Many councils do, and some of them are excellent. This information is useful to residents.
These maps only show one council’s facilities. Open data allows all the councils’ information to be combined, to create customised maps and applications for finding toilets. These apps are better designed around the individual’s needs.
To use Camden as an example, you can see their public toilet webpage here. You can see their public toilet open data webpage here. Links to other public toilet open data webpages can be found by clicking on a council that publishes data, on the toilet map.
People have, in the past, created public toilet databases by trawling every council’s webpage on toilets. Manually checking information in this way is time-consuming and the information on a council website is not always complete. Once included in the database, there’s no way to know if the information changes, so someone has to keep re-visiting all the council webpages. Also, not all councils have webpages about toilets. Basically, it’s never going to work.
With data, a computer program can regularly reload the data so that any updates are immediately displayed.
The good news is that if you already have a toilet website or map, then you already have the information needed to create the data – location, opening hours, type of facilities provided…
You could also use the data yourselves to power your own maps on the council website. As long as the data is kept up-to-date, everything else will follow.
This does require a little work to set up. We think that if more people know where public toilets are, then the facilities become safer, anti-social behaviour reduces, and the value of the public service goes up.