Why Sochi's terrible bathrooms are the perfect symbol for Putin's Olympics

Something stinks in Sochi, and it's not just the shoddy plumbing

Sochi toilets
(Image credit: (REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson))

A last-minute sprint to complete vast infrastructure projects for the Olympics is as much a staple of the Games as the events themselves. But Sochi, Russia, has taken it to the next level this year, ending up with some puzzling facilities that give the old bathroom at CBGB's a run for its money.

A "peculiar mix of grandiosity and bungling" defines the accommodations, writes The New York Times' David Segal, which should be thought of "not as hotels but rather as a rare opportunity to experience life in a centrally planned, Soviet-style dystopia." Though there are many construction follies to nitpick — missing light bulbs, broken elevators, uninstalled heating systems, and so on — none more perfectly exemplify the Sochi Games' number one problem (ahem) than its terrible, wacky bathrooms.

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Jon Terbush

Jon Terbush is an associate editor at TheWeek.com covering politics, sports, and other things he finds interesting. He has previously written for Talking Points Memo, Raw Story, and Business Insider.