Find us by looking for a toilet – leave as a proud P Donor
Today’s agriculture depends on industrial fertilizers containing P, Phosphorus. This non-renewable is currently still obtained from mined Phosphate Rock which is depleting quickly. To secure our future food supplies we need to start to recover P now.
The P-BANK is a public toilet that aims to close the P-cycle. The sanitation system separates Pee from the waste water which simplifies nutrient recovery. This happens directly in the P-BANK. The recovered P is re-used as fertilizer in the P-BANK garden.
In the donor rooms you can comfortably donate in a no-mix toilet or a waterless urinal.
RECOVER
While washing hands, you can peek into the recovery lab. A process of chemical reactions recovers P from Pee safely and hygienically.
Leaving the P-Bank you’ll discover that the recovered P can be successfully reused as an alternative for mined Phosphorus.
The existence of Tiny Fishing repositories on GitHub transforms the game from a mere diversion into a learning tool. Because GitHub is an open-source platform, developers often upload the raw code (HTML, CSS, and JavaScript) of these games. For a budding programmer, this is an invaluable resource. A high school student who enjoys playing Tiny Fishing can, with a few clicks, view the source code that powers the physics of the hook or the logic of the spawning fish. It demystifies the magic of game development. Instead of being a black box, the game becomes a textbook. Players can fork the repository, modify the code to give themselves infinite money, or change the color of the fish, learning the basics of variable manipulation and logic flow in the process.
| Repository | Description | Tech Stack | |------------|-------------|-------------| | tiny-fishing | Faithful recreation of the original flash-style game | HTML5 Canvas, Vanilla JS | | tiny-fishing-clone | Simple clone with upgrade system | Phaser 3 | | fishing-game-js | Tutorial-style, great for beginners | HTML/CSS/JS | | tiny-fishing-unity-webgl | WebGL build of a Unity remake | Unity, WebGL | tiny fishing github
In the vast ecosystem of the internet, few places are as distinct as GitHub, the world’s leading platform for software development. It is a place of complex algorithms, collaborative coding, and serious technological infrastructure. Conversely, few genres are as simple and ubiquitous as the "unblocked game"—browser-based distractions often sought by students looking to pass the time in computer labs. At the intersection of these two worlds lies a surprising cultural artifact: "Tiny Fishing." While it appears to be a simple pixelated distraction, the presence of Tiny Fishing on GitHub reveals a fascinating story about open-source education, digital preservation, and the enduring appeal of minimalist game design. The existence of Tiny Fishing repositories on GitHub
: Using the GitHub search bar for "Tiny Fishing" will reveal repositories containing the source code or web assets. Unblocked Collections A high school student who enjoys playing Tiny
Recreational fishing apps often prioritize rich features and social sharing, increasing complexity, data usage, and privacy risks. Tiny Fishing aims to provide a pared-down alternative: a single-page web app and small backend that let users record trips and catches, view simple statistics, and consult local rules — with minimal permissions, no tracking, and small footprint suitable for older phones and intermittent connectivity.
behind the restaurant ‘Lücke’
entrée
donor room
recruiting donors at other facilities
recruiting donors in the bar
rewards after donating
In 2018 the Bauhaus University Weimar and WERKHAUS destinature received funding from the German Federal Environment Foundation (DBU) to develop the first P-BANK. The concept was developed by Anniek Vetter and Sylvia Debit during a semester project at the Bauhaus University Weimar led by Prof. Jörg Londong back in to 2013.
The P-BANK was first used for several months during the 100th anniversary year of Bauhaus in Weimar, Germany 2019. Later that year the P-BANK was at the Tiny Living Festival. The project was presented at the Antenna platform during the Dutch Design Week 2019.
WERKHAUS destinature built the mobile P-Bank from sustainable materials, based on the service and communication designed by Debit and Vetter, including donor-rooms containing the toilet safe! sponsored by Laufen. The recovering system is developed by the B.is, the department of urban water management and sanitation of the Bauhaus University Weimar led by Prof. Jörg Londong, with the support of Vuna and Eawag. Besides consulting Goldeimer supports getting the story and the out there!
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