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The underground public toilet in Elizabeth Street near Victoria Street has historical significance as one of the first underground public toilets in Melbourne. It was the second underground public toilet for women and the third for men in Victoria. It has significance for its association with issues of gender equality and the activities of the first-wave feminists in Victoria, as a reflection.
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The Russell Street underground conveniences (male and female) are of social and architectural significance at a national level as Melbourne's first underground toilet,Melbourne's first public toilet for women, Melbourne's oldest extant public toilet, and Australia's oldest known underground toilet. Their historical associations are significant in relation to the achievement of gender equality. Melbourne's waste problem was so bad that we earned the nickname Smelbourne! It wasn't until 1902 that the first female public toilet was made available on the corner of Russell St and Bourke St.
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The council decided that underground toilets would be the most discreet option and save the women using them any embarrassment. On Friday the Herald Sun carried a story titled 'Flush fight: a sexist history of Melbourne's public toilets', rehearsing the chronology of social and technological change that saw Melbourne's first public urinal for men opened in 1859, and the first underground public toilet for women in 1902. Toilets have been a popular news item over.
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The gateway sign advices that the loo is ready for use (after removal of the concrete slab) `The underground men's public toilet in West Melbourne, built in 1938, is one of eleven built in Melbourne in the early twentieth century in response to public demand for public toilet facilities in Melbourne that were both sanitary and discreet. Street. Melbourne's historic 1902 toilet has been decommissioned and, though capped and crowned with a public sculpture, remains substantially intact underground.
vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au
A handful of extant above. The underground public toilet in Russell Street was built in 1902 and designed by the Melbourne City Surveyor Adrien C Mountain. It included facilities for men and women, and was both the first underground public toilet built in Melbourne, and the first public toilet for women.
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It was one of a number of underground public toilets built in Melbourne in the early twentieth century in response to. LOCATION: Corner Bourke and Russell Sts (former underground toilets) It might seem unglamorous now, but, in 1902, when the underground toilets formerly in operation at this site were built, women had just gained the right to vote and sit in Federal Parliament. These toilets were the first public women's toilets built in Melbourne, with four water closets, two wash basins, a store room and an.
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The collection includes Melbourne's first underground toilet, Melbourne's first public toilet for women, Melbourne's oldest extant public toilet, and Australia's oldest known underground toilet. Viewing facilities near Victoria - Melbourne{ {providerName}} Facilities found { {listMessage}} Toilets are displayed according to your preferences with the best match at the top of the list. Showing all facilities.
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