Sex segregation in home architecture Many
Saudi traditional homes have one entrance for men and another for women. For non-related males to enter the female sections of a Saudi home is a violation of family honour. The Arab word for the secluded section of the house is
harim which means at once 'forbidden' and 'sacred'. Private space is associated with women while the public space, such as the living room, is reserved for men. Traditional house designs also use high walls, compartmentalized inner rooms, and curtains to protect the family and particularly women from the public. Moreover, sex segregation was expected in public. In restaurants, banks and other
public places in
Saudi Arabia, men and women are required to enter and exit through separate
doors. However, since 2019, Saudi Arabia no longer enforces sex segregation in restaurants and some other places.
Sex segregation in public places Since the public sphere of life is the domain of men, women are expected to be
veiled outside the secluded areas of their homes.
Non-mahram women and men must minimize
social interaction. Companies traditionally have been expected to create all-female areas if they hire women.
Public transportation is segregated all over the country. Public places such as beaches and amusement parks are also segregated, sometimes by time, so that boys and men, and girls and women attend at different hours. Special amusement parks for women, so-called "
women parks" have been created. Violation of the principles of sex segregation is known as
khilwa. Western companies often enforce Saudi religious regulations, which has prompted some Western activists to criticise those companies.
McDonald's,
Pizza Hut,
Starbucks, and other US firms, for instance, maintain segregated eating zones in their restaurants. The facilities in the families' section are usually lower in quality. Men and women may, sometimes, mix in restaurants of Western luxury hotels that cater primarily to noncitizens. Segregation was particularly strict in restaurants, since eating requires removal of the veil. Most restaurants in Saudi Arabia used to have "family" and "bachelor" sections, the latter for unmarried men or men without a family to accompany. Women or men with their families have to sit in the family section. In the families section, diners are usually seated in separate rooms or behind screens and curtains. Waiters are expected to give time for women to cover up before entering, although this practice is not always followed. Restaurants typically have an entrance for women who come without their husbands or mahram [casually their brothers], although if they are allowed in, they will be guided to the family section. Women are barred from waitressing, except at a few women-only restaurants. There are many
women parks in Saudi Arabia. The first female-only Trampoline park was established in 2018 in country's capital by Bounce. Typical examples of segregation include:
Sex segregation in academic institutions Universities are male-only or female-only. Saudi Arabia is home to the largest
female-only university in the world,
Princess Nourah Bint Abdul Rahman University, but
Effat University was the most well-known until 2022.
King Saud University Girls Campus has different colleges only for females. The
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, which opened in September 2009, is a coeducational campus where men and women study alongside each other. It was the first Saudi university to run a mixed class. All schools are sex segregated, there are only boy or girl schools. The first private formal school for girls, the Madrasat AlBanat AlAhliah was established in 1941.
Hotels The Luthan hotel was the first Saudi women's only hotel, acting more as a vacation spot for women than a mandated segregated institution. Upon entering the hotel, women are allowed to remove their headscarves and
abayas and the hotel employs only women, calling their bellhops the world's first bellgirls, providing opportunities for Saudi women in IT and engineering jobs where, outside the Luthan, are quite scarce. ==Public reception==