The first time I saw the photo, I stared at it a little too long, trying to make sense of the odd…

This odd fixture in Cologne is one of those examples—an object that forces you to rethink how different cultures treat public needs, hygiene, and, yes, drunken chaos.

The First Clue: It’s Not (Exactly) a Urinal

As the comments rolled in under the original post, one of the first explanations came from someone who had gone to school in Germany. They wrote:

“When I was in school, I never thought about it. We just needed water very often in class or for someone to wash their hands. There are even toilets in university classrooms. But I guess they were installed mainly for blackboards, to clean them and get the chalk dust off your hands.”

This was the first hint: not everything built into a wall in Germany is what it looks like. Some fixtures exist simply because German practicality demands it. If you need to wash chalk off your hands, you wash chalk off your hands. No drama. No second thought.

But soon, more comments began to shift the theory in an entirely different direction.
And that direction was very German.

The Unexpected Reality: Germany Has Vomit Stations

When someone mentioned Oktoberfest, everything clicked.

“In Germany we have ‘vomiting pools’ in some public places where events like Oktoberfest are held.”

That was the moment the puzzle pieces aligned.
The strange fixture wasn’t a urinal after all.
It was a vomit basin—a designated place for people to throw up during festivals, club nights, beer-heavy celebrations, and other famously intense German events.

It sounds unbelievable until you remember that Germany is the birthplace of some of the world’s largest beer festivals. They know what their crowds need, and they design for it accordingly.

And the comments only got more vivid from there.

A Culture of Practicality… Even in the Messiest Moments

Video on the next page 👇👇👇