As a NV Wolfack fan I must Go Pack!DD just transferred to UNLV and said that the there are gender neutral bathrooms all over the place. She thought it was pretty awesome. I'll have to ask what kind of symbols they have on them. I've noticed a lot of the newer hotels and restaurants here have the closet like stalls rastahomie describes. (hey, when I type ras- rastahomie pops up in my suggestions. You're now iPad famous rastahomie!)
Ah, if only I had some kind of school spirit. I did very briefly way back when Tark was kicking butt and taking names. It was short lived though. I lack the dedication it takes to be a sports fan.As a NV Wolfack fan I must Go Pack!
Wait until men have to wait in long lines with the women once bathrooms become one fits all.
Interesting that the plain triangle that BCLA saw was at the DeYoung (Love that museum) perhaps San Francisco has taken things even further, who knows, they do tend to do that BUT signage must still comply to ADA.
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So, saw this beauty recently in Europe..... have no idea if I was in a gender neutral bathroom or not but this cracked me up!!!! LOL
MJ
So, saw this beauty recently in Europe..... have no idea if I was in a gender neutral bathroom or not but this cracked me up!!!! LOL
One positive I have noticed of non-gender specific restrooms (from working in a place with one) is they seem to stay cleaner / less smelly. Guys seems to know not to mess with a the restroom they share with women but don't seem to care when it is a men's room.
NOOOOOO!!! I used to love going to DeYoung when we lived in CA. Now I will not be going because I'm not trying to walk into a bathroom with open urinals and explain that to my very young daughter. I have no problem with a shared bathroom if all the stalls, including urinals, are private.There seem be variations on it. Often there's a triangle with some symbol on it representing a man/woman/wheelchair. This one was just a triangular shaped piece of plastic mounted on the door. Here's one photo I found of a white triangle in a blue circle:
I found an article on the New York Times on this subject. They have a photo with several signs.
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/08/style/transgender-restroom-all-gender.html
The place I went to was the de Young Museum at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. There were a lot of visitors who didn't speak much English, and I think even some who can speak conversationsl English might have difficulty understanding the text. That sign had zero symbols. Also - the urinals in the one that was previously a men's room didn't exactly have "privacy stalls". They had partitions, but they stuck out maybe 1.5 feet from the wall and didn't really block much. The one thing I noticed was flowers. Definitely not used to that. Guys usually don't care about that kind of thing.
Guess we just have different experiences.I've had to do maintenance in many public restrooms over the years. The women's restrooms were almost always WAY filthier than the men's.
NOOOOOO!!! I used to love going to DeYoung when we lived in CA. Now I will not be going because I'm not trying to walk into a bathroom with open urinals and explain that to my very young daughter. I have no problem with a shared bathroom if all the stalls, including urinals, are private.
Women can be nasty, no doubt.I've had to do maintenance in many public restrooms over the years. The women's restrooms were almost always WAY filthier than the men's.
Guess we just have different experiences.
I work in a bar, so yes. Men's room is always messier and smells. Guys is it that hard to flush the urinal?Have you spent much time in men's restrooms?
I work in a bar, so yes. Men's room is always messier and smells. Guys is it that hard to flush the urinal?
That's because guy don't wash their handsI used to work in a movie theater and had to clean up both bathrooms after the movies let out. The men's was always stinker, but the women's was always messier with paper scattered everywhere.