Yet another defense of the residential urinal
Check out the Drop urinal from Hidra .
Hidra developed the Drop specifically for the residential market, they didn't adapt a commercial one for home use. That's how most residential urinals come to be by the way. A manufacturer takes something that's meant for heavy use and scales it back a little bit.
Hidra took another tack though, and the Drop never had an incarnation as a commercial product. To make it easier to fir into existing baths, the Drop has been made slimmer and taller. It's also a pretty attractive piece of porcelain.
For the existence of me, I will by no means apprehend the vast rejection of urinals for home use. Having half the populace flush 1.6 gallons of clean, potable water down the drain each time they want to put off about a pint of liquid is one of the greater absurd practices of cutting-edge existence. It's a terrible misuse of sources and people hold to do it because of a peculiar unease around urinals.
Sometimes that unease is warranted but not for the reasons you may think. I was in Spain with my great friend Bob Borson earlier this year and he had encounter with a urinal in Valencia that has to be read to be appreciated.
Anyhow, back to the business of urinals. Think of it this way, if there's a man or men in the house and there's a urinal present, toilet seats can be kept down. That alone would make the divorce rate plummet.
If you are contemplating a rest room remodel and there are guys who may be stricken by the preservation, consider installing a urinal for your new bathtub. The men worried will be thrilled and you will reduce down your water use notably. At this level of the sport, who would not welcome a decrease utility invoice?
You can find the Drop and more cool bath stuff on Lazio-based Hidra's website.