Peequal, a Bristol start-up founded by Hazel McShane and Amber Probyn, has cut queues for women at major events and is seeking £500,000 for its latest model. And this week the revolutionary toilet, which is the UK's first squat-and-go women's urinal, has made its debut at Glastonbury Festival, much to the delight of this festival goer. Glastonbury Festival will offer eight female urinal sites across the event to help cut long queues for the toilets.
Glastonbury Festival The six different types of toilets at Glastonbury 2024 - including compost loos Glastonbury Festival has a variety of toilets available on site, all are cleaned at least once. I tried the new women's urinals at Glastonbury - they're the future of festival toilets It does not involve any kind of funnel contraption and you don't have to get your bum out in public. On the main Glastonbury site, the "best and quietest time to use the toilets is 12am because most of the big acts have finished, although the festival is still busy", the cleaner said.
The female only toilets at Glastonbury Festival, at Worthy Farm in ...
A new scheme is helping women feel confident during their period at Glastonbury Festival by providing them with sanitary products. WaterAid has teamed up with the CIC Hey Girls to offer. At its second Glastonbury year, PEEQUAL had 80 units, praised by both users and staff, promising a clean, quick, and private experience.
Female festival-goers are preparing for a summer of shorter toilet queues, as Bristol-based Peequal rolls out its women's urinals at Glastonbury and 29 other festivals. The UK's first public women's urinal will be launched at this year's Glastonbury Festival in late June to cater for all the female festival goers.The designers and co-founders of PEEQUAL, Amber Probyn and Hazel McShane, have had their women's urinals trialled at The Love Saves the Day two.