The Architecture of the Washroom

By Melina Arvaniti-Pollatou.

“As soon as you flush the toilet, you’re in the middle of ideology,” Slavoj Žižek famously remarked, reminding us that ideology is never merely a matter of doctrines or political declarations but is embedded within the material arrangements of everyday life (Žižek, 1997). The bathroom, perhaps more than any other room in the contemporary building, reveals this condition with particular clarity. Hidden behind doors, concealed from public view, and reduced in architectural discourse to questions of plumbing and hygiene, it nevertheless exposes cultural assumptions more vividly than many explicitly political spaces.

Bathroom design by Italian architect Camilla Romeo. Artworks by Ludovica Lugli.

Recasting Žižek’s proposition in architectural terms, one might argue that architecture exercises its greatest power not when it instructs us how to live, but when it quietly structures the conditions under which living takes place.

White tiles pair with a vintage art deco shaving mirror, a custom latex sink skirt, and raw granite shelves in this bathroom by New Operations Workshop.

The washroom is one such apparatus. It organizes intimacy and exposure, purity and contamination, privacy and collectivity.

Bathroom design by XStudio for House O in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. Photography by David Rodríguez.

In this sense, as Austrian-born architect, designer, and researcher Alexander Kira demonstrated in his seminal investigation of the relationship between the human body and sanitary design, even the most ordinary bathroom fixture is never entirely neutral.

Every sink, toilet, and shower is shaped by assumptions about posture, cleanliness, privacy, and ultimately about what a body is and how it should behave (Kira, 1966).

Andy Warhol in a foil-wrapped bathroom.

What appears as plumbing is also culture; what presents itself as technical necessity is equally a social proposition. The bathroom is thus both infrastructure and ideology rendered concrete.

Shimmering bathroom design.

The rhetorical question therefore emerges at the beginning of every design process: what is a bathroom?

Appartement Rhin’s renovation by minuit architects in Paris is centered around the bathroom design.

Let us recall the discomfort provoked when a washroom refuses the familiar grammar of ceramic tiles, polished surfaces, and immaculate whiteness. For bathrooms are never neutral containers for bodily functions. As Mary Douglas demonstrated in Purity and Danger (1966), notions of cleanliness and contamination are cultural constructions through which societies organize meaning. Bathroom design materializes these constructions. It speaks through what it excludes as much as through what it displays.

Dovecote by AZO Sequeira Arquitectos is part concrete, part stone; part treehouse, part bathhouse. Photography by Nelson Garrido.

There is perhaps nothing more magnetic than the raw honesty of a brutalist bathroom designed for the bareness of being. Within its rough materiality, an unexpected intimacy emerges between coarse concrete and the unapologetic nudity of the body. Stone, gravel, moisture, skin: the attraction is undeniable. Exposed pipes and unfinished surfaces refuse the concealment that modern sanitary culture has so carefully cultivated.

Bathroom in ruins.

The bathroom is no longer an immaculate image of hygiene but a terrain of primordial textures, where architecture allows the body to encounter its own material reality.

Concept design by Larisa Bulibasa.

Paradoxically, it is precisely in this absence of sleekness that vulnerability exists. The brutalist bathroom acknowledges that bodies are porous, mortal, unfinished referencing what Maurice Merleau-Ponty understood as our embodied condition: we do not merely occupy space; we encounter the world through the material reality of our flesh (Merleau-Ponty, 1945). Within the brutalist bathroom, the body is not elevated to the status of an object of worship, nor disciplined into an ideal of hygienic perfection. It becomes ordinary again. Within its walls, workers and sinners alike pause to remember, to forgive, to surrender, and perhaps to repent. The bathroom returns the body to its simplest condition: temporal, soft, and humane.

For there is no other place in the world where we feel our Otherness most keenly than the bathroom.

Here, the body confronts itself through those traces it ordinarily seeks to conceal: fluids, odors, vulnerability, decay. What Julia Kristeva termed the abject—that which is neither fully self nor fully other—emerges into view, unsettling the illusion of a coherent and autonomous subject (Kristeva, 1980). In the bathroom, we encounter ourselves not as social identities but as fragile biological beings, suspended between nature and culture.

This ambiguity raises another question: is the bathroom shared or private?

Historically, bathing was rarely a solitary affair. From the thermae of imperial Rome to the Ottoman hammam, from Japanese sento bathhouses to Finnish saunas, bathing infrastructures served as spaces of sociability as much as hygiene. The public bath was an urban institution through which communities encountered one another. The body, rather than being secluded, participated in a collective ritual.

“People visiting Hakone’s Seven Hot Springs for therapeutic bathing.” From the illustrated book Bunbu Nidō Mangoku Tsū (published in 1788). Courtesy of the Hakone Town Museum of Local History.

The emergence of modern privacy transformed this relationship. As domestic plumbing spread throughout Europe and North America during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, bathing gradually migrated into the private sphere. Simultaneously, public washrooms became increasingly regulated through mechanisms of segregation and control.

18 Drops of Sweat is a collectively built hammam, first installed in Paris in the summer of 2024. Designed as a multifunctional platform, it served as a showering station for young refugees men hosted at La Station when not used as a hammam by visitors.

Gender, class, race, religion, and later disability became inscribed into architectural layouts and sanitary standards.

Beyond its practical function, the project highlights the importance of collective hygiene practices and reintroduces original water-related rituals into urban life, in a time where the hypothesis of going back to public bathing becomes more and more relevant.

Restroom design thus becomes a record of shifting political ideologies, revealing what Michel Foucault described as the intimate relationship between architecture, discipline, and the governance of bodies (Foucault, 1975).

Built from reused materials—textiles, bricks, tiles, and metal—it gives new life to discarded elements through thoughtful design.

For Spanish philosopher Paul B. Preciado, the public restroom is not a neutral amenity but a political technology: an architectural apparatus that does not simply segregate bodies according to gender, but actively participates in the production and stabilization of “men” and “women” as social categories (Preciado, 2018).

‘It looks like a gay disco at six in the morning’. Andreas Angelidakis’ Athenian bathroom.

The first decades of the twenty-first century have further exposed the bathroom as a contested political territory. Debates surrounding accessible, inclusive design, gender-neutral facilities, and transgender rights have demonstrated that the washroom remains one of the most charged spaces in contemporary architecture, concealing deeper questions about recognition, visibility, and citizenship. Yet the bathroom also persists as a site of resistance. Even in its most utilitarian form, the washroom permits small acts of withdrawal and transgression.

Bathroom design from the book ‘In my room: designing for and with children’ (1989).

The office toilet, the railway-station restroom, the corner bathroom of a crowded apartment: each offers a temporary suspension of social obligations.

Bathroom at Palazzo Forani photographed by Stefan Giftthaler.

These are spaces where one lights a cigarette despite regulations, lingers longer than necessary, gazes into a mirror, cries in secret, or simply retreats from the relentless demands of productivity.

The bathroom is architecture’s escape hatch.

Such moments are not merely personal. They can destabilize broader social norms. Mahnaz Afzali’s documentary The Ladies Room (Zananeh, 2003) offers a striking example. Set within a women’s public restroom in Tehran’s Laleh Park, the film reveals a hidden social world formed among homeless women, sex workers, and other marginalized figures. Within the shelter of the restroom, women remove their veils, smoke, exchange confidences, discuss forbidden subjects, and create forms of solidarity otherwise unavailable in public life.

The Ladies Room by director Mahnaz Afzali.

The washroom emerges as a micro-political commons.

Bathrooms therefore occupy a paradoxical position. They are among the most regulated spaces in contemporary society and among the most potentially liberating. Simultaneously spaces of discipline and refuge, surveillance and withdrawal, they resist stable categorization. Anthropologists have long understood bathing as a ritual of transition, while architectural theorists have increasingly described such environments as liminal spaces—thresholds where identities become temporarily unsettled (Turner, 1969).

Facing the bathroom at Urban Cabin by Francesca Perani.

To enter a bathroom is to cross a boundary.

Casa Aether by AB+AC Architects features a yellow bathroom designed to activate. Photography by
Sanda Vučković.

One leaves behind, however briefly, the social performance demanded elsewhere. The act of washing retains traces of purification rituals older than modern sanitation. Bathing remains a symbolic act of transformation even when stripped of religious meaning. If bathrooms are culturally determined spaces that silently materialize political ideologies, then every alteration in their architecture signals a possible transformation in the body of society.

Raboes Bathroom, designed by Sabine Marcelis in 2020 for De Kort van Schaik’s House is an interior installation in the Netherlands.

The question is therefore not simply how bathrooms reflect prevailing norms, but how they might produce new forms of communal life.

The project treats the bathroom as one continuous object, where partition, furniture, and sanitary functions are merged into a single spatial piece.

What would happen if the architecture of the washroom changed? What new forms of collectivity, vulnerability, and freedom might emerge from behind its door?

Textured glass blocks shape the atmosphere of this washroom by YOD.GROUP.

Architecture is never merely functional. It is a spatial instrument, tuned to intention, through which norms of privacy, hygiene, gender, and intimacy are endlessly rehearsed at the quiet scale of the everyday life.

Bibliography

Douglas, Mary. Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo. London: Routledge, 1966.

Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. New York: Vintage Books, 1975.

Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. Phenomenology of Perception. Paris: Gallimard, 1945.

Turner, Victor. The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure. Chicago: Aldine, 1969.

Žižek, Slavoj. The Plague of Fantasies. London: Verso, 1997.

Kira, Alexander. The Bathroom. New York: Viking Press, 1966.

Kristeva, Julia. Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection. New York: Columbia University Press, 1982 [French original 1980].

Preciado, Paul B. Countersexual Manifesto. New York: Columbia University Press, 2018.

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