm hacking are the standard.
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billybrobby



Joined: 09 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 2005 7:34 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I was dropping the kids off at pool the other day in a coffee shop. There was a sign on the wall that said if I tried to flush the toilet paper, ū �� ���ϴ� (something bad is gonna happen). i mean, what the hell is that all about? there are only three things you flush down a toilet (for non goldfish owners), and if the toliet won't accept one of those things, you gotta say its not really doing its job. it's like having a calculator with no add button.

so, i flushed my toilet paper. but i didn't stick around for the ū ��.
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hypnotist



Joined: 04 Dec 2004
Location: I wish I were a sock

PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 2005 8:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't care about squatting, though I try to avoid it if possible (too many times making like a bear when caught short in the woods / mountains - I remember one fantastic toilet in the Dauphine Alps which was a hut on the side of a cliff - the seat was actually suspended over the cliff, and whatever you did disappeared off to act as fertiliser...)

When Korean toilets are bad they're really damn awful (particularly inside hofs - ugh) but unlike in the UK, I'm never worried when in Seoul or Suwon about getting caught short. Even the public toilets in the sticks in Jeju were ok.

I mean, in Seoul you can jump off a subway train, do your business at a toilet that's 90% likely to be clean (if not wonderful), and jump back on again. Fantastic.

And yeah, the rest stops on the motorways rock, too.
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