"Mommy, what's a phone box?"
On a deserted industrial estate in the commuter town of Newark,
Nottinghamshire, there is a graveyard. But this is no ordinary resting place
for the dead. Few know of its existence; even fewer come to pay their
respects... Welcome to the graveyard of decommissioned BT phone boxes. This warehouse, run
by payphone specialist X2 Connect, is home to more than 150 of them – from a
rare 85-year-old red kiosk to state-of-the-art three-cornered machines...
Since last month, when BT announced plans to sell off 60 of its classic red
phone boxes, X2 Connect has been busier than ever. For the first time in 25
years, private buyers have the chance to own one of the K6 boxes, designed
in 1935 for King George V’s Silver Jubilee, for a starting price of £1,950 –
and demand has been huge...
Some 70,000 K6s were installed across Britain as part of the first nationwide
programme of public telephone kiosks. Now, just 10,770 remain, including two
in Normandy, France, that were installed for the 50th anniversary of the
D-Day landings, and a few in Malta, Bermuda and Gibraltar. But as payphone
use declines thanks to the spread of mobiles, 60 per cent of kiosks are
losing money, with an 80 per cent drop in the number of calls made in the
last five years. In 2002 there were 92,000 BT phone boxes on our streets;
now there are 51,500.
More information at
The Telegraph.
"X2 Connect, meet Dr. Who fan club..."
ReplyDeleteI read somewhere that one person had theirs converted to an aquarium. Wouldn't that be cool?
ReplyDelete