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Shanghai Improves Public Toilets
Some 140 years after the first modern toilet showed up on its streets, Shanghai has invested more than 200 million yuan (US$24 million) over the past 10 years to renovate its public toilets.

Officials in Shanghai hope to showcase their ambition and ability to become a leading international metropolis in the Far East through improvements to the city's public conveniences.

The city's efforts to burnish its international image include fitting advanced illumination and washing facilities, adding special seats for disabled people and redesigning restroom exteriors.

There are more than 1,000 sign posted public toilets and nearly 2,000 toilets in stores, hospitals and restaurants open to the public in Shanghai, home to more than 16 million people.

Mobile toilets have also been introduced in public venues like subway stations in the China's biggest city.

In Shanghai's downtown areas, there is on average one standard public restroom every 300 meters, contrasting with a meager one loo every 1,000 meters 10 years ago, according to recent statistics.

"We will take sustained measures to gradually open other toilets that are currently closed to the public," said an official at the Shanghai Municipal Bureau of the Management of City Appearance and Environmental Sanitation.

The official said city authorities had finished making 10,000 special signs pin-pointing the location of public conveniences, and will set them up near the toilets soon.

Most public toilets traditionally cost less than 1 yuan to use in Shanghai, a similar fee to other places in the world's most populous country.

But municipal authorities have ordered some toilets inside shopping malls and restaurants to open to the public for free.

Analysts said more efforts were needed for Shanghai to improve its public toilets, an important element in creating accessible, sustainable cities.

Though China's first modern toilet was introduced in 1864 in Nanjing Road, Shanghai's most prosperous shopping area, residents and foreign tourists used to complain about the difficulty of finding a toilet in the city.

To make the situation worse, people living in the city, especially foreigners, usually found it hard to overlook the filthy condition of many public toilets.

Last year, a taxi driver called Wang Weixiong collaborated with more than 30 colleagues to draw a map locating Shanghai's public toilets for the drivers to use when they were caught short.

(Xinhua News Agency May 25, 2003)

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