Abstract:
The invention concerns a rectangular, in particular square, multipurpose sanitary installation, comprising essentially two separate units, namely a dry toilet unit (A) including essentially a wash basin and a toilet and a rectangular washroom (B). the washroom is delimited by at least two adjacent walls of the installation and by a mobile element perpendicular to one side of the installation and moveable parallel to itself, such that the surface of the washroom (B) may vary and with it the surface of the dry toilet unit (A). A mobile element may be used as water-retaining wall or as bench.

Description:
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
   This application is a Continuation of PCT Application No. PCT/IB2003/004654 filed Oct. 16, 2003, claiming priority of French Application No. 02/12917 filed Oct. 17, 2002, which is included in its entirety by reference made hereto. 

   BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
   1. Field of the Invention 
   The subject of the present invention is a rectangular, particularly square multipurpose sanitary facility, comprising essentially two distinct spaces, that is a space for the dry dressing room comprising essentially a washbasin and a WC and a rectangular wet room. 
   2. Description of the Related Art 
   From patent FR 1 379 768 a domestic hygiene assembly is known consisting of three distinct enclosures forming respectively a dressing room comprising a washbasin, a wet room comprising a tub-bath and a dressing room comprising a WC, these enclosures being able to be grouped together as desired to form a coherent set in which the wet room is entirely occupied by a circular tub communicating with the dressing room via a door whose threshold is formed by the edge of the tub. In one embodiment, the three enclosures are in a row and the wet room occupies the whole width of the facility. The dressing room or dry dressing room also comprises a rest bed which may also be a medical couch. Each of the enclosures has its own destination and comprises the installation of appropriate sanitary articles, which allows it to be used separately and simultaneously with the other two, without the corresponding users getting in one another&#39;s way. The disadvantage of this facility is however, that it occupies an area of approximately 8 m 2 , which was greater than the construction standards in force before the adoption of the standards relating to the needs of handicapped persons. 
   BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
   The essential aim of the invention is to reduce the length of the facility while retaining the dimensions of the wet room provided in the prior art and while offering the possibility of having a dry dressing space sufficiently large to accommodate, in length, a rest bed as provided in the prior art. 
   This aim is achieved by the multipurpose sanitary facility according to the invention wherein the floor of the wet room is approximately flat and wherein the wet room is delimited, on the one hand, by at least two contiguous walls of the facility and, on the other hand, by a movable element perpendicular to one side of the facility and movable parallel to itself, so that the surface area of the wet room may vary and with it the surface area of the space for the dry dressing room. 
   The movable element can be moved to the end of the facility so that the surface area of the wet room may vary between practically zero and a maximal determined value. 
   According to a first embodiment, the wet room is delimited by three contiguous walls of the facility whose walls are, in pairs, of different lengths. 
   According to one embodiment, the walls of the facility have a cornice and the movable element consists of a partition suspended on the cornice and furnished with means of rolling on this cornice. 
   The movable partition may also have storage volumes. 
   According to one embodiment of the invention, the space for the dry dressing room comprises a fixed seat adjacent to the movable partition in a position of maximum surface area of the wet room, this seat being convertible into a rest bed when the movable partition is pushed back to the end of the wet room. 
   According to embodiments, the sanitary facility according to the invention comprises an auxiliary element that can be used alternatively as a banquette or as a wall for keeping water in the wet room, that is to say as a fourth wall of a bath or of a rectangular splash pool whose three other sides are formed by the walls of the facility. 
   Since the auxiliary element used as a water retention wall has to provide a seal in its contact with the walls and the floor of the facility, the facility comprises means for pressing the auxiliary element against the floor and against the lateral walls of the facility. 
   According to one embodiment, the lateral walls of the facility have a console having a bottom face inclined, such that the space between the floor and the console diminishes progressively towards the respective walls, wherein the smallest narrow faces of the auxiliary element, and at least one of its long narrow faces is elastically deformable and that the length and the height of the auxiliary element, free of pressure, are respectively slightly greater than the width of the facility and at the shortest distance between the consoles and the floor, such that when the auxiliary element is in place, it is compressed longitudinally between the walls of the facility and vertically between the consoles and the floor, and the auxiliary element is covered with a sealed elastic padding and it contains its own means of extending its dimensions making it possible to press the auxiliary element against the walls of the facility and against the floor. 
   According to another embodiment, the facility is square and the wet room is delimited by two walls of the facility and by one internal wall. 
   Other features of possible embodiments will be evoked during the description of an embodiment of the invention made with reference to the appended drawing. 
   Thus, as in the prior art, the wet room can be used both for the bath and for the shower and secondarily as a splash pool! 

   
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     The appended drawing represents, as examples, two main embodiments of the invention. 
       FIG. 1  is a schematic plan view of a second embodiment of the sanitary facility. 
       FIG. 2  is a schematic view in perspective of the wet room and of the technical space of the facility according  FIG. 1 . 
       FIG. 3  is a side view of the bench/bath of the second embodiment. 
       FIG. 4  is an end view of this bench/bath. 
       FIG. 5  is a schematic plan view of the wet room fitted with the bench/bath  1 . 
       FIG. 6  is a schematic view in elevation thereof. 
       FIG. 7  represents a water retention barrier. 
       FIG. 8  is an end view of this barrier. 
       FIG. 9  is a view in section thereof. 
       FIG. 10  is a schematic view, in elevation, of the facility showing the positioning of the retention barrier. 
       FIG. 11  is a schematic plan view of the cleaning and storage means. 
   

   DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
   The facility of the first embodiment is of rectangular shape. It may form a portion of a building or, advantageously, a prefabricated enclosure in rectangular parallelepipedic shape, prefabricated and deliverable fully equipped. This enclosure may be made in any appropriate material. 
   The enclosure has an entrance that may be closed by a door with two leaves and. Optionally, the enclosure may have two window openings. 
   The enclosure is divided into two spaces, one space for the dry dressing room A and a wet room B for the bath and the shower. The spaces A and B are separated by a box-shaped partition. The partition can be moved in order to vary the surface areas of the spaces A and B. 
   The dry dressing room space A comprises an oblique partition delimiting a triangular space in one of the corners of the space A. The space accommodates the technical pipework, pumps, wastewater discharge duct, etc. Perpendicular to the wall a sliding door is installed which interacts with an auxiliary internal wall to close off a subspace A′ constituting a WC fitted with a suspended pan. On the other side of the sliding door a washbasin is placed in front of a mirror. 
   The movable partition is furnished with a central door. One of the sides of the door is subdivided into storage compartments, for the storage of towels and dressing room products. The other side of the door forms a vertical box-shaped element in which a round brush is installed that can be rotated about a vertical axis. Above the door, across the whole width of the movable partition, there extends a box-shaped element containing a rotary round brush. 
   Along the lateral walls of the wet room B run two consoles at a height of approximately 40 cm above the floor. 
   As has been mentioned hereinabove, the movable partition may be moved parallel to itself into the wet room so as to reduce the surface area of the latter and to increase the surface area of the space A for dry dressing room. For this purpose, the movable partition is furnished, on each side, in its top portion, with a rolling gear consisting of two rollers, these rollers running in rails formed or fixed in two cornices situated approximately 2 m from the floor. The cornices run almost to the end of the wet room so that the partition may be pushed back to the end of the wet room. The surface area of the wet room therefore varies in practice between the maximal value and zero. The traveling element has recesses for the passage of the consoles. 
   The facility is also fitted with an auxiliary element whose general shape is a rectangular parallelepipedic panel. This auxiliary element is intended to be used either as a banquette, or as a water retention wall so it will hereinafter be called quite simply a bench-bath. This bench-bath is made of light material so that it can be easily handled by any user. Its ends and at least one of its narrow longitudinal faces is covered with or made of an elastic material, for example rubber, and the bench-bath has a length slightly greater than the distance separating the lateral walls of the facility and a width slightly greater than the height of the consoles measured against the lateral walls of the facility. 
   When the bench-bath is used as a banquette, it is simply placed flat on the consoles. 
   When it is used as a water retention partition, it is engaged by a slight rotation about a vertical axis beneath the consoles with its elastically deformable edge on the floor. 
   The consoles have a bottom face slightly inclined so that the engagement of the bench-bath beneath the consoles has the effect, on the one hand, of vertically compressing the bench-bath and therefore of pressing its elastically deformable face against the floor and, on the other hand, of compressing the bench-bath longitudinally between the opposing walls of the facility. This creates the seal. 
   If it is planned to use the bench-bath also for delimiting a splash pool, at least one of the large faces of the bench-bath will also be elastically deformable and auxiliary consoles will be provided on the lateral walls of the facility to press the bench-bath, laid flat, against the floor and seal the splash pool. 
   In embodiment variants, the bench-bath may be fitted with its own means for its axial and transverse extension. 
   The cylindrical and rotating brushes are used for the automatic washing of the wet room. The horizontal brush cleans the ceiling, the end wall and the floor, plus the lateral walls above the cornices, above its ends. For washing the ceiling, the brush is guided by the rails of the cornices. After having swept the ceiling, the brush is guided to sweep the face on the wet room side of the movable partition and, having reached the floor, it sweeps the floor and the sides of the wet room situated below the consoles. 
   The vertical brush is used to sweep the vertical walls of the wet room, between the cornices and the consoles. It makes a run there and back to return to its housing in the movable partition. The horizontal brush may of course be used to clean the bench-bath. Various mechanical means may be used to move and guide the brushes, for example telescopic arms or pantographs. The rotation of the brushes is advantageously provided by means of flexible shafts. 
   The sanitary facility according to the invention may be executed in thousands of more or less sophisticated ways. In its simplest version, the movable partition may be stripped of storage means and brushes. According to a particular variant, the lateral walls of the facility have vertical wall hooks into which the bench-baths are slotted to form a basin and the bench-bath is fitted, at its ends, with retractable pegs furnished with a ramp intended to create the vertical pressure on the bench-bath. 
   A second embodiment will now be described with reference to  FIGS. 1 to 11 . 
   As emerges at first glance from  FIG. 1 , this embodiment differs essentially from the first embodiment in the square shape of the facility  30  and in that the wet room B occupies only a portion of the sides of the square. In addition, the sliding door, the oblique partition and the triangular space of the first embodiment are advantageously combined into an L-shaped technical space  32  (technical center C.T and storage room), the leg of the L being formed by two parallel walls  33  and  34 , the wall  33  limiting the wet room, while the wall  34  delimits a rectangular space  35  in which a WC  36  is placed. A washbasin  37  is advantageously situated at the inner end of the technical space  32 . There is a movable partition  38  that can be moved in the direction of the arrow. In front of the washbasin  37 , the dry dressing room A is laid out in which is disposed a rest bed  39  mounted on rollers and articulated. The technical space  32  accommodates not only the water, electricity and air conduits and the water and air discharge conduits, but also cleaning means that will be described hereinafter and this space is also used as a cupboard for storing the bench-bath and another auxiliary device that will also be dealt with hereinafter. 
   All the equipment is thus combined in a compact assembly forming a subassembly capable of being factory built. In addition, the central position of the technical space  32  makes it possible to produce sanitary facilities with variable surface areas by simply modifying the width of the wet room and the width of the dry dressing room. These features increase the installation possibilities of the sanitary facility. 
   The wall of the technical space  32  has, close to the washbasin  37 , a first door  40  extending over the whole height of the wet room. The wall  33  also has two smaller doors  41  and  42  extending from the ceiling over a portion of the height of the wet room, approximately 45 cm above the ground, in order to leave an interstice  43  between the bottom of these doors and the bottom portion of the wall  33 , so as to form a kind of low wall  44  extending below the doors  41  and  42 . In the wall of the sanitary facility opposite the wall  33  a horizontal groove  45  is formed of rectangular section and whose bottom face is situated at the same level as the top of the low wall  44 . This groove and this low wall are intended to support a banquette  46  shown in figures  10  and  11 . This banquette  46 ,is furnished on its bottom face with two parallel battens  47 ,  48  shorter than the banquette and used, on the one hand, to position the banquette longitudinally between the wall  33  and the opposite wall and, on the other hand, to position the banquette transversely on a water retention element as will be described hereinafter. One of the doors  41  or  42  may be pushed back inside to make it easier to install the banquette  46 . The banquette  46  in place is shown in figures  12  and  13 . As illustrated in  figure 12 , the banquette  46  may be moved from one end to the other of the slot  45  and of the low wall  44  to occupy, for example, the position  46 ′. The dimensions of the banquette are, for example, 160×30×10 cm. 
   In this embodiment, the banquette  46  cannot immediately be used as a water retention element, but it nevertheless constitutes an essential means thereof. The actual water retention is provided by an auxiliary retention element  49  shown in  FIGS. 7 ,  8 ,  10  and  11 . This water retention element is advantageously designed like a vehicle wheel, that is to say with a rigid portion, for example made of light metal, having a rectangular-shaped core or wheel center  50 , whose periphery has a V-shaped profile  51  ( FIG. 9 ), in which an elastically deformable and where necessary compressible packing  52 , for example made of rubber, is housed. The profile  51  could also be U-shaped or similar. The assembly shown in  FIG. 9  is also overlaid with a sealed cover  53 . The retention element  49  has, for example, the following dimensions: length 150 cm, width 20 cm, height 35 cm. In any case, its length is substantially equal to the width of the wet room, and its height markedly greater than the height of the low wall  44  and level with the bottom face of the groove  45 . 
   The installation of the water retention element is illustrated in  FIG. 10 . The retention element  49  is first erected vertically in the desired location of the wet room, situated between the ends of the groove  45 . This installation is carried out with a slight compression of the vertical sides of the retention element  49 , that is to say without particular pressure, the slight compression being just sufficient to keep the element  49  in position. The banquette  46  is then inserted obliquely into the groove  45  as shown in  FIG. 10 , above the retention element  49 , so that its battens  47  and  48  are either side of the retention element  49 . The banquette  46  is then lowered while exerting a pressure P on its other end. The banquette  46  is thus used as a lever with the top edge  54  of the groove  45  as the fulcrum point. The door  41  or  42  situated opposite the banquette  46  is opened into the technical space. This makes it possible to bring the free end of the banquette  46  onto the low wall  44  and then the corresponding door  41 ,  42  is closed so that the latter holds the banquette  46  vertically by maintaining the compression exerted by the banquette  46  on the retention element  49 . This retention element  49  is thus pressed against the floor and equally against the lateral walls of the wet room by the deformation of the packing  52 , thereby sealing the space thus formed. 
   The technical space  32  also serves as a storage space for the banquette  46  and the water retention element  49  and for two rotating cylindrical brushes of vertical axis  55  and  56 , as shown in  FIG. 11 . 
   The banquette  46  is stored facing the door  41  while the water retention element  49  is stored facing the door  42 . The storage locations and the brush  56  are situated in an oval-shaped housing  57  extending from the floor to the ceiling of the facility and used as a collector of overflow water from the bath, and for outflows from the washbasin  37  and the shower. The mechanized brush  56  can be drawn along a rail in a circuit  58  ensuring the cleaning of the housing  57 , including walls and ceiling, and simultaneously of the banquette  46  and of the water retention element  49 . 
   The brush  55  is housed at rest in a housing  59  situated just behind the door  40 . In use, the brush  55  moves along a rail forming a track  60 , approximately in a spiral, inside the wet room, so as to totally clean this wet room, that is to say both the walls, the floor and the ceiling. 
   The bottom portion of the housing  59  of the brush  55  comprises a basin which the brush  55  also cleans and which is in the path of the water running from a drain grating  61  to the central drain.