Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register. Please log in or create an account.
Science: Health: Public Bathroom: Cubicle
Dry-Erase Bathroom Walls   (+14, -2)  [vote for, against]
They're going to write it anyways....

So make it easy to clean off. The bathroom cubicle walls are made out of dry-erase boards and people are provided with dry erase markers.

Though you might want to bring your own; I don't want to share a marker with anybody!
-- DesertFox, Mar 10 2005

This may lead to dry-erase voting ballots, so I'm not too sure about voting here.
-- mensmaximus, Mar 11 2005


When I was 13 and tutoring a group of 9 year olds, I wrote every dirty word I knew on the first dry erase board I'd ever encountered, in permanent ink, just before the teacher came back into the room.
-- JesusHChrist, Mar 11 2005


I've seen a black wall and chalk version of the bathroom wall, but dry erase is much more HB and much more 2005 (+).
-- neilp, Mar 11 2005


Love it. I saw on TV once where they had graffiti-proof concrete...
-- ignorantimmigrant, Mar 11 2005


interesting, [Brau]
-- DesertFox, Mar 11 2005


My school has black stall walls, but the tiles are still write-able. Although even in the black walls, people have resorted to scratching crap into the walls.
-- Dickcheney6, May 01 2008


Did you know that if you write on a dry- erase board with permanent marker you can write over the top of it with a dry- erase marker and the chemicals in the dry-erase marker will make the permanent marker erasable!

This is a good idea, people need somewhere to be creative or to vent their frustrations about their boss and co-workers/classmates - maybe they can wipe it down at the end of each term/business quarter.
-- mecotterill, May 11 2008


Dry erase and steam do not mix so a bathroom with showers would require special provision (dorms are the only place I have seen anything remotely like this).
-- WcW, May 11 2008


I have thought about this before. You should see the kinds of graffiti you get in a porta-john on an a Forward Operational Base in Iraq. I always try to use a different one so I get to read them all.

My only regret: That I have but one bun to give.
-- MikeD, May 12 2008


You can write on glass with a dry erase marker and erase it afterwards. Smooth metal or glazed ceramic tiles will also work.

Of course, people scratch stuff on bathroom walls now a days.
-- yuandrew, May 12 2008


Scratches wouldn't show up that well on a dry erase wall.
-- Spacecoyote, May 13 2008



random, halfbakery