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By: Charlie Forst; Revised by Beth Doerr
Published: 1/01/2002


Introduction

A composting toilet is any system that converts human waste into compost through the natural breakdown of organic matter. The photo above shows a composting toilet from the late 1800’s. Composting toilets provide a sanitary method to recycle human waste while conserving water and protecting the environment. In addition, they produce a valuable fertilizer. Composting toilets can be divided into batch systems and continuous use systems. The models covered here are batch systems.

Basic Design

Batch composting toilets can be divided into wet models and dry models. In both models waste is covered with a dry material (ash, lime, soil, sawdust, etc) after each use and is composted in a chamber that is plastered or sealed so that it is waterproof. In a dry composting toilet, urine is collected separately from feces.Compared to wet systems, dry composting toilets have less smell, use less dry cover and produce a regular supply of Nitrogen fertilizer. Wet composting toilets are easier to construct and produce a richer final fertilizer.

The diagram below shows a front and side view of a batch composting toilet that was built in Mbandaka, Zaire, in 1988. Essentially the basic toilet design is two chambers built side by side with a floor and a center wall separation. Chamber A is used for one year, then A will be covered and chamber B will be used for one year. At the beginning of the third year the compost from chamber A is removed and used. Chamber A is then put back in use while the contents of chamber B composts.

TN47 whole system with A and B labeled

Double Walled Composting Toilets

Composting toilets can be designed with passive solar ventilation for better air circulation, the elimination of odor, and quicker composting action. This is accomplished by constructing a double wall on one side of the upper structure. The outer skin of the double wall should be transparent plastic material or sheet metal roofing painted black. The sun warms the air between the inner and outer walls and as the warm air rises, it draws the air from the upper part of the toilet through the pit and into the double wall, where it continues to warm and rise. A toilet without a double wall is a typical basic composting toilet.

The top step (shown as “A” below) is a removable slab for compost removal. Be certain that the roof overhang is sufficient to prevent pit back fill.

TN47 overhead

Overhead view

TN47 front with C and B labels

Front View

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TN47 side view double front

Double Front Wall Side View

 

TN47 side view double back

Double Back wall. Side view

 

 

Dry Composting Toilets

TN47 dry composting latrine designDry composting toilets separate liquid waste from solid waste. Liquid waste is mixed with water and used as a source of Nitrogen. After each use solid waste is covered with a small amount of dry material and toilet paper is discarded in a waste bin.

Dry composting toilets use the same basic composting toilet design with 2 sealed chambers and add a urine diverter and collector. The photos below show several models of urine diverters including ones constructed out of concrete and plastic containers.

TN47 separated latrine

 

Additional Resources

http://practicalaction.org/?id=water_and_sanitation
www.lifewater.org/resources/sanitation.html#SAN
www.weblife.org/humanure/index.html
www.ecosanres.org/pdf_files/ToiletsThatMakeCompost.pdf

Cite this article as:

Forst, C. 2002. Composting Toilets . ECHO Technical Note no. 47.