The Loo of the Year Awards are run to celebrate the best public toilets in the United Kingdom, and promote high standards.
Loo of the Year Awards | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Recognising the best toilets in Britain, Ireland and the Channel Islands |
Country | United Kingdom |
First awarded | 1987 |
Website | loo |
The awards competition receives sponsorship from a number of companies involved in providing products and services to washroom providers.
History
editFirst introduced in 1987, the Loo of the Year Awards competition has run annually, except for 1993.
Eligibility criteria
editAny type of public facility ('away from home' toilet) can be nominated for consideration. There are sixty one award categories. Eligible facilities can be located in England, Scotland, Wales or Ireland.
Anyone can submit a nomination—staff, customers, visitors, managers, owners or contractors—but owners or managers must authorise entries.
Judging criteria
editAfter an unannounced inspection from an authorised Loo of the Year Awards Inspector, nominees are graded on a scale from Bronze to Diamond. Grades are awarded based on 101 criteria, and are judged on both male and female facilities, as well as any baby changing and accessible facilities provided. The criteria include cleanliness, decor, signage, accessibility and customer care.[1]
Awards
editAwards are given in one of sixty three categories. An entrant receiving a Diamond or possibly a Platinum grading will be considered for one a number of major national awards in each of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland:
- National Category Winners (up to sixty-three categories in each country)
- National Accessible Toilet Winner
- National (Baby) Changing Facilities Winner
- Public Toilet Entries – National Winner
- Individual Category Entries – National Winner
- Changing Places Toilet Entries – National Winner
- Space to Change Toilet Entries – National Winner
- Eco Friendly Toilet – National Winner
- Local Authority Award – National Winner
- Toilets in Education – National Winner
- Hygiene Room – National Winner
Other awards include:
- Individual UK Loo of the Year Trophy
- The winner of this award is selected from one of the eight national winners in the Public Toilet Entries and the Individual Category Entries categories above.
- UK Corporate Provider Trophy
- The winner of this award is selected from organizations or authorities entering ten or more different locations and winning five or more five-star awards.
- Champions' League – Standards of Excellence Awards
- This award is presented to organizations or local authorities winning five or more five-star awards and who, in the inspectors' opinion, are maintaining a consistently high standard of management in all their Loo of the Year Awards entries.
- Local Authority Premier League
- Membership in the League is granted to the top twenty local authority public toilet providers.
- Washroom Technician of the Year Awards
- These "people awards" are open to all full-time techbicians, as well as employed washroom technicians and retained washroom technician contractors. Separate Washroom Technician of the Year Award Certificates are awarded in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland with Commended and National Winners for each country.
In addition, the overall UK winner (either an individual, in-house washroom technician teams or external washroom technician contractor teams) is awarded the UK Washroom Technician of The Year Trophy.
Overall "Loo of the Year" trophy winners
editThe winner of this category is presented with a Golden Loo Seat Trophy.
Year | Winner[3] | Sector |
---|---|---|
1987 | Hatton Gardens Hotel, Upton St Leonards | Hospitality |
1988 | The Lido, Worthing | Local Authority |
1989 | Children's World Stores | Retail |
1990 | Eagle and Child, Gwaenysgor, N.Wales | Hospitality |
1991 | Grampian Road, Aviemore, Scotland | Local Authority |
1992 | Welcome Break Services, M3, Farnborough | Transport |
1993 | No Competition | |
1994 | Heritage Motor Centre, Gaydon | Heritage |
1995 | City of Westminster Council | Local Authority |
1996 | Portsmouth Historic Dockyard | Heritage |
1997 | The Manor Hotel, St. Albans | Hospitality |
1998 | Eurotunnel, Folkestone | Transport |
1999 | The National Trust, Gibside Estate, Tyne & Wear | Heritage |
2000 | The Oracle, Reading | Retail |
2001 | JD Weatherspoon | Hospitality |
2002 | East Lothian Council, Scotland | Local Authority |
2003 | The Eden Project, Bodelva, Cornwall | Leisure |
2004 | The Highland Council, Scotland | Local Authority |
2005 | Moto Hospitality | Transport |
2006 | The Camping and Caravaning Club | Holiday Parks |
2007 | The Trafford Centre, Manchester | Retail |
2008 | Asda Stores | Retail |
2009 | McDonald's | Hospitality |
2010 | JD Wetherspoon | Hospitality |
2011 | Ceredigion County Council | Local Authority |
2012 | Staffordshire County Council | Local Authority |
2013 | Brighton & Hove City Council | Local Authority |
2014 | Danfo UK | Local Authority |
2015 | We Clean | Cleaning & FM |
2016 | Gatwick Airport | Transport |
2017 | ABM | Cleaning & FM |
2018 | J D Wetherspoon | Hospitality |
2019 | Intu | Retail |
2020 | Wychavon District Council | Local Authority |
2021 | Paultons Park | Leisure |
2022 | Mitie | Cleaning and Facility Management |
2023 | Hillcroft Holiday Park | Holiday Parks |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Inspection Criteria". www.loo.co.uk. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
- ^ "The best toilet in the UK REVEALED - and it's in an AIRPORT". Express.co.uk. 14 December 2016. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
- ^ "Hall of Fame". www.loo.co.uk. Retrieved 8 March 2020.