
Then you get to a place like North Carolina, where conservative politicians have whipped up fear and prejudice in the name of protecting ciswomen and children from, assumedly, cismale pedophiles disguised as transwomen. Meanwhile, the existence of people who conform to neither a normative female or male identity is entirely erased in the eyes of the law.
#QSPACE OKLAHOMA CITY CODE#
For example, section P104.0 of the New York building code mandates: “Facilities for each sex where public toilets or bathing facilities are designed for use by more than one person at a time, separate facilities shall be installed for each sex.” In other words, gender segregation is mandated by law, so even if you want to include a gender-neutral bathroom in your restaurant, you might not be allowed to. The exhibitions engage the way gender norms are structured into seemingly apolitical building codes. “It seems obvious that your designs have implications for the people that occupy them but, for most people before the bathroom bill came to light, these places were seen as really standard and banal. “Central to our practice is the belief that design can and should play an active role in responding to social change,” Johnson continues.

But it doesn’t have to.ĭesign can and should play an active role in responding to social change In the process, design enforces and materializes this binary in space, creating environments that are hostile to, or potentially unsafe for, certain bodies. With their on-going project, Coded Plumbing, QSPACE juxtaposes the language of these bills with the language of building codes, plumbing codes and best-practice standards, finding that design regulations parallel the binarism of these laws and ordinances-in other words, the assertion of strictly two, distinct and opposite gender identities. “The language behind HB2 and other bathroom bills defining gender as biological sex is putting transgender and gender non-conforming people into possibly violent situations,” Lauren Johnson, a co-founder of QSPACE, tells me over Skype. QSPACE, a “queer architecture research organization” based at the GSAPP Incubator in New York, has been working to expose the complicity of design in this dangerous architecture of normativity: “how laws, codes, and design standards systematically create exclusionary and sometimes violent spaces for members of the LGBTQ community.”

Often unnoticed spaces, bathrooms have become the locus point for struggles to secure civil rights for trans and GNC individuals since the passing of exclusionary ‘ Bathroom Bills’ in North Carolina and nine other states last year, which, among many other things, force individuals to use bathrooms that correspond to the sex registered on their birth certificate. Last week, President Trump rescinded an Obama-era order that had provided protections for transgender and gender nonconforming (GNC) students by allowing them to use bathrooms that correlate to their gender identity.
