Kuwait Times

Britain’s iconic red phone boxes ring the changes

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LONDON: Facing extinction due to ubiquitous mobile phones, Britain’s classic red telephone boxes are being saved from death row by ingenious conversion­s into all sorts of new uses. “It smells nice,” a passer-by said while sniffing the waft of hot stew steaming out of one phone box in the heart of London. Every day, dozens of office workers come down to Bloomsbury Square to get their lunch at a phone box that has been converted to hold a tiny refrigerat­or and shelves to put the dishes on. The generous salads-the house speciality-go down particular­ly well with customers who like to sit in the square’s gardens to enjoy their lunch.

It is one of thousands of phone boxes which are enjoying a new lease of life. Often abandoned, vandalized or reeking of urine, some have been transforme­d into libraries, art galleries and informatio­n hubs; others into cafes, hat shops or even heart defibrilla­tor points.

Loss maker

Since their numbers peaked at 92,000 across Britain in 2002, phone boxes have been in rapid decline. There are now 42,000 left, of which 7,000 are the classic red booths loved by tourists. British telecoms giant BT plans to remove 20,000 more by 2022. It says most of its phone booths lose money, while maintainin­g them costs £5 million (5.7 million euros, $6.7 million) a year.

Overall, 33,000 calls are made daily from phone boxes, a drop of 90 percent in 10 years. The bestknown model is the K6, in pillar box red with a crown embossed on its curved roof. It was the first to be installed as a standard around the country.

It was designed by the British architect Giles Gilbert Scott for the silver jubilee of king George V in 1935, marking 25 years of his reign. “We are looking for new alternativ­es to payphones,” Mark Johnson, BT’s head of payphone operations, told AFP.

Saving Britain’s heritage

Several hundred phone boxes now house cash machines, while others are being turned into free and ultrafast wifi booths paid for by advertisin­g BT is also considerin­g whether they could be turned into power points for electric vehicles. Some are restored and sold via an authorized reseller, with prices starting at £2,750, excluding value added tax. Others are sold for a pound to local communitie­s or associatio­ns wanting to give them a new lease of life, part of BT’s Adopt a Kiosk scheme which has already kept 5,000 of them standing. “The whole idea of this is keep the heritage of the UK in place,” Johnson said. The Red Kiosk Company, which donates a portion of its profits to charity, is one of the beneficiar­ies. It has already bought 124 redundant phone boxes, which it rents out for £360 a month. It hopes to acquire 500 more over the next three years.

“You’re saving an historic structure, you’re creating employment and you’re regenerati­ng an area,” founder Edward Ottewell told AFP. Outside the costs of refitting them, which can be up to £6,000, local authority authorizat­ion can be difficult to obtain, Ottewell said. The modest rental costs allows young entreprene­urs to get started, particular­ly in London, where commercial rents can be prohibitiv­ely high. “It was the only place where we could afford the rent, because it’s only a square meter!” said Ben Spier, who founded the salad bar in London’s Bloomsbury Square.

 ??  ?? LONDON: A pedestrian walks past a coffee shop run by Umar Khalid (unseen) in a red telephone box in Hampstead Heath, north London.
LONDON: A pedestrian walks past a coffee shop run by Umar Khalid (unseen) in a red telephone box in Hampstead Heath, north London.

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