Transparent Public Toilets Unveiled In Tokyo Parks — But They Also Offer Privacy



A woman enters a public restroom with transparent walls in Tokyo’s Shibuya ward. The bathroom was designed by architect Shigeru Ban, who devised it as a way to reassure anyone entering the toilet.

Satoshi Nagare/provided by The Nippon Foundation


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Satoshi Nagare/provided by The Nippon Foundation

The idea of using a public bathroom with see-through walls may sound like the stuff of nightmares. But a famous Japanese architect is hoping to change that view, using vibrant colors and new technology to make restrooms in Tokyo parks more inviting.

«There are two things we worry about when entering a public restroom, especially those located at a park,» according to architect Shigeru Ban’s firm. «The first is cleanliness, and the second is whether anyone is inside.»

Transparent walls can address both of those worries, Ban believes, by showing people what awaits them inside. After users enter the restroom and lock the door, the powder room’s walls turn a powdery pastel shade — and are no longer see-through.

«Using a new technology, we made the outer walls with glass that becomes opaque when the lock is closed, so that a person can check inside before entering,» the Nippon Foundation says.

The group is behind the Tokyo Toilet project, enlisting world-famous architects to create toilets «like you’ve never seen.»

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The glass walls of Shigeru Ban’s new public bathrooms turn opaque when people enter and lock the door.

Satoshi Nagare/provided by The Nippon Foundation


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Satoshi Nagare/provided by The Nippon Foundation

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The restrooms recently opened at two parks in Tokyo. More architect-designed public bathrooms will be created in the coming months.

Satoshi Nagare/provided by The Nippon Foundation


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Satoshi Nagare/provided by The Nippon Foundation

The restrooms recently opened at two parks in Tokyo. More architect-designed public bathrooms will be created in the coming months.

Satoshi Nagare/provided by The Nippon Foundation

The Nippon Foundation is redesigning 17 public toilets in Shibuya, one of Tokyo’s busiest shopping and entertainment districts. The foundation is working with the local government to deploy two of Japan’s national strengths – devotions to cleanliness and design – to address a public necessity.

Well-known toilet company TOTO, famous for its toilets that coddle users with features such as heated seats, bidets and deodorizers, «will advise on toilet equipment and layout,» the foundation says.

Ban’s colorful public bathrooms opened to the public earlier this month in two parks: Yoyogi Fukamachi Mini Park and Haru-no-Ogawa Community Park. Other bespoke commodes will be opening in coming months.

  • public toilets
  • tokyo
  • Pritzker Prize



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