Dezeen’s top ten: toilets

Dezeen's top ten: toilets

Since our story on the P-Tree urinal that straps to a tree (above, bottom left) was so popular, this month’s top ten is all about toilets.

1: readers couldn’t handle the glass walls separating kitchen and toilet in Suppose Design Office’s house in Nagoya, which comes in first.

2: second most popular is the Tokinokura Lavatories Shimodate by Shuichiro Yoshida Architects, a narrow toilet block built between two historic buildings.

3: this sustainable wash basin-toilet combination by Milanese designers Gabriele and Oscar Buratti comes in at number three.

4: our fourth most popular toilet story is Future Studio’s series of 17 colourful public restrooms scattered throughout Hiroshima Park.

5: number five is this biodegradable Peepoo bag by Anders Wilhelmson.

6: our latest toilet story on the P-Tree urinals by Dutch designers Aandeboom is at number six.

7: a pointy public toilet by Plastik Architects in Kent, England, is our seventh most popular story.

8: at number eight, we have Royal Flush by Chris Briffa Architects, a public toilet in the former red-light district of Valletta, Malta.

9: this pipe-shaped toilet, dubbed Mrs. Hudson by Ukranian architects 2-B-2, is our ninth most popular story on toilets.

10: finally, a toilet by Italian designer Stefano Giovannoni that includes a heated seat, air dryer and remote control comes in tenth.

See all  Dezeen’s top ten stories»

We’ll be back with another top ten next month. Meanwhile you can watch this movie of the P-Tree urinals in use at a festival on Dezeen Screen.


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