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Advertising supplement provided by
Provided by Hadrian
By Virginia A. Greene, AIA
Privacy, Health, and Safety
Public rest rooms should be clean, safe environments. Designing
private bathroom spaces with partitioned toilets requires
attention to privacy, security, health, and sanitary conditions.
Public and private areas may be clearly defined by the location
of toilet partitioning systems. Aligning the toilet and sink
areas opposite one another using toilet partitions as space
dividers separates public and private zones. Successful public
spaces prioritize user comfort, ease of movement through the
space, cleanliness, and the brevity of time required to use
the facility.
Theater design is a case in point. In the movie theater
and exhibition industry, the ability to move people is very
similar to the approach applied at Disney properties. Movie
show times are staggered to control and mitigate ingress and
egress of hundreds of moviegoers, or patrons. Convenient location,
disbursement of facilities throughout the theater complex,
and the number of rest room facilities for men and women follow
the same theory, said James T. Martino, AIA, principal
of James Thomas Martino Architect, P.C., in Port Washington,
New York.
The use of toilet partitions to sub-divide a bathroom facility
can affect air circulation. If not properly planned, poor
air circulation in a bathroom space with toilet partitions
can cause moisture pockets and air circulation barriers. The
building design must provide appropriate mechanical systems,
which require careful review and coordination of architectural,
mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems to ensure proper
ventilation.

Theater Lobby,
Annapolis, Maryland
Architect: James Thomas Martin, Architect,
P.C. |
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The architect reviews toilet partition shop drawings from
the manufacturer and coordinates the design with mechanical
systems for air and moisture control in wet zones. Architects
should review the location of fresh air and return air ducts
in conditioned bathroom facilities, as these systems may impact
the location of toilet partitions, panel heights, quantities
of toilet partitions, frequency of use, and proximity to heating,
ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems. When these
design factors are well orchestrated, bathroom areas in public
facilities provide comfort and optimal airflow.
Public rest rooms should be safe spaces. When planning high-traffic
public areas, architects must consider the possibility that
individuals may try to damage, destroy, or vandalize the finishes,
furnishings, and equipment in a space. Toilet partition design
must address minimizing damage from vandalism, theft, and
defacement.
These factors impact the design for secure closing mechanisms,
variable partition heights, finish surfaces, and panel spacing.
Various surfaces may be specified to provide durability, such
as a washable, stain-resistant, painted-on finish for metal
panels that addresses ease of maintenance due to vandalism.
Continuous hinge-side fillers enhance privacy by visually
sealing the gap between the compartment door and the vertical
support, or stanchion. A full height continuous stop and keeper
eliminates the sight gap on the stop side of the door, and
protects against vandalism because doors cannot be racked,
or bent, by pulling on the top corner of the door, as can
occur with a single-point stop and keeper.
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