This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

A railway station in Cologne has hit back at people who urinate in public, putting up signs in one particularly troubled section of the car park warning “the walls pee back”.

A spokesman for Deutsche Bahn railway company told Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger, a local newspaper, it was deterring “Wildpinklers”, or “freepee-ers”, from taking a piddle in public by covering “a 30-metre stretch of wall with a special kind of paint that’s extremely hydrophobic”.

“It means any stream of liquid aimed at the wall will bounce back off at roughly the same angle,” a spokesperson explained. A diagram on the car park wall offers a more visual explanation.

ksta.de/koeln (@ksta_koeln) Achtung Wildpinkler! Diese Wand am Kölner Hauptbahnhof pinkelt zurück: https://t.co/UJ9U7B5Jvz (cm) pic.twitter.com/0rJMViWFl4

Cologne is not the first German city to pit hydrophobic paint against public urination, after an initiative that began in Hamburg’s St Pauli party district in March.

It costs about €700 (£490) to cover six sq metres with urine-repelling paint, which has raised some questions over the scheme’s efficiency.

Uwe Christiansen, a board member of the St Pauli Interest Community, came up with the idea. “It was a real annoyance that was growing and growing,” Christiansen told website The Local in March. “People were just tired of the peeing on walls, home entrances and playgrounds.”

The project’s promotional video has since had more than 5m views.

Liquid-repelling paint was originally used by Nissan to keep cars clean with the paint acting as a deflector for water-borne dirt.

According to Ultra-Ever Dry, a paint manufacturer, an object coated with hydrophobic paint develops a surface chemistry and texture with patterns of geometric shapes that have “peaks” or “high points”. These repel water, some oils, wet concrete and other liquids.

Other cities have been considering using the paint technology. San Francisco covered nine walls with the paint in a pilot scheme this summer in areas around bars and others with large homeless populations, and during the UK general election campaign this year, Manchester council considered using nano-tech paint to bounce back anything sprayed at the city’s walls.

However, there were concerns that unsuspecting pedestrians could be splashed by other liquids, such as rainwater from passing cars.