An interactive urinal is a device that allows users to play video games or control interactive displays while urinating. Several designs have been produced to date, usually comprising a urinal fitted with a pressure sensor to measure the strength and position of the urine flow and an LCD screen mounted above the urinal to provide animated graphics.
A British company called Captive Media developed and patented an interactive video game system for installation above urinal bowls in 2011.[1] Their system operates by use of infra-red detection of urine temperature, with the sensors integral to the screen unit which is positioned above the bowl. Amongst others, the system is installed in The Exhibit Bar in Balham in London,[2] and Ta Bouche Bar in Cambridge, UK.[3]
Players control the system by directing their stream left or right. Currently the system has two games:
Players can then access an affiliated website called Captive Games to view their scores on a leader board, and use Twitter to broadcast them. When not in use the screens display entertainment content, including YouTube videos and Internet memes, as well as the venue's own promotional material and third-party advertisements.
In 2006 the design magazine Yanko Design presented a concept for a urinal containing a pressure-sensitive display screen that is triggered when it is urinated on, producing images and sound. According to the designer, Marcel Neundorfer, it transforms urination into "more than just a necessary nuisance. By projecting the game experience into the public space, viewers are treated to a new way of visualizing the abstract, and the entertainment value is boosted."[4]
An interactive urinal named PlaceToPee, formerly named PleeStation (plee means "toilet" in Dutch), was devised in Belgium by software engineer Werner Dupont and electrical engineer Bar Geraets. The pair came up with the idea during a drinking session in a bar and attracted the interest of sanitary equipment company Guedens Sanitair Verhuur, which provided financial support to develop a single PlaceToPee unit.[5] The PlaceToPee was installed in the 2007 GamePower Expo in Ghent with a racing game that allowed visitors to steer on-screen cars with their urine. The system gave warnings to players about drunk driving if their urine was off-target. It was shut down after the Belgian police deemed it to be indecent.[6] The following year the makers displayed the PlaceToPee at the "Arendonk Zingt & Swingt" festival. It allowed users to answer on-screen questions by urinating in a particular direction. The creators publicly expressed confidence in their product and suggested that it could be used as a sophisticated means of counting votes for the Miss Belgium contest.[7] Women are catered for by providing them with a cardboard cone to direct their urine.
The interactive urinal communicator is an advertising device invented by bioengineer Dr. Richard Deutsch for the Islip, New York company Wizmark. The 3.5-inch (8.9 cm) screen is placed in a urinal to promote products or services. Deutsch commented, "Now when nature calls, there is going to be something entertaining to look at and listen to."[8]
Features of the advertising include:
Deutsch commented to Marketing Magazine that "Beginning with early attempts at writing one's name in the snow, there has always been an element of recreation associated with urination for men." Such advertising vehicles are not entirely new: some plain screens have carried advertising for a few years now and poster style ads in washrooms are quite common. The use of interactive urinal screens is being advocated by guerrilla marketers.[9]
In 2009, artist Ricardo Carvalho and programmer Alias Cummings created an interactive urinal entitled Global Warming, in which the trail of urine hits on a grid of ultra sensitive piezos housed within the urinal. The strength and direction of the urine is calculated and used to control the navigation of a 3D Earth globe, leaving a trail of thousands of Google Earth place markers on its surface. The spectator's action is reminiscent of spraying, the animal behaviour of identifying and marking territory. Global Warming, besides its obvious environmental connotation, is an ironic take on how primitive territorial instincts, such as the visceral act of spraying, can be exercised through supposedly intelligent and networked devices and at the same time disguised by them.[10]
The Japanese company Sega has developed an interactive urinal system called the Toylet.[11] A choice of four mini-games can be selected:
The Toylet records players' scores and allows them to be saved onto a USB memory stick. Advertisements are shown between games. The system has been installed in the men's toilets in four stations of the Tokyo Metro, including Akihabara, Soga, and Ikebukuro. It was trialed until the end of January 2011. Some units are available at the new Tokyo Sega Joypolis.
Simulated versions of Toylets are playable in the video game Yakuza Kiwami 2.
Open source hardware project. The Pinect,[12] a hand-free game console for pissoirs named after the popular hand-free controller, Kinect. The Pinect is an open source project, meaning that the hardware and software designs, as well as the 3D case design, are freely available to the public.
The Pinect's electronics are based on an Android tablet (Mediapad T3 10), Arduino, and a low-cost 0.3M USB camera. This makes it accessible to a wide range of DIY makers and developers. The use of the Android platform allows for easy game development using popular game engines such as Libgdx, Unity, and Godot etc.
Currently, there is one game available for the Pinect console. PiBall is a network football arcade game for two players, which was developed for the FIFA World Cup 2018 in Russia.This open source implementation of an interactive urinal not only provides a unique and entertaining experience for users, but it also allows for a wider community of developers and makers to contribute and innovate on the project. It opens up new possibilities for interactive public spaces and provides a fun and engaging way for people to interact with technology.
The Pinect project is fully open-source, and all of its software for Android and Arduino is available on GitHub. The repository includes everything needed to build and replicate the Pinect, including the 3D case model, PCB, and scheme layout.
The 3D case model can be used to 3D print the housing for the Pinect, while the PCB and scheme layout can be used to assemble the electronic components. All the necessary software, including the Android app and Arduino sketch, can be found in the repository and can be easily compiled and loaded onto the device.