First On-campus Unisex Toilet Opens at Seoul University | Be Korea-savvy

First On-campus Unisex Toilet Opens at Seoul University


This undated file photo provided by Sungkonghoe University shows the private university in Seoul.

This undated file photo provided by Sungkonghoe University shows the private university in Seoul.

SEOUL, March 16 (Korea Bizwire)A gender-neutral toilet that can be used by anyone regardless of sex or disability has been installed at a Seoul university for the first time among domestic universities.

Sungkonghoe University said Wednesday it has completed the construction of the unisex toilet on the first basement floor of a lecture building called the New Millennium Hall.

The toilet, named “Everyone’s Toilet,” is equipped with various convenience facilities, such as voice assistance, automatic doors, Braille blocks, angle mirrors, toilet covers for babies, diaper changing tables, small washbasins and folding chairs, the university said.

Due to the absence of gender distinction, sexual minorities who have different gender identities after birth can also use the unisex toilet without any inconvenience, it added.

A student looks around the just opened "restroom for all" at Sungkonghoe University in Seoul on March 16, 2022. The restroom, open to all genders and those with disabilities, is the first of its kind at a college in the country. (Yonhap)

A student looks around the just opened “restroom for all” at Sungkonghoe University in Seoul on March 16, 2022. The restroom, open to all genders and those with disabilities, is the first of its kind at a college in the country. (Yonhap)

Unisex toilets are becoming increasingly common in Western countries but are unfamiliar in Korean society due to concerns about vulnerability to crime.

According to Sungkonghoe University officials, the installation of a unisex toilet was first proposed by a student council in May last year and the school headquarters initially reacted cautiously due to objection from some students.

After months of protests by both sides and open discussions, the school finally reached a decision to build the gender-neutral toilet last November.

“The use of the toilet is the most basic and essential element in human life, but some people regard the existing toilets as inconvenient,” a school official said.

(Yonhap)

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