

Mike Ott, CP24.com





Is this stool taken?

This question may have a different, more uncomfortable meaning at a new café opening in Toronto’s Koreatown. Following a trend taking over parts of Asia, toilet-themed restaurants have finally found their way to Canada.

Lien Nguyen, the owner of Poop Café Dessert Bar on Bloor Street near Christie Street, said the opening of the derriere-delicatessen is expected to be this August.

The potty-themed café, like its counterparts in Asia and elsewhere, will serve desserts themed around the dirty deed, such as chocolate ice cream, pudding, and other brown treats. Nguyen said in an email that customers will sit on fake toilets, and eat out of toilet- and urinal-shaped dishes.

Modern Toilet Restaurant, based in Taiwan with locations across Asia, is perhaps the most well-known chain paying homage to the water closet. It features shower heads mounted on the walls, tiled floors, and poop-shaped cushions on the toilet-chairs where customers sit. The lights hanging from the ceiling are shaped like plungers, and some locations even have centerpieces made from bedpans.

Nguyen said the Toronto equivalent looks to be similar to those in Asia, but it’s still under renovations. She said it will be different by only serving doo-doo desserts rather than all types of food.

“Our concept is kind of similar to that but we only serve dessert. We will be serving Thai, Japanese, and Korean desserts and we will name them in a bathroom theme,” Nguyen said. “We will post online and ask people to vote for the names."

Local resident Meg Siegel was excited to see the sign for the new restroom-restaurant. “I’m going to Japan in October and had planned on going to one then,” she said. “Now I can just go to one here.”

Siegel expects the new backside-bar will be very successful, citing Toronto’s love for trendy things.

“Toronto is adopting lots of the quirkier things from Asia. Anything that comes from Japan seems to be very trendy, like Uncle Tetsu’s,” she said. Uncle Tetsu’s is a cheesecake restaurant on Bay Street that usually has a long line out the door.

“I think people are all about places that make for a good photo op, like Sweet Jesus,” Siegal added. “I assume and hope this one will be similar.”

Nguyen is not concerned about resistance from the community over the presence of the potty-palace.

“I do not see anything wrong with it. So far people are supporting us a lot; they follow us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter. They are so excited for it.”