There’s nothing glamorous about public restrooms. But take them away — and cities learn fast just how essential they are.
When public toilets are missing, closed, or underbuilt, the consequences ripple far beyond inconvenience. From sanitation issues to lost tourism dollars, the impact is real, visible, and avoidable.
So what actually happens when a city doesn’t offer enough public bathrooms?
Let’s break it down.
1. Streets Become Toilets
It’s an unfortunate truth: when there’s nowhere to go, people still go.
Cities without adequate restroom access experience:
– Increases in public urination and defecation
– Higher biohazard cleanup costs for sanitation crews
– Health risks tied to human waste in public areas
– Complaints from residents, tourists, and business owners
One study in San Francisco showed over 30,000 calls for feces removal in a single year. In many cities, this is now a line item in the public works budget — and it’s growing.
2. Tourism and Business Take a Hit
Imagine you’re visiting a downtown corridor or local event and suddenly realize there’s nowhere nearby to use the restroom.
What do you do?
– Cut the visit short
– Avoid shopping or dining
– Choose a different area next time
Lack of access pushes people away from public spaces — especially families, seniors, and people with disabilities. That means fewer foot traffic dollars and a less welcoming environment overall.
3. The Unhoused Bear the Brunt
While everyone suffers from poor restroom access, unhoused individuals are often the most affected.
With no home base, no 24-hour access to facilities, and frequent policing of behavior in public, the absence of safe restrooms becomes not just a health risk, but a matter of dignity.
The Portland Loo® is used by many cities as a way to meet basic sanitation needs without requiring shelters or service centers to handle it alone.
4. Businesses Become the Default
In many cities, businesses — particularly cafés and retail stores — are stuck serving as de facto public restroom providers. That’s not what they signed up for.
Employees are asked to enforce “customers only” policies, deal with restroom misuse, or explain to frustrated pedestrians why there’s nowhere else to go.
It creates friction. And in some cities, it’s leading to real burnout among frontline workers.
A Smarter Way Forward: The Portland Loo®
When Portland faced these challenges firsthand, it didn’t double down on enforcement or close more restrooms. It designed a better one.
The Portland Loo® was built for:
– Quick installation in dense or high-traffic areas
– Easy cleaning and upkeep by city crews
– Safe, single-occupancy use with ADA access
– Crime- and vandal-resistant materials
It’s now being used in cities across North America to proactively address the need for public restrooms — while keeping maintenance and misuse under control.
Want to Help Your City Avoid a Breakdown?
If your community is lacking safe, accessible public restrooms, it doesn’t take a legal case to start taking action. Our Petition to Bring a Loo® is a fast, effective way to organize community support and start the conversation with your local leaders.
Whether you’re a resident, business owner, or city official — we can help you make the case.
Because sometimes, fixing what’s broken starts with installing something that works.
No city runs well without public restrooms. The Portland Loo® helps cities run better.
Built to solve real problems. Ready when your city is.




