In 1940, Buckminster Fuller receieved Patent 2220482 for a prefabricated bathroom. Fuller wrote in his claim:
Fuller’s design was very clever; it was designed to break up into slices so that it could be carried up a stairwell if need be. But Siegfried Gideon was not impressed:
To everyone else, perhaps a little more room would be nice. But the tiny, prefabricated bathroom remains a holy grail of designers, with patents still being pumped out regularly.
Perhaps the most extreme example of trying to squeeze too much into too little space is David Fergusson’s 1946 patent 2552546. He squeezes an entire bathroom into the area of a shower stall; the sink folds up to reveal the toilet, which somehow is also hinged so that it folds back into the wall when one wants to shower.
It really is a mechanical marvel. But it suffers from the same problem as Fuller’s and other attempts to make bathrooms so small and efficient, that there is more to bathing than just using the toilet or the sink, and that people are not machines. Gideon wrote in 1948:
It is too late for us to be cheated by purely engineering solutions won at the expense of human comfort.
Bathrooms should be designed around people. But in fact, we get it seriously wrong in the design of each and every fixture; our bodies are designed to squat and we sit on toilets. Our showers aim water down when they should aim water up. Our sinks are too low and too dirty. Alexander Kira figured this all out 50 years ago, and nobody is listening.
Next: Alexander Kira and the right way to go to the bathroom.
The History of the Bathroom Part 1: Before the FlushThe History of the Bathroom Part 2: Awash In Water and Waste
The History of the Bathroom Part 3: Putting Plumbing Before People