The well-known Sheraton Waikiki Hotel in Hawaii will celebrate its 50th anniversary next year according to reports. I kēia manawa, the hotel replaced all 1,635 rooms toilets with smart toilets. Smart toilets are set for a new outbreak in the US market.
Ua hoʻokumuʻia ma 1971, The Sheraton Waikiki Hotel is a four-star hotel that has spent US$220 million since 2019 on large-scale renovations, including the introduction of smart toilets products and bathtubs for all 1,635 Nā lumi. The hotel’s room manager said that the hotel will be celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2021, hoping to use smart toilets as one of its selling points, thus the introduction of smart toilets comes at a time when the hotel is undergoing a complete renovation. Kahi mea hou aʻe, many customers indicated in the questionnaire that they want to use smart toilets in hotels, and feel that guests have high expectations for smart toilets, which is why the hotel decided to introduce them on a large scale.
Fewer hotels in the U.S. currently use smart toilets or similar products on a large scale, Akā hōʻikeʻia nā hōʻike e like me keʻano o ka hōʻikeʻana o nā mea hana akamai i ka United States e hoʻomau, more and more American families are choosing these products. FORTUNE, USA TODAY, and other media also indicated that with the outbreak of COVID-19 , products such as smart toilets will see new development opportunities.
COVID-19 makes Americans to embrace ka smart Nā Kuoki
I kēia manawa, ka U.S. Fortune website published an article titled “Will Coronavirus Finally Get Americans to Embrace the Bidet?” (e komo pū ana me nā kāwele akamai, ʻaʻole i wehewehe ponoʻia ma lalo nei). The article argues that the panic of 1907 led to the creation of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and that the stock market crash of 1929 brought Americans WPA and Hoover Dam, and this COVID-19 outbreak may promote the popularization of toilets.
Articles from USA Today also expressed the same view, saying that the American people is beginning to embrace toilets or similar products. The article explains that since the inception of this product in France a few centuries ago, most Americans have scoffed at this product, Ma ka Iapana, Italy and other countries have used this product as the main method of post-poo cleansing, but today’s Americans may want to take a look at this product.
Ua hoʻomaopopoʻia maʻAmelika Hui PūʻIa, nāʻokiʻoki, smart toilets or similar products often share an English name “bidets”. I ka hikiʻana mai i nā koho, they also include smart toilets. Wahi a kahi hōʻike e ka hale kūʻai kūkulu BrG, the current market size of bidet in the United States is approximately USD106 million, and it is expected to grow by 15% Ma 2021. The smart toilet products produced by TOTO and Kohler start at about US$300 in the United States. I 2017, Kohler launched a survey on local customers, which showed that 33% of the surveyed users expressed curiosity about the smart toilet and intend to upgrade toilets for this purpose.
U.S. smart toilet sales continue to rise
It is said that products including bidets, ʻO nā kāpili akamai, etc. were formerly bidets. Due to ideological and other reasons, ka U.S. market is still not widely accepted this product. I 1964, Ua hui pūʻia kaʻoihanaʻAmelika Hui PūʻIa i ka Bidet a me ka noho Toulet, and added a water spray function to create a prototype of the smart toilet and spread it to Japan. Akā a hiki i ka hoʻomakaʻana o kēia kenekulia, Americans were still reluctant to accept this product except for high-end hotels and niche venues such as Hollywood celebrities.
Eia naʻe, with the increasing popularity of smart toilets in the world, Americans’ perceptions have begun to change. No kēia kumu, I nā makahiki i hala, many smart bathroom brands have been rushing to the American market, which has greatly increased the sales of smart toilets in the United States, directly activating the local smart bathroom market.
ʻo kahi laʻana, the sales volume of TOTO smart toilets has shown year-on-year growth in the U.S. market in recent years. MaiʻApelila a hiki i Dekemaba 2019, TOTO’s sales of smart toilets in the U.S. market increased by 21%, which is higher than that of mainland China (0%) a me ka Pacicidaka (14%) and other regions. Ma Mei 2019, TOTO spent JPY 3.7 billion in Thailand to build the company’s fifth smart toilet production base in the world. The purpose is not only to expand the Thai market, Akā e hui pū me ka koi e ulu ana no nā huahana i loko o ka mākeke US.
I kēia manawa, there has been a craze of local purchases of smart toilets as the U.S. became the hardest hit by the COVID-19. A Kohler spokesperson said in a previous media interview that the sales of smart toilets began to pick up at the end of February. With the increase in the number of patients diagnosed in the United States, Ua hoʻonui pinepineʻia ke kūʻai aku i nā mea hana Smack Smack. Laweʻo Toto i ka manawa kūpono e hoʻolaha ai i kāna huahana SMALLET, saying that it can provide “a more hygienic and paperless bathroom experience.”
Chinese companies rush to U.S. Kūʻai kūʻai
Ma kahi o nā palena haole, Uaʻimiʻiaʻo Chinese BANDS i nā mākeke kūʻai maʻAmelikaʻAmelika Hui PūʻIa i nā makahiki i hala. I 2015, JOMOO appeared in the Silicon Valley of the United States with the new smart bathroom products that year, demonstrating JOMOO’S determination to enter the international market. ʻElua mau makahiki ma hope mai, JOMOO chose to launch the M5 Masters Series advertisement in Times Square in New York, ka mea e hoihoi hou i ka nānāʻana i nā mea kūʻai aku american. Kahi mea hou aʻe, the bathroom advertisements of DONGPENG, SSWW and other companies have also appeared on Times Square to speak for China’s smart bathroom.
As China’s smart bathroom production technology leaps forward, exporting related products to the U.S. has also become possible in recent years. On August 15th, 2018, ka 2,400 smart toilet seats produced by Zhejiang iKAHE Sanitary Ware Co., LTD., ua māheleʻia i loko o nā meaʻeluaʻelua a hoʻounaʻia iā Ningbo Port. ʻElua mau lā ma hope aku, ua hoʻomaʻemaʻeʻia lākou a laweʻia i ka United States, becoming the first batch of “Made in Taizhou” smart toilet products that successfully entered the US market.
It can be seen that as a part of smart manufacturing, smart toilets have begun to leave the country in recent years after completely eliminating the industry haze of “going to Japan to buy toilet seats”. This has great significance no matter from the perspective of the sanitary ware industry or the entire Chinese manufacturing industry.