Engineering Best Practice
Design Around Natural Hand Movement Instead of Maximum Sensor Range
Many commercial restroom designs prioritize long sensor range, yet professional engineering often favors predictable activation inside the user’s natural handwashing position. Commercial occupants rarely stop to search for an activation point. The sensor should therefore recognize normal hand movement while avoiding activation from users simply walking past the sink. Countertop depth, faucet height, user reach, basin width, wheelchair positioning, and expected traffic flow should all be coordinated together.
Engineering Consideration
Avoid specifying the longest available sensing distance simply because it appears more advanced. Longer sensing fields may increase unnecessary activations, wasted water, and maintenance requests within busy commercial washrooms.
Why It Matters
Well-designed ergonomics improve accessibility, reduce user hesitation, shorten handwashing time, decrease accidental activations, and help create consistent experiences throughout airports, healthcare facilities, office towers, universities, and transportation terminals.
