Officials Declare Drive-In Brothel A Success For Sex Worker Safety

Drive-In Brothels Could Reshape Standards For Sex Worker Safety
Two empty so-called 'sex boxes' are seen at the opening day of Switzerland's first sex drive-in on August 26, 2013 in Zurich, which is aiming to get prostitution off the city streets. The drive-in, which as darkness began to fall was bathed in colorful lights, has a track where the sex workers can show off their assets and negotiate a price, and nine so-called 'sex boxes' where they and their clients can park and conclude the transaction. AFP PHOTO / FABRICE COFFRINI (Photo credit should read FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images)
Two empty so-called 'sex boxes' are seen at the opening day of Switzerland's first sex drive-in on August 26, 2013 in Zurich, which is aiming to get prostitution off the city streets. The drive-in, which as darkness began to fall was bathed in colorful lights, has a track where the sex workers can show off their assets and negotiate a price, and nine so-called 'sex boxes' where they and their clients can park and conclude the transaction. AFP PHOTO / FABRICE COFFRINI (Photo credit should read FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images)

It's been a year since Zurich, Switzerland, installed drive-in "sex-boxes" to improve safety for sex workers, and now authorities are hailing the program as a success.

Attracted by the prospect of on-site social workers and security (and no pimps), prostitutes agreed to relocate from a popular strip in downtown Zurich to the wooden, car-sized boxes just outside the city. Onsite amenities include a panic button in each "box," laundry, showers and a cafe, the Agence France-Presse reports.

On average, 15 prostitutes can be found working nightly at the publicly funded sex boxes, where clients -- who must be alone -- drive in, cruise the facility and select a sex worker, who then gets in the car and has the client park in one of the monitored boxes.

To work inside the all-night drive-in, prostitutes must pay a small tax and stop soliciting on the streets, according to The Associated Press.

Prostitution has been legal in Switzerland since 1942, but sex work was an often dangerous trade, as protection was scant.

"They get into cars with men they don't know, and they don't know where they will be taken," Ursula Kocher, who runs a Zurich advice center for sex workers, told the BBC last year. "They get driven out of the city, into a forest, away from anywhere."

A year since the new facilities were put in place, authorities can confidently say the boxes work, despite some complaining of lower earnings.

"The new regulation of street prostitution has attained its objectives of protecting the population and the sex workers," the city said in a statement, per the AFP.

"The first year of the service has been positive," Zurich social services told AFP.

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