Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Open-Air Urinals Are Sparking Outrage All Across Paris

Open-Air Urinals Are Sparking Outrage All Across Paris
(GettyImages)

Eco-friendly urinals have begun popping up on the streets of Paris that have locals making a big stink about it.

Design studio Faltazi designed the controversial Uritrottoir, which is a French mashup for the words: urinal and pavement.

But the garish red boxes doubling as planters are inciting protests from residents and nearby businesses in Central Paris.


Dezeen wrote about the four toilet boxes that have sprung up in an area of the metropolitan city notorious for public urination. The uritrttoir was the city's solution.


One of the pee boxes.(CNN/YouTube)

Faltazi erected one of their open-air urinals in Nantes, where the company is based. But it wasn't until the urinals made their appearance in a popular part of France, most notably, along the Seine's thoroughfare, Ile Saint-Louis, which is the neighboring island to Ile de la Cite on which stands the famed Notre Dame cathedral.




Complaints began trickling in at the town hall regarding the commodes' "immodest" purpose and for its close proximity to an elementary school 20 metres (65.62 feet) away.







An insufficient number of public restrooms could be a major catalyst for the pee box.





Victor Massip, one of the designers attached to the project, explained that the urinals were meant to blend into its public surroundings and made to look like planter boxes.

"In order for Uritrottoirs to be accepted by residents, we had to imagine equipment that does not look like a urinal."



The graffiti isn't helping. (CNN/YouTube)



Unfortunately, the resulting design got lost in translation and didn't get the predicted amount of public approval.

CNN interviewed a local who offered his opinion on how the city is combating public urination.

"I think installing a urinal in Paris for those who don't respect their surroundings is a good idea. But in my opinion, this model isn't attractive at all. And where it's been set up is not appropriate at all."







Another local shared her disdain for the offensive uritrottoir.

"It is definitely a desirable and historic neighborhood, but seeing people urinating right in front of your door is not the nicest thing."

A 50-year-old art gallery owner was downright enraged and told The Guardian that the urinals were "horrible."

"We're told we have to accept this but this is absolutely unacceptable. It's destroying the legacy of the island. Can't people behave?"


Peeing along the Seine River.(Aurelien Meunier/Getty Images)

So where does all the urine flow?

Near the bottom of each uritrottoir is a compartment filled with sawdust and wood chips. When the container reaches full capacity as indicated by its sensor, it is removed and taken to a composting site.

The mulched compost then returns to feed the planters above each unit. Green, but gross.

Dezeen provided figures on just how much urine stayed off the city's streets since the urinals made their prominent debut.

"The designers estimate that three urinals installed in Nantes collected 6,000 litres of urine over a period of six months, that would otherwise have ended up on the city streets."


While this may be convenient for men, what about women?






Outspoken feminist Gwendoline Coipeault of the French group Femmes Solidaires admonished the initiative of catering to gender-specific predispositions.

"They have been installed on a sexist proposition: men cannot control themselves [from the bladder point of view] and so all of society has to adapt."
"The public space must be transformed to cause them minimum discomfort. It's absurd, no one needs to urinate in the street."

As a proponent for the urinals, local mayor Ariel Weil is fine with going with the flow. But he is willing to relocate them if necessary.

"If we don't do anything, then men are just going to pee in the streets. If it is really bothering people, we will find another location."

This seems to be the general consensus.




H/T - GettyImages1, GettyImages2, YouTube, TheGuardian

More from Trending

Tim Walz; Donald Trump
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Tim Walz Perfectly Explains Why Trump Running The Country 'Like A Business' Is A Bad Idea

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz criticized President Donald Trump during an interview with MSNBC host Jen Psaki, stressing just why the people who elected Trump to run the country "like a business" were completely misguided.

Walz particularly lamented the impacts of Trump's ongoing trade war with Canada and Mexico, noting that Trump has a history of scuttling deals and "a proven track record of being an absolute failure."

Keep ReadingShow less

People Reveal Red Flags That Scream "This Couple Won't Last!"

Love is not a many-splendered thing.

Ok, maybe it is for some, but not for most.

Keep ReadingShow less
JD Vance; Cory Bowman
Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images; @corymbowman/X

Vance Roasted After His Brother Gets Walloped In Ohio Primary Following Vance's Endorsement

On Tuesday, the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, held their primary election to determine who would earn a spot on November's mayoral ballot.

The city's mayoral race is nonpartisan—no parties appear next to candidates' names on the primary or general election ballots. The top two vote getters in the primary, regardless of their party affiliation, vie for the office.

Keep ReadingShow less
Ellen DeGeneres; Ellen DeGeneres on a lawn mower in the UK
FOX via Getty Images; @ellendegeneres/Instagram

Ellen DeGeneres Just Tried To Mow The Lawn At Her Sprawling UK Estate—And It Went South Fast

Say what you may about Ellen DeGeneres, but we can all agree that she's always tried to find the funny side in a situation, even if it's something that should be as mundane as mowing the lawn.

DeGeneres left the talk show scene in 2022 after allegations ran rampant about her running a toxic workplace, so when President Donald Trump was elected for a second term, it seemed the perfect time for the entertainer and her wife, Portia de Rossi, to look for greener pastures, namely in the U.K.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Pete Buttigieg; Linda McMahon
MSNBC; Patrick T. Fallon/Getty Images

Buttigieg Epically Drags Education Secretary For Confusing A.I. With 'A1 Steak Sauce'

Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg mocked Education Secretary Linda McMahon during an MSNBC appearance after she recently went viral for confusing AI with A1, the steak sauce brand.

McMahon slipped up during her appearance at the ASU+GSV Summit last month. While discussing the state of modern education, she brought up the role of AI in today's classrooms.

Keep ReadingShow less