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resim 414

We would dream of it at home. The Urben Blu outdoor public toilet automatically cleans its bowl with each use and washes its floor at intervals of 5 to 20 visits, depending on its programming.

As soon as it lands in an urban park, this smart toilet is truly connected: to the water distribution network, to the sanitary network and to the wireless network. And no, there is no “e” in the phrase “at will”.

Smart and vandal-resistant, the Urben Blu outdoor toilet looks like a small pavilion, but it’s entirely factory-made.

It inflicts a scouring and recurring cleaning, fully automated, which leaves it immaculate in 45 seconds, ready for a new and eager use. Heated and carefully insulated, the cabinet easily survives the harshest winters.

Urben Blu was founded in 2010 by Marcel Paré, an entrepreneur who wanted to introduce the principle of European-style self-cleaning toilets to the country. Faced with the inability of foreign components to withstand our winters, he set about designing a truly Quebec self-cleaning toilet, therefore resistant to the cold. Businessman Alain Bolduc joined him after a convincing visit to the company in the late 2010s.

The Urben Blu public toilet is offered with one or two toilets. The simple version measures approximately 9 ft by 12 ft (2.8 m by 3.6 m), with a quarter of its surface area taken up by a small mechanical room, out of reach of users.

The pavilion is factory-built on a 30 cm thick concrete slab, the floor of which is heated. The self-supporting galvanized steel structure is lined with insulation. Its exterior covering can be personalized to the customer’s liking.

“All the interior walls are made of ultra-resistant concrete that we manufacture in our factory,” says Alain Bolduc.

Its fiber-reinforced concrete sink is equipped with three automatic contactless functions: a soap dispenser, a faucet and a hand dryer.

The stainless steel trash can, hidden by the concrete wall, only reveals its circular opening. Toilet paper is dispensed sheet by sheet through a wall outlet.

Cleaning and disinfection of the bowl, suspended from the wall, is carried out automatically after each use. Its seat is then dried by a powerful fan, placed in the mechanical room, which projects a blade of air onto its surface.

A large LED display panel, next to the entrance door, informs the user about the use and occupancy of the cabinet, which is locked during cleaning.

Cleaning cycles, opening hours and lighting are controlled by an electronic module, which can be managed remotely on a cell phone, tablet or computer.

“The City can connect directly to this control for all the functionalities and to have statistics on toilet use,” explains Alain Bolduc.

A new function notifies the manager by email when the soap or toilet paper level is low.

The price of the single pavilion is around $200,000.

“There is no one currently in North America who does what we do,” maintains Alain Bolduc.

“Moreover, we have just signed an agreement with a large American distributor who, according to him, had been looking for a product like ours for 30 years. We also have a distributor who takes care of the Western provinces. »

So far, the company has delivered around a hundred toilets to Quebec, Ontario and the United States.

Since the retirement of Marcel Paré, Urben Blu has been owned by Alain Bolduc, Pierre Gendron and Sébastien Riopelle. The company has around thirty employees, including around twenty in production.

“Today, we have five representatives, we cover the United States and Canada and we make 10 to 15 presentations to new clients every week,” says Alain Bolduc.

In the United States, the Urben Blu self-cleaning toilet is of particular interest to oil companies, which want to offer clean sanitary facilities at their truck stops.

Urben Blu is currently working with the Quebec company Solère to add a solar battery system to its toilets, which would take over in the event of a breakdown or make them entirely autonomous.