This invention relates generally to a sink access device and more particularly to a sink access device for a public restroom which provides access to a sink by diminutive individuals and wheelchair occupants.
State and local ordinances dictate the necessity for public restrooms in certain establishments. For instance, under some regulations, restaurants need a single water closet per seventy-five male and female patrons but only one lavatory for two hundred patrons. For larger arenas, one water closet per one hundred and twenty males and sixty females is required while only requiring one lavatory per two hundred males and one hundred and fifty females. For large passenger terminals, one water closet per five hundred individuals and one lavatory per seven hundred individuals is required.
While the number of public restrooms is mandated, the actual restroom designs are not. The flux of the inconsistencies of restrooms has prompted, among other things, the formation of the American Restroom Association, which discusses various aspects of restrooms at www.Americanrestroom.org. The mission statement for the American Restroom Association includes the advocation for the availability of clean, safe, well-designed public restrooms which includes restroom design and technology, restroom availability, pertinent legislation and regulations, and increasing research related to the problems faced by people who hesitate to travel or who avoid activities that put them out of range of proper toilet facilities. With a few exceptions, states adopt either the International Plumbing Code (IPC), the Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC) or the National Standard Plumbing Code (NSPC). While these codes typically are concerned with identifying issues regarding the number of restrooms and lavatories which must be present depending upon accessibility and the size of the public establishment, these codes are deficient in identifying specific requirements to standardization of rest rooms. For instance, while there is a trend for hands-free operation of toilets, lavatories and the like, these are merely incorporated into restrooms at the discretion of the proprietor of the public facility and are not mandated by any legislation. Accordingly, while restrooms are required to meet certain standards so that they can be utilized by everyone, they are not necessarily designed for everyone. In fact, until recently, handicapped individuals experienced great hardship in utilizing public restrooms until legislation to eliminate these hardships was put into place by the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”). Accordingly, since the utilization of public restrooms is a common occurrence, their designs should include access for everyone. For the purposes of this patent application, “restroom” is defined as a room equipped with toilets and lavatories for public use.
In addition to the adequate presence of restrooms, the overall construction and condition of restrooms is also important to the public. A survey conducted by the International Facility Management Association, www.ifma.org, indicated that besides a public building's front entrance, its restrooms have the greatest potential to negatively impact a visitor's impression of a facility. Also, durability, cleanliness and ADA compliance were highly regarded characteristics of restrooms. Of the respondents to the survey, nearly three-quarters believed that their restrooms were the most frequently visited common area of the building. Key findings from the survey indicated that issues regarding the restrooms were as frequent as other prime issues such as parking and temperature. In particular, customers were most concerned with restroom cleanliness and indicated hands-free sensor technology is the most popular design trend. Accordingly, the experience which the public has with a particular establishment's restroom will greatly affect that individual's perception of that establishment.
The interrelationship between the public and restrooms is so intertwined that not only is the location of restrooms important but also their accessibility, interactivity and safety. For instance, at a meeting at the School of Architecture and Planning at the University of Buffalo regarding utilization of public amenities, certain key attributes for restrooms was discussed. Such guidelines regarding the design of restrooms included the physical design, such as the floor surfaces draining and drying quickly; the provision of the automatic flush plumbing and changing tables for babies; hooks for coats at or below 48 inches, and other ergonomically friendly features.
However, with all of the attention placed on restrooms and their “friendliness” to the public, a major problem with restrooms currently exists. Namely, lavatories are too high for children, toddlers and diminutive persons to utilize. This is especially a problem because many lavatories have installed infrared devices to trigger the faucet to turn on. Hence, while parents go to public places with their children such as museums, aquariums, zoos, and restaurants, the lavatories and sinks at these public restrooms are too high for the child to use without assistance from a parent. Accordingly, a parent has to pick up a toddler and hold them prone over a sink countertop to enable the toddler to wash its hands. Inevitably, the toddler gets its clothing wet due to the water left on the countertop from previous usage by an adult. To perform this maneuver, the parent typically has to place a diaper bag or other item which he is typically carrying onto the lavatory floor, pick up the toddler, and then place the toddler back down. As toddlers mature, their weight can approach forty pounds and more, but they are still too short to utilize the lavatory. Such toddler weight is too heavy for some parents, and in some cases, the parent may injure himself picking up and orienting the toddler over the sink.
To alleviate the problem associated with not enabling sink access for toddlers and diminutive persons the inventors of this application have previously been awarded three patents for a sink access device which enables toddlers and diminutive persons to access a sink. The patents are U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,037,557; 7,861,332; 7,716,757 for a sink access device. This innovative invention was recognized and discussed in the USPTO's own publication “Inventor's Eye” in January 2011 when the '332 patent was issued. An additional recognition of the unique novelty of the invention in the '557; '332; and '757 patents and need in the marketplace was identified by the product being awarded best new product by the International Association of Amusement Parks in 2011. While the sink access device associated with these patents are suitable for their intended purpose, they are not suitable for single sink restrooms. Accordingly, an improved design is necessary.
One embodiment includes a public restroom having a wall and a floor which includes a sink positioned above the floor of the restroom. The sink is of a predetermined height and width having a first side edge and a second side edge associated with the sink front defining a sink front profile. The sink has a forward approach zone thirty inches in width defined forward of the sink front profile. The forward approach zone is unobstructed providing access to the sink by a wheelchair occupant. A sink access device has a step support mount and a step pivotally mounted to the step support mount. The step has a first upright position wherein the step is in a first position which is vertical and a second position wherein the step is in a second position which is horizontal providing a platform for a diminutive person to step onto for accessing the sink. The step being positioned in front of and beside the sink front profile of the sink when the step is in the first upright position; and the step being in front of and offset from the sink front profile when in the second horizontal position providing access to the sink for a diminutive person; and the step support mount being positioned outside the forward approach zone.
In an additional embodiment, a sink access device is provided for a restroom having a sink positioned above the floor of the restroom. The sink is of a predetermined height and width having a first side edge and a second side edge associated with the sink front defining a sink front profile. The sink access device includes a step support mount and a step pivotally mounted to the step support mount. The step having a first upright position wherein the step is in a first position which is vertical and a second position wherein the step is in a second position which is horizontal providing a platform for a diminutive person to step onto for accessing the sink. The step being positioned in front of and beside the sink front profile of the sink when the step is in the first upright position; and the step being in front of and offset from the sink front profile when in the second horizontal position providing access to the sink for a diminutive person.
In an additional embodiment, a method for providing access to a sink for a diminutive person and wheelchair bound occupant is provided. The method includes providing a sink of a predetermined height and width having a first side edge and a second side edge associated with the sink front defining a sink front profile. A forward approach zone thirty inches in width is defined forward of the sink front profile which is clear of obstacles. The method further includes providing a sink access device having a step support mount and a step pivotally mounted to the step support mount. The step having a first upright position wherein the step is in a first position which is vertical and a second position wherein the step is in a second position which is horizontal providing a platform for a diminutive person to step onto for accessing the sink. The method further includes mounting the sink access device outside of the forward approach zone permitting unrestricted access to the sink when the sink access device is not deployed in the second position which is horizontal.
The subject matter which is regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other features, and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Embodiments of the present disclosure includes a sink access device which provides access to a sink for a diminutive person such as a child or smaller adult while providing access to the sink for a handicapped individual and also providing unimpeded access by an adult or non-handicapped individual.
As illustrated in
The sink access device may include a travel stop 30 wherein when the step pivots from the first upright position to the second position. The travel stop stops the step in the horizontal second position. The travel stop may include a lip 36 carried by the step support which overhangs step base 22 whereby step base 22 engages lip 36 when pivoting from the vertical to horizontal position when deployed. Travel stop 30 may also include other devices for limiting the horizontal deployment of step 20 such as a leg which may engage the floor.
The sink access device may include a step support mount 24 which includes a first leg 40 and a second leg 42 offset from the first leg, each leg having a general length including a leg top 44 and a leg bottom 45, a step support top 48 which maybe lip 36 interconnects the leg tops. The step support top having a predetermined width, and the step pivotally mounted to each of said legs.
Step support mount 24 may consist of a single leg such as a post wherein the step base 22 is pivotally mounted to the post and transitions from a vertical to a horizontal position until the deployment into the horizontal position is stopped.
The sink access device preferably includes a bias 46 for urging the step from the second position which is horizontal to the first position which is vertical when the step is not being utilized. In a preferred embodiment, bias 46 is a gas spring.
As shown in
As shown in
In operation, the sink access device of the present invention provides for a unique solution to accessing a sink by three separate groups of individuals. As noted in the background, accessing a sink by a child or diminutive person is an arduous task. The present invention provides a solution by providing a sink access device which may be deployed in a horizontal position which enables the child or diminutive person to step onto and access the sink. When not deployed, the sink access device includes a bias for automatically transferring the step into a vertical position. When in the vertical position, the sink access device is positioned outside a frontal approach zone located in front of the sink. The frontal approach zone provides at least thirty inches of unimpeded access to the sink for an individual in a wheelchair. Also, with the sink access device deployed it the natural vertical position, access to the sink is also unimpeded for an adult who is not handicapped. In this public restroom construction, the single sink is accessible by these at least three groups of individuals.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190075983 A1 | Mar 2019 | US |