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  2. Blair toilet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blair_toilet

    The Blair Toilet (a.k.a. Blair Latrine) is a pit toilet designed in the 1970s. It was a result of large-scale projects to improve rural sanitation in Rhodesia under UDI at the Blair Research Institute, and then deployed further during the 1980s after Zimbabwean Independence. There was mass deployment of the toilet design in the rural areas of ...

  3. Pit latrine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pit_latrine

    Ideally, the shelter or small building should have handwashing facilities available inside or on the outside (e.g. supplied with water from a rainwater harvesting tank on the roof of the shelter) although this is rarely the case in practice. In the shelter, anal cleansing materials (e.g. toilet paper) and a solid waste bin should also be available.

  4. Outhouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outhouse

    [D] The term "outhouse" is used in North American English for the structure over a toilet, usually a pit latrine ("long-drop"). However, in British English "outhouse" means any outbuilding, including such as a shed or barn. [50] In Australia and parts of Canada an outdoor toilet is known as a "dunny". "Privy", an archaic variant of "private ...

  5. Latrine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latrine

    A latrine is a toilet or an even simpler facility that is used as a toilet within a sanitation system. For example, it can be a communal trench in the earth in a camp to be used as emergency sanitation , a hole in the ground ( pit latrine ), or more advanced designs, including pour-flush systems.

  6. Two-up two-down - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-up_two-down

    Those built before 1875, the pre-regulation terraces, shared one toilet between several households. Those built after the passage of the Public Health Act 1875 (38 & 39 Vict. c. 55), the so-called byelaw terraced houses, each had its own toilet, usually outside. The rapid urbanisation of Britain during the Industrial Revolution meant that these ...

  7. Nathan and Olive Boone Homestead State Historic Site

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathan_and_Olive_Boone...

    Nathan and Olive Boone Homestead State Historic Site, located two miles north of Ash Grove, Missouri, is a state-owned property that preserves the home built in 1837 by Nathan Boone, the youngest child of Daniel Boone. [4]

  8. Myendetta Homestead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myendetta_Homestead

    Myendetta Homestead is a substantial timber homestead on a large property (15,981.036 hectares (39,490.00 acres)) of flat, lightly wooded land, 30 kilometres (19 mi) south-west of Charleville. [1] The house sits within the remnants of a house garden that in 2013 is defined by a lawn.

  9. Hoyle Historic Homestead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoyle_Historic_Homestead

    The Hoyle Historic Homestead, also known as Hoyle Family Homestead, Peter Hoyle House, and Pieter Hieyl Homeplace, is a mid- to late-18th century two-story house in Gaston County, North Carolina, with notable German-American construction features, the main block of which reflects two, and possibly three, phases, but the exact construction dates have not been determined.