Nostalgia and the profit motive have created a market in old phone kiosks
But BT, Britain’s former telecoms monopoly, is not happy
ON A RECENT Sunday afternoon, Hampstead High Street offered a very British sight: an orderly queue outside a red telephone kiosk that has not been used to make a call for many years. Danny Baker, a retiree-turned-barista, whips up flat whites on an espresso machine where the phone used to be. The novelty of the kiosk draws in passers-by, some of whom have become regulars.
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Bigger inside”
Britain December 11th 2021
- Behind the chaos and scandal of Boris Johnson’s government lies stasis
- A court bashes Uber into compliance—again
- For the clinically vulnerable, “Freedom Day” has yet to arrive
- Britain is liberalising its listing rules to revive its battered bourse
- Nostalgia and the profit motive have created a market in old phone kiosks
- The robots are gathering to help beat Britain’s supply-chain shortages
- Britain’s new suburbs are peculiar places
More from Britain
Why have Britain’s bond yields jumped sharply?
Mostly, blame Donald Trump. But Labour’s policies haven’t helped
The phenomenon of sexual strangulation in Britain
A survey suggests the risky practice is more common than you might think
The decline in remote working hits Britain’s housing market
A return to the office means a return to town
Britons are keener than ever to bring back lost and rare species
Immigrants that everyone can get behind
A much-praised British scheme to help disabled workers is failing them
It lavishes spending on some, and unfairly deprives others
Rolls-Royce cars pushes the pedal on customisation
Be your own Bond villain