So, where could we go from here?
Answer: keep it local, keep it simple. Councils already run public toilets, car parks, and wash blocks. That’s the realistic ground to fight on. In fact, it is being done by some councils, and it works at Whitby main harbour car park for instance.
The Local Council Model
Instead of dreaming about shiny new infrastructure, bolt a solution onto what already exists:
- Waste Point at Toilet Blocks
Councils already pipe sewage from their public loos. All they’d need is a coded hatch or drain cover that motorhomers and vanlifers can unlock. Keep it secure, keep it basic. - Fresh Water Taps
Same idea. Put a meter on it or run it off a token system, so it’s not abused for car washing. Even a £1 coin for 50 litres would cover upkeep. - Car Parks = Overnight Spots
Pair it with overnight parking in council-run car parks. £5–£10 a night, clean facilities, no sneaking around. Councils make money, vans get legit stopovers.
Community-Powered Add-ons
- If councils drag their heels, there’s room for a DIY approach:
- Token Clubs – A local “vanlife club” pays a small yearly fee and gets tokens or codes for disposal points. Keeps it to genuine users.
- Co-op Facilities – Community-funded taps and drains on land offered by pubs, garages, or even farmers. Money goes into maintenance, not profit.
- Sponsored Points – Local businesses chip in. A pub with a waste tap and water point outside suddenly has 20 vans eating Sunday dinner. Win-win.
The Risks
- You’ll get abuse – folk chucking all sorts of crap down drains. Needs regular checks.
- Some councils will say “encourages travellers” and shut it down before it starts. That’s politics for you.
- Costs are small but not nothing – someone has to own the upkeep.
The Takeaway
Forget motorway services – they’ll never do it unless Westminster makes them. The smart play is council facilities and community co-ops. Start small, prove it works, then spread it.
If vanlifers want it, we need to show it’s not just dumping waste – it’s money back into towns. A pint, a fry-up, a shop run. Councils love income. Play that card, and we might actually see taps and drains where we need them.
That’s the straight cut. No fantasy, no “wouldn’t it be nice.” Local, practical, community-backed – that’s the only way it’s getting done.