ADAM THIBODEAUX

private containers in public spaces, 2023

Restrooms and changing rooms are some of the most gendered public spaces encountered in everyday life. As “containers” of bodies, they reflect norms about gender that are rooted in historical and cultural beliefs. Currently, these norms are being challenged by transgender and gender diverse individuals and their allies. Rigid gender norms are reflected in the standardized design of toilet and locker rooms. As existing norms evolve, changes in architecture are following along. But there is also plenty of evidence for changing design practices related to other gender-related issues like the changing role of women in society, multi-cultural differences, and social participation by people with severe disabilities.

The project employs storytelling as its primary educational tool, highlighting both small-scale individual stories and larger, national and international news stories. The stories will be exhibited in the atrium for a few weeks before and after Transgender Awareness Week, with programming including a Conversation on Gender and Space with Ivan Coyote, Susan Stryker and Seb Choe. The exhibit is designed to be interactive and dynamic. Visitors can offer their own stories and comment on those of others. The exhibition will use the ready-made containers as hosts for displaying and sharing stories collected before, during, and after the event.

“Private Containers in Public Spaces” seeks to juxtapose the hyper-standardization of the built environment with the hyper-specific stories of its users as a tool for building empathy between users with unique embodied experiences. 

This exhibition is a prototype intended for public education about gender and space. It highlights the experiences we all share in the use of public spaces in which we conduct intimate and personal acts – toilet and locker rooms - by giving voice to those who use them. The intent is to encourage dialogue and reflection about how these spaces can be more responsive to our varied experiences. The components of the exhibit can be used together or individually as part of educational and advocacy activities. They serve as props and a stage for events that can be programmed to encourage engagement and discussion.

Architecture can be conceived as a collection of containers for bodies. This exhibit and associated events interrogate the standardized "containers" of the body that exist in public spaces and reveal the ways that an individualized body might come into conflict with them. Gym lockers and toilet stalls are ubiquitous ready-made containers found in toilet and locker rooms. They are familiar architectural elements, making them ideal vessels for bridging embodied differences through empathy. Their familiarity and pervasiveness allow for a broad range of individuals to share experience, commiseration, and interrogation of the ways their bodies fit and do not fit within these containers. 

 
 

Project Team:

Randy Fernando, Maya Kirch, Ed Steinfeld, Beth Tauke

University at Buffalo Sponsors:

School of Architecture and Planning

Office of Inclusive Excellence (VPIX)

Gender Institute

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Alliance (LGBTA)

Center for Inclusive Design and Environmental Access (IDEA)

LGBTQ Faculty and Staff Association

Community Sponsors:

Evergreen Health

Pride Center of Western New York

with Additional Support from:

Joey Amirato

Joshua Diamond

Andrew Boyles

Rachel Kramp

Sean Brunstein

JP Mata-Collantes

Gavin Carroll

Cindy Mierzwa

Alex Cutruzulla

Kira Podmayersky

Ian DeWald

Carol Recinos Luna

Cassidy Fisch

Kathryn Korenblyum

Gabriella Zayas

Janelle Price

Wade Georgi

Bruce Majkowski

Miguel Guitart

Caryn Sobieski

Ashley Godoy

Matthew Hervan

Charlie Saunders

Amthor Glass and Mirror