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Winnipeg’s pop-up toilets back on Main Street with harm reduction focus

Residents are relieved after a popular pop-up is back in Winnipeg's Exchange District – Aug 27, 2019

The pop-up public toilet facility that moved around downtown last summer is back, but now, it’s found a more permanent home: the corner of Main Street and Henry Avenue.

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This year, the Downtown Winnipeg Biz partnered with Main Street Project to provide the service again — now, with a particular clientele in mind.

“In this area, we have a lot of people that have a need to use a public, accessible toilet,” said Melanie Drushko, the Downtown Winnipeg Biz’s director of transportation and place-making, though she added many people need access to public washrooms, not just the homeless or marginalized.

Beyond just being a place to humanely use the bathroom, the facility will be staffed by trained Main Street Project employees who will provide harm reduction services — including free condoms and needle exchange and access to opioid overdose reversal drug Naloxone  — and outreach services for people who want help.

The area is a service hub for marginalized or homeless people, said Rick Lees, executive director of Main Street Project, pointing to Salvation Army, Thunderbird House and Siloam Mission as examples.

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Access to washrooms is a societal obligation, Lees said.

“This is a way of society meeting its responsibility to provide a very basic right that we all take for granted,” Lees said.

The bright orange pop-up toilet got a more permanent location at Main Street and Henry Avenue, with a stronger focus on harm reduction. Erik Pindera/Global News

The facility will be open until the end of fall — hopefully, the next six or seven weeks, Lees said. During that time, it will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., seven days a week.

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The bright orange structure was designed by BridgmanCollaborative Architecture, sponsored by the Downtown Winnipeg Biz. The Downtown Winnipeg Biz is looking into longer-term strategies for public washrooms.

“The city has in the past worked with various organizations on facilitating a public washroom in our downtown and would be open to considering similar proposals in future,” a City of Winnipeg spokesperson said in an email.

WATCH (June 1, 2018): Winnipeg business owner fed up with people urinating on her building

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