mchodera wrote:The bathrooms at The Publican are my present favorite - always spotless and no heavy deodorizing smell. I also like the central handwashing station design; since you're washinbg your hands after you've closed the bathroom door, no worries about a wet handle or what to do with the towels...
Khaopaat wrote:mchodera wrote:The bathrooms at The Publican are my present favorite - always spotless and no heavy deodorizing smell. I also like the central handwashing station design; since you're washinbg your hands after you've closed the bathroom door, no worries about a wet handle or what to do with the towels...
And the C.O. Bigelow Lime & Coriander soaps & lotions are a nice touch...after trying them there, I now have a bottle of that lotion sitting on my desk at work (it gets very dry in here).
aschie30 wrote:Khaopaat wrote:mchodera wrote:The bathrooms at The Publican are my present favorite - always spotless and no heavy deodorizing smell. I also like the central handwashing station design; since you're washinbg your hands after you've closed the bathroom door, no worries about a wet handle or what to do with the towels...
And the C.O. Bigelow Lime & Coriander soaps & lotions are a nice touch...after trying them there, I now have a bottle of that lotion sitting on my desk at work (it gets very dry in here).
Funny you say that - I haven't been to The Publican yet, but the bathrooms at Avec, which is, as we all know, a relative of The Publican, has my favorite brand of soap and lotions - Molton Brown. C.O. Bigelow is good as well - someone over in that company pays attention to these things, and that pleases me.
ronnie_suburban wrote:You know, this topic got me thinking about the other side of the equation, too -- folks who destroy bathrooms and don't bother to tidy them up afterwards. I realize that proprietors, especially those with fewer employees, have a tough time managing their restrooms but the task would be made so much easier if customers actually bothered to clean up after themselves. How many times have I walked into a bathroom and thought to myself 'whoever left it this way was a totally inconsiderate pig?' Sadly, too many times to count.![]()
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Cathy2 wrote:Or people who put their feet on movie theater seats ...
Pie Lady wrote:I don't get the people who just leave their bottles/popcorn bags etc. under the seat. If you can carry them in full, why can't you carry them out empty?
Khaopaat wrote:Pie Lady wrote:I don't get the people who just leave their bottles/popcorn bags etc. under the seat. If you can carry them in full, why can't you carry them out empty?
The same reason people leave weight plates & dumbbells all over the floor at the gym after they're done using them, and wads of dryer lint & spent dryer sheets on the floor of the laundry room after they take their clothes out...clearly they're expecting their mom to follow them around & pick up after them.
Cathy2 wrote:Or a sense of entitlement as if the world is there to serve them.
Cathy2 wrote:And what about the feet on the seat?
Khaopaat wrote:To bring it back to restaurant bathrooms & Ronnie's point about inconsiderate people destroying formerly-clean bathrooms: I honestly believe that, when these people drop paper towel on the floor, splash water all over the counter, or miss the urinal entirely, as soon as the item/mess leaves their field of vision, it ceases to exist to them. They're oblivious to everything outside of their sphere of existence.
Believe it or not, this is me giving these slobs the benefit of the doubt
riddlemay wrote:Cathy2 wrote:Or a sense of entitlement as if the world is there to serve them.
It could be a little bit generational. When I was a kid in the fifties and sixties, movie theaters (it's my recollection) expected (in fact, wanted) you to leave your empty cups and popcorn bags, etc., on the floor--they didn't provide big trash cans right outside the theater for you to dispose of your own stuff, as they do today. A staff of ushers or whatever came in after each showing and cleaned up. When things changed, and theaters started putting the big receptacles outside the theaters for customers to dispose of their own refuse, it took some of us a while to realize that the rules had changed. I now "police my own area" as I should, but there was an interim period in which I didn't know I was supposed to. Some others might still have not caught on.
Cathy2 wrote:My favorite restaurant bathroom experience was at Schwa. I had just returned from the bathroom, when my friend went immediately thereafter. When she returned, there was a funny look on her face.
"Did you wash your hands?"
"Yes."
"Did you dry them?"
"Yes."
"Where did you put the towel?"
"In the bathroom's waste can."
"It wasn't there when I was there."
In the minute between visits, Schwa had already freshened up the bathroom. Now that is service.
Regards,
My personal theory is that some people are completely oblivious to the fact that other people inhabit the world around them. It's not that they don't care that their feet are resting on the back of your head; it's that it never even occurred to them that your head might be there.
stevez wrote:I had a similar experience at Tru. I thought it was kind of creepy to be followed to the bathroom by a staff person who waited outside the door until I was done so he could "freshen up" as soon as I left. I'm sure he thought he was being discrete, but...no.
happy_stomach wrote:stevez wrote:I had a similar experience at Tru. I thought it was kind of creepy to be followed to the bathroom by a staff person who waited outside the door until I was done so he could "freshen up" as soon as I left. I'm sure he thought he was being discrete, but...no.
...when he went to open the bathroom door for me on my way in, he had to kind of step into the bathroom to hold the door open.
Pie Lady wrote:happy_stomach wrote:stevez wrote:I had a similar experience at Tru. I thought it was kind of creepy to be followed to the bathroom by a staff person who waited outside the door until I was done so he could "freshen up" as soon as I left. I'm sure he thought he was being discrete, but...no.
...when he went to open the bathroom door for me on my way in, he had to kind of step into the bathroom to hold the door open.
Why did he have to let you in?
happy_stomach wrote:I think the door was big and heavy-seeming. Because I always wonder about these things, I wonder if men get the door opened for them, too.
Khaopaat wrote:happy_stomach wrote:I think the door was big and heavy-seeming. Because I always wonder about these things, I wonder if men get the door opened for them, too.
We do. Or at least I have both times I've gone. I think it's weird.
happy_stomach wrote:Khaopaat wrote:happy_stomach wrote:I think the door was big and heavy-seeming. Because I always wonder about these things, I wonder if men get the door opened for them, too.
We do. Or at least I have both times I've gone. I think it's weird.
I appreciate the consistency.
ronnie_suburban wrote:The doors in and around those upstairs bathrooms at Alinea can feel somewhat counter-intuitive at times (push, pull? hmm...can't remember), so maybe they feel an extra responsibility to help out.
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