We’ve all got at least one in the house, and we all use it
several times a day. But it’s probably the room we think least about,
mainly because we see it as a purely functional space. But bathrooms don’t have
to be boring. Amaze your friends and family, or get them wondering why you
suddenly known lots of random facts about toilets, with these unusual,
interesting and weird facts about bathrooms.
Here 10 Interesting And Weird Facts About Bathroom.
1. Many Famous People
Have Died in the Bathroom.
Everyone
knows that Elvis famously died on his toilet in the bathroom in 1977
of many different medical conditions which were felt to be related to drug
misuse. 200 years earlier in 1760 King George II of Great Britain also
died in the bathroom, although in those days it was known as a “close stool”.
Whitney Houston was found dead in a hotel bathroom too, and who can forget
Moaning Myrtle, the bathroom-haunting spook in the Harry Potter movies?
2. We Visit the Bathroom
More Often Than You Think.
On average, we each go to the loo between six and eight times
every day. That means that every year, we make an average of 2,500 trips to the
loo. Over the course of the average lifetime, we spend as much as up to three
years in the bathroom. If you’re one of the people who retreat into the loo
with a book, or even a phone as I mention further down, it could be considerably
longer.
3. How You Hang Your Loo
Roll is a Matter for Academic Study
Researchers
in the United States spent over $10,000 researching
whether toilet paper should be hung with the loose end hanging at the
front or the back. The cutting edge study found that only 25% of people have
the flap hanging to the back of the roll. This debate happens so much that Wikipedia
even has an entire detailed page on the topic that has an incredible
amount of references. There’s also an excellent article on the topic
called ‘The Correct Way to Hang Toilet Paper‘.
4. 75% Of Us Use Phones on the Loo
In
a survey of the readers of the Digital Spy website, 75% admitted to regularly
using their phones while on the loo. It’s therefore probably not surprising
that half of all claims for water damage to smartphones come from dropping
their handset into the toilet. Thankfully you can sometimes fix a phone
that’s been dropped in the toilet, as we explain in our guide.
5. South Korea Has a
Museum Dedicated to the Toilet
The unusually named Mr Toilet House opened in 2012 in Suwon,
South Korea and is a museum dedicated to everything toilet-related. The museum
is housed in a building which looks like a loo seat from the air and was once
the home of Sim Jae-duck, the founder of the World Toilet
Association. South Korea is not alone; there are also toilet-related
museums in New Delhi, Kiev and Alamo Heights in the USA.
6. The World’s Largest Public Loo is in China
A
toilet facility in Chongqing, south-west China, was opened to the public in
2007. The building contains over 1,000 separate toilets and covers an
area equivalent to the size of half a football pitch. It is the largest in the
world. Japan has also claimed the title to world’s largest loo too, but, in
this case, it’s a single toilet surrounded by more than 2,150 square feet
of gardens. Hopefully they've got enough basins for everyone to wash
their hands after!
7. Some Public Toilets are cleaner than others
Research
has shown that the average public bathroom is not the cleanest of places, but
also that most of us avoid using the first cubicle in the row. If you are
worried about germs while using a public loo, it, therefore, makes sense to opt
for the first one you come to. You’d think that the toilet seat in a
public bathroom is the most disgusting thing in the world, but the disgusting
truth is that a toilet seat actually has fewer bacteria than your mobile phone.
In fact, your phone is dirtier than the 5 objects in the video below.
8. Air-Fresheners in the Bathroom are Nothing New
Manufacturers
of air-freshening products would have you believe that their products are new
and innovative. However, we’ve been using air freshening and deodorizing
products since the time that we moved on from using a pit in the ground for a
loo. The very earliest air fresheners were made from pomegranates and cloves
while the first modern air freshener was introduced in 1948.
9. Thomas Crapper Didn’t
Invent the Toilet
It’s
often said that the aptly named Thomas Crapper was the man who invented the loo
in the Victorian times. This isn’t entirely true. The toilet in its various
shapes and sizes had been around for centuries, but Mr. Crapper was the one who
made improvements to the flushing mechanism (such as the use of a ballcock) and
popularized the use of the indoor flushing toilet. So why that is some people
call a toilet a ‘crapper’?
10. We’re Not Impressed by French Loos
A 2013 survey of Brits who had travelled to Europe on holiday found
that the French have the dirtiest toilets, with most indicating a bad smell as
the reason for the uncleanliness. Turkey and Greece also ranked badly for dirty
loo’s, but at the other end of the scale, Belgium and Portugal scored high
marks for their clean public conveniences.
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