Industry Review — MultiFeed BathSelect Automatic Soap Dispensers
The following reviews represent an evaluations, by architects, plumbing engineers, construction managers,
and facilities directors.
All reviews are for large-scale commercial deployment and incorporate the
technical concepts around BathSelect centralized MultiFeed architecture, sensor stability, power logic, lifecycle serviceability, and operational resilience.
Walter N — Senior Plumbing Engineer
Firm Type: National Engineering Consultancy
Project Type: International Airport Expansion
Scope: 32 lavatories · 96 dispense points
★★★★★ 5.0
We evaluated BathSelect MultiFeed soap dispensing system as part of a high-traffic terminal expansion where
downtime tolerance was effectively zero. Centralized soap supply with distributed dispense heads proved
significantly more resilient than individual cartridge units during simultaneous peak usage.
Engineering Evaluation
- Feed architecture: a single reservoir supplying multiple stations via manifold distribution; allowed capacity sizing based on peak passenger throughput.
- Flow consistency: stable dispense volumes under concurrent activation at adjacent sinks.
- Sensor logic: non-contact activation remained reliable under high ambient light and reflective countertop finishes.
- Power selection: AC primary (with DC backup) specified to ensure continuous operation during maintenance or power transitions.
- System robustness: sealed housings and protected routing reduced risk from washdown and aggressive janitorial practices.
E. Lang—Project Architect
Firm Type: Commercial Architecture Studio
Project Type: Corporate Headquarters Campus
Design Priority: Unified touchless hygiene strategy
★★★★★ 5.0
The BathSelect MultiFeed system allowed us to separate the user-facing design from the
service infrastructure. Dispense points remained visually minimal while all replenishment
and maintenance activity was relocated to secure back-of-house zones.
Design + Coordination Notes
- Design consistency: identical dispenser heads across restroom banks eliminated visual clutter.
- Early coordination: Tubing routes and access panels were resolved during the DD phase, preventing cabinet conflicts.
- Clean counter strategy: eliminated visible refill activity during occupied hours.
- Hygiene narrative: hands-free soap delivery aligned with corporate wellness and infection-control goals.
Marwan Q — Construction Manager
Role: CM-at-Risk
Project Type: Large Mixed-Use Development
Deployment: 72+ dispense points across multiple floors
★★★★★ 5.0
From a construction standpoint, success depended on treating the MultiFeed system as a
distribution network rather than a collection of independent fixtures. Once rough-in
coordination was resolved, installation scaled efficiently floor by floor.
Field & QA Observations
- Rough-in accuracy: early confirmation of backing and service clearances prevented rework.
- Line management: protected tubing paths minimized damage risk during close-out.
- Commissioning repeatability: once primed and calibrated, systems behaved consistently across zones.
- Documentation: as-built line maps simplified turnover to facilities management.
Stan M — Director of Facilities Operations
Organization: Large Office & Transit Portfolio
KPI Focus: Service intervals · uptime · labor efficiency
★★★★★ 5.0
Operationally, the MultiFeed system reduced refill labor and virtually eliminated soap outages
during peak occupancy periods. Centralized replenishment changed our maintenance model from
reactive to scheduled and predictable.
Operational Performance Metrics
- Refill frequency: reduced from multiple daily touchpoints to scheduled bulk refills.
- Uptime: maintained consistent soap availability during high-demand windows.
- Standardization: a single soap chemistry across all stations reduced clogging and variance.
- Lifecycle confidence: the system supports long-term deployment without sacrificing user experience.