Moliphino
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2016
I remember turnstiles to get into the bathrooms in the train station in Munich. There was also a change machine nearby if you needed it.Good point. I only noticed that American chains in Europe charged for the bathroom (i.e. you had to buy something). I remember being in Nuremberg and buying the smallest cup of coffee at Starbucks just to get the bathroom code because I had to go that bad. I remember cities like Prague also charging for public bathrooms and they had the bathroom attendants too.
In St. Emilion there were only a couple paid port-a-potties and we had to go to the visitors center to get change to use it because we only had bills. Of course that was the one time I had to pee badly right when getting off the train. I think there were free bathrooms available when we toured one winery, but I didn't have to go then.
I have learned to use available bathrooms if you have the slightest need to pee because you don't know when the next one is coming.
I didn't say it was. Cities anywhere can be tough.Well, it’s not like WDW everywhere, in NYC there aren’t a lot of public bathrooms, and businesses require you purchase something to use theirs. The hotels we’ve stayed at in Philadelphia require a room key to enter the lobby bathrooms (if your room isn’t ready the front desk can buzz you in). In that case it’s to keep out the homeless.