In Public: Piss
Urine is not water. It contains uric acid, ammonia, and salts. Over time, these chemicals corrode concrete, dissolve limestone, and rust iron. Historic buildings in European cities—Rome, Athens, Venice—are literally being dissolved by uric acid crystals. When a tourist pees on a wall built in 1500 AD, they aren’t just being rude; they are committing an act of slow-motion vandalism.
It is crucial to note that when we talk about "public urination," we are predominantly talking about men. Why? Because anatomy makes it easier for men to be discreet. Women suffer from the lack of public restrooms acutely. Women are far less likely to urinate in public, which means they are more likely to suffer from urinary tract infections (UTIs) or avoid going out entirely. The infrastructure gap is a feminist issue. Installing a urinal helps men; installing a safe, private, clean toilet helps everyone. The Legal Landscape: Fines, Sex Offender Registries, and Absurdity How do cities respond? Often, with disproportionate fury. piss in public
In the Netherlands, the solution is simple: pop-up urinals. During nightlife hours, mechanical urinals rise from the pavement. They are open, men stand in a row, and the waste flows directly into the sewer. It is not elegant, but it is effective. It accepts human biology rather than fighting it. Urine is not water
Public urination is not a victimless crime. It is a biological act colliding with civic infrastructure, public health, property values, and human dignity. From the back alleys of San Francisco to the railway underpasses of London, the act of urinating in public is a barometer for a city’s deeper ailments: poverty, inadequate sanitation, substance abuse, and the sheer failure of urban planning. We rarely talk about public urination in polite company, which means we rarely talk about solutions. Yet the numbers are staggering. In cities like New York, the NYPD issues tens of thousands of summonses annually for public urination. In San Francisco, a city with a notorious lack of public restrooms, a 2016 audit found that while there were 80 public toilets for dogs (dog parks), there were barely 30 for humans in the entire downtown core. and deeply problematic urban crisis.
A college student who pees behind a dumpster at 3 AM, if seen by a police officer, can theoretically be forced to register as a sex offender for life. While prosecutors rarely push for this, the threat looms. This legal shotgun approach does not deter the desperate homeless man, but it does ruin the life of a foolish teenager—solving nothing while creating a permanent underclass of "registry offenders" for a victimless biological act.
It is a familiar scene in any major city. You turn the corner from a bustling high street into a narrow alleyway, and the smell hits you first—sharp, acrid, and unmistakably human. The visual confirmation follows: a dark stain creeping from the wall, perhaps a discarded plastic bottle used as a makeshift urinal. "Piss in public" is a phrase often treated as a punchline, a crude joke about drunken lads or desperate dog walkers. But beneath the humor lies a complex, expensive, and deeply problematic urban crisis.