Park Toilette

Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf

PARK TOILETTE

Naumann Wasserkampf Architekten

MANUFACTURERS
Graphisoft

DESIGN TEAM
Julia Naumann, Max Wasserkampf, Pascal Schettki

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Statik Ludger Hottenrott

BUILDING SERVICES
Ingenieurbüro Hirsch

PHOTOGRAPHS
Max Wasserkampf

AREA
15 M²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Weimar, Germany

CATEGORY
Park, Small Scale

Text description provided by architect.

Looking back in the history of our cities - and thus also parks – one determines that so-called street furniture played a major role than today. Nowadays often anthracite-colored paintwork of these elements is causing invisibility in public spaces.

Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf
Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf
Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf

An intention of a designed shape is no longer ascertainable. Benches, dustbins, phone boxes, and in German so-called “Bedürfnisanstalten“ were – in the past much more than today – read and designed as furniture of the public space.

The artistic handling of these objects was much more reflective than today. Objects of public space were evoking a kind of branding for cities through their architectural expression.

You can still see this in European cities today; an example is Vienna. The city's furniture forms the subconsciously perceived background or, better, the scenery of the public life that takes place in front of it.

Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf
Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf
Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf

The public toilet is situated in the ‘Park an der Ilm’, which is part of the world's cultural heritage. It attempts to turn the "public toilet" into something more than an industrially manufactured functional building. Historical models and their joining were analyzed and translated into an appropriate, contemporary language.

The structure is divided into the classic elements of base, shaft, and roof. These elements are not only design elements, but also serve each other. The all-around concrete base protects the skin of the facade from splashing water. In the cabin, tiles till 1.20 m in height enable unrestricted cleaning. The shoring was planned in timber frame construction.

Color-treated solid wood panels are used as the stiffening elements and face of the building. On the inside, these are left in their natural state. The facade parts are joined by painted steel profiles.

Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf
Park Toilette
© Max Wasserkampf
Park Toilette
Plan

The screw pattern is therefore not hidden but emphasizes the structure of the facade with its fine formulation. The nodes are a reminiscence of the former details of the connection of Viennese “Bedürfnisanstalten”.

The roof, which overhangs the facade by 95 cm and protects the visitor from rain, was made of two large glulam panels. It preserves its shape from a copper-made covering.

Park Toilette
Site Plan
Park Toilette
Section

The design of the park toilet went as far as the special formation of the gargoyles and signage, which was specially designed for it.