Bio-loo answers call of nature
Upgraded semi-mobile versions of the toilet are being used in dozens of domestic scenic spots, including the Yancheng ancient ruins park and the West Taihu Lake ecological resort in Changzhou, as well as several parks in Jiangxi and Anhui provinces and the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, according to Zhang Qizhong, marketing director of Huajian Eco-Technology.
The units look modern and neat and have a steel structure and insulation materials on the outside.
"A stall can accommodate 120 people for 24 hours," Zhang says.
The units have helped cut costs and meet tourists' needs in some special places.
Permanent architecture, or namely concrete structures with deep foundations, are not permitted to be built at major national relic sites, says Tan Zhenggang, deputy director of the Yancheng ancient ruins park's management committee.
The park also lacks sewage infrastructure, Tan says.
"The biological toilets don't require ground digging and are easy to move," Tan says.
"They are easier to maintain and manage than traditional water-flushed counterparts."
A stall costs roughly 70,000 yuan ($11,300). There are nine squatting toilets in the park at the moment.
"They have been running smoothly for nine years since they were put into use at the scenic spot," Tan says.
They might be an answer to prayers from those drought-affected areas, especially the central and western regions in China, says Zhang Lingyun, deputy dean of the tourism college at Beijing Union University.
"The population in those places is not very big, so scientific planning of toilet distribution should be made," he explains.