
Breezy and exposed! That’s the secret to bathrooms no one, not even street people, wants to live in.
Many cities have had epic, expensive public toilet fails. Seattle, we’re looking at you and your $5 million self-cleaning toilets that wound up trashed.
But over at The Atlantic’s Cities site, John Metcalfe has a piece detailing why Portland’s public potties have survived the aggressions (and heavy use) of the citizens. Here are Portland’s tips for defecation success.
1. Make it open to the elements: we’re talking bathroom stall, sans the bathroom. People walking by on the sidewalk should be able to see the peer’s feet and hear every little splish, splash, and sploosh in that potty. A comfortable, enclosed public bathroom is a bum’s living room, but an open-air crapper is just an open-air crapper.
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In our increasingly digital world, the old school theme parks are rushing to catch up to computerized games—including by giving visitors the power to create their own rides. This week, Disney’s Epcot Center opened the virtual ride “Sum of All Thrills,” which will not only let kids pick the theme of their ride, but will let them design the nuts and bolts too.
CNN reports:
Kids design their experience on touch-screen computers, using a digital ruler and pre-selected track options to construct their rides. If a person tries to build something physically impossible — a hill that’s too steep for the cars to climb, for example — then they’re asked to retool their ideas.
Hopefully their design doesn’t get too crazy, because then they’ll have to ride it out in a simulator. In total, the ride lasts about a minute.
If roller coasters aren’t a child’s favorite, he or she can build a plane ride or bobsled track. By participating in the design, the child can learn how much energy a jet needs to fly, or what speed a roller coaster must travel to make it through an upside-down loop.
Disney’s other parks have already toyed with interactive rides. For instance, CyberSpace Mountain allows people to select loops and drops from a menu to build their own virtual thrill. Universal Studios, meanwhile, has Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit, a roller coaster in which you pick the playlist and become your own DJ throughout the ride.
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Image: Raytheon