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Japanese public toilet in Tokyo has windows that change color when you use it

10 Comments
By Oona McGee, SoraNews24

Public toilets in Japan have been known to impress visitors, but in Tokyo’s Shibuya Ward, you’ll find 17 restrooms that are on a whole other level. Designed by 16 creative professionals from around the world, these restrooms were created as part of a project called The Tokyo Toilet, which overhauled old restrooms and transformed them into more welcoming public spaces.

▼ One of the most stunning is a toilet known as the “Transparent Toilet“, because, well, its walls are see-through.

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This unusual restroom, which first opened to the public in 2020, is located in Yoyogi Fukamachi Kokoen, and can be easily accessed from Exit 3 of Yoyogi-koen Station.

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The previous toilets at this little park were uninviting, but now they’re so stunning that tourists from overseas even make the trip to use them.

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Designed by architect Shigeru Ban, these toilets were inspired by a skeleton, as there’s nowhere to hide. You can tell at a glance whether there are any suspicious persons hiding inside and you can easily see whether it’s clean or not.

▼ Certainly nowhere to hide here.

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It’s absolutely stunning to look at, but it actually has a few drawbacks, which our reporter Masanuki Sunakoma discovered upon using it recently. The first thing is, well, it can be embarrassing to use the toilet, seeing as it’s become so famous that tourists and passersby stop to photograph it.

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Mustering up his courage, and ignoring the photographers nearby, Masanuki opened the glass door to the toilet.

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Apparently, this glass wall maintains its transparent state with the help of energy — when you lock the door, the power is removed and the door becomes opaque. It was fascinating to see it in action, and when Masanuki took a video from outside, it proved the system really worked, as it was impossible to see inside.

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According to reports he’d heard, though, there seems to have been an issue in winter, where it took a long time for the glass to become opaque. Apparently, this was because the particles that become opaque solidify as the temperature drops.

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Thankfully for Masanuki, it was midsummer when he visited so he didn’t encounter any problems. And with another transparent toilet just a five-minute walk away, at Haruno Ogawa Community Park, this is definitely a site worth visiting.

With two of Japan’s most unique public restrooms within walking distance of each other, this part of Shibuya is the place to go when you need to pee. And that’s not all, as there’s another restroom in the area that looks more like a restaurant, and all the toilets in the Tokyo Toilet Project can be visited in a “Tokyo Toilet Tour” that’s proving to be popular with foreign tourists. And if visiting them isn’t enough, you can watch Perfect Days, an award-winning film about the toilets directed by Wim Wenders, which will make you cry…and want to pee.

Toilet Locations

Yoyogi Fukamachi Small Park Toilet / 代々木深町小公園トイレ

Address: Tokyo, Shibuya-ku, Tomigaya 1-54-1

東京都渋谷区富ケ谷1丁目54-1

Haruno Ogawa Community Park Toilet / はるのおがわコミュニティパークトイレ

Address: Tokyo, Shibuya-ku, Yoyogi 5-68-1

東京都渋谷区代々木5丁目68-1

Images © SoraNews24

Read more stories from SoraNews24.

-- Japanese public toilet in Tokyo is more like a fancy restaurant than a restroom

-- Japanese public toilet tours become popular with foreign tourists in Tokyo

-- Japanese public restroom ads donate to charities every time a stall is used

© SoraNews24

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

10 Comments
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This is ooold news. These toilets have been around since 2020 - I can see them from my porch.

5 ( +7 / -2 )

Laila

Yeah, in fact I think I recall reading about them toilets in this site yonks ago.

-1 ( +5 / -6 )

I. I don't have to go so bad, after all. I'll wait till I get home.

6 ( +6 / -0 )

Gene

Probably more privacy taking a leak in the bushes, lol

-1 ( +5 / -6 )

Not designed for use by the disabled.

7 ( +9 / -2 )

Wallace

Still behind with that in many areas over here aren’t they.

-3 ( +5 / -8 )

In other words, Japan uses a sledgehammer to crack a peanut again.

-2 ( +4 / -6 )

A couple years ago the entire park and I saw an ojichan who didn't lock the door do his business and walk out without washing his hands!

2 ( +4 / -2 )

A case of style over substance in my opinion. The building would be no less attractive if the power to the glass was cut full time. Might save a bob or two as well.

-2 ( +3 / -5 )

So the toilet is opaque sometimes ... okay, sort of interesting, but while we're at it, how about a self-cleaning floor?

1 ( +1 / -0 )

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