What happened to pay toilets?

Do pay toilets still exist anywhere…or has the civilized world finally come to their senses that Capitalism should STOP here? :smiley:

We have them in San Francisco, though they are, of course, out of service a fair amount of the time. They were installed less than ten years ago, too.

More here.

I guess, in SF, you gotta pay as you go, huh? :smiley:

Having used the pay toilets in Euston station I know the UK still has them.

We used to have the “pay-as-you-go” in a local shopping centre. It was 2p! Part of me wants them to bring it back, just for nostalgic purposes.

I just got back from Sweden, and they still have pay toilets in malls and such. Believe me, comparing them to public toilets in America, that was definitely worth the five crowns I paid to take a leak!

I had a Grave Need and ran into a local McDonald’s to use their toilets, only to be confronted with a coin slot on the door. I’m assuming people who actually purchase food there are given some sort of key or something, but I’m not certain. I haven’t seen this in other restaurants, but this one is on a street that has a fair amount of transients and homeless people around.

I saw several in Ediburgh, too, when I was there few years ago, mainly in shopping malls.

They certainly exist in Hungary.

If I went to a restaurant, paid for a meal, and went to the bathroom to find that I had to pay for it I’d be sorely tempted to use the sink isntead. In the United States I thought there were building codes stipulating that certain businesses had to have bathrooms for the public.

Marc

Those same models can be found in Palo Alto, a affluent suburb closer to San Jose, but it’s 50¢ instead of 25¢. The stairwells to the parking garages still stink.

San Jose put some in recently, too, but I think it’s just a quarter here.

But the sink is also on the other side of the locked door, next to the toilet.

Generally, restaurants are under some requirement from the local health codes to provide restroom facilities for their customers. Not the public at large. Health codes (as well as building codes) vary from county to county.

Usually, it’s the fast-food places in “iffy” areas that lock the restrooms - otherwise they become havens for drug users and homeless. If you’re a customer there, all you need to do is ask at the counter for a token or the key.

There’s a Krystal’s on Bourbon St in New Orleans, just off of Canal. The bathroom doors unlock with tokens that you get from the cashiers. Given the location, it makes a hell of a lot of sense.

All the pay toilets I remember growing up seem to have moved to Mexico. And unlike ignis_glaciesque’s experience in Sweden, the majority that I’ve used aren’t worth the pesos they cost.