Gorgeous! I want the camera to pan down into the floor window, though.
Guess now I have to go to Norway to see it!
Skyfall Lounge (Mandalay Bay, Vegas) has women’s room stalls with full glass exterior walls overlooking their property. It’s kinda fun peeing with a view of Vegas at your feet.
Hey the pit toilet just past the entrance at Eldorado Canyon SP in Colorado blows a really nice cool breeze up on your ass while you’re making use of the facilities. Sure the view isn’t as good but it’s still relaxing.
On a rafting trip down the Green River in Utah, the guides were always keen to set up the portable toilet (an ammo box with a toilet seat on top) sufficiently far away from camp for privacy but with a reliably good view.
I recall a news article regarding a very unusual office building men’s room. In place of individual urinals, an entire transparent glass wall (with a drain-trough running the length of its bottom edge) was the urinal. Users would stand close up to the wall and urinate against it; close proximity and careful “angle of attack” mitigated backsplash. Why a glass wall? On the other side of the wall was an elaborate, full scale jungle/forest scene… set up like a massive diorama except – again – full scale. As explained, the idea was to provide users something interesting to look at (apart from an opaque wall… or their junk).
In Amurica someone would camp out on the other side of the river with a camera and a mission to show the libs how obscene and perverted their lifestyle is.
At Cleve-Cole hut on Mount Bogong there is a famous “loo with a view”. Its a typical outside toilet, but the door is split so you can leave the top half open. The view is fantastic.
I think most of the Anglosphere is fairly cagey about being overlooked while performing eliminations, too. Beyond that I can’t speak with even that small amount of confidence, but I am weirdly interested to find out.
Well, the French version is “Bienvenue…” and since this particular washroom is a “beautiful venue” (I’m stretching this a bit, linguistically), that is fairly apt.
Some of the wilderness areas that I’ve visited have campsites equipped with these. Some of them have pretty nice views. They’re still unpleasant to use when it’s raining or snowing, to say nothing of the black fly season! (I still was thankful for one that I encountered after having hiked a mile without finding anywhere to dig a hole that wasn’t within 200 feet of surface water!)