![]() ![]() Perhaps the most photographed telephone box in London is this one in Great George Street / Parliament Square:īefore Covid, there would frequently be queues of tourists waiting to get their photo taken in a London red phone box with the Elizabeth Tower, or more probably Big Ben to those taking photos, in the background. These original reasons for locating a phone box also apply to sites where advertising works best, and as advertised on the phone box in the photo below, at the junction of London Wall and Moorgate, there is a company (Redphonebox Advertising) that specialises in this new use. They are in locations where they are easy to be seen, and where there is a high footfall, so they originally could be found when you wanted to make a call. This one is in Aldersgate Street:Īdvertising is a potentially profitable business for the reuse of telephone boxes. One of the modern versions of the telephone box, also showing how so many of these are now used for advertising. Grade II listed (the larger K6 models) telephone boxes at Smithfield Market: So, still never letting a door shut me in a phone box, here are a selection of photos of London telephone boxes, starting with Charterhouse Square: It is why whenever I used a telephone box I would always keep my foot in the door, to keep it slightly open. As a young teenager I watched the short 1972 Spanish horror film La Cabina, or the telephone box on TV. I have to admit to finding telephone boxes rather scary. Historic England have a spreadsheet available for download here, which details the location of all listed telephone boxes. The majority are Grade II, but some Grade II*. There are some 2,390 telephone boxes which have been listed by Historic England. Having the right change for a phone call was always a problem, and hearing the dreaded pips when the money was running out and you had no more change was a challenge for calls of more than a few minutes. I can just remember the manual method of paying for a call when you had to Press Button A to put coins into the phone to make a call, then if the call was not answered, Press Button B to return the coins. The technology in the phone box has changed over the years. There have been many modifications, and significant redesigns, the majority of these coming after the Post Office / British Telecom was privatised in the 1980s. ![]() ![]() He would then update the design to the K6 which first appeared in 1934 and is the traditional red telephone box we see across the streets of the city. The model K2 telephone box was the result, which first appeared on the streets of London in 1926. The original red telephone box was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, a design he entered into a Post Office competition in 1924. The most common being advertising as they are often in prime street locations, with full length advertising covering their windows. The majority do not work, many have had their phone equipment removed, and many are not in a state that you would wish to stand in and make a call, even if they did work. So long a key part of the city’s street infrastructure, I wonder for how long they will survive. I have a number of photographic themes when walking London’s streets and for the last couple of years, London’s telephone boxes has been added to my theme list. The mobile phone has effectively killed off the need to find a telephone box, yet they are still to be found across the city. I cannot remember the last time I used a telephone box, or when I last saw anyone else using one. I will be guiding on some of these walks and whilst most of walks have now sold out, the only walk that has tickets remaining is on Friday 10th September (PM). Before exploring the London Telephone Box, an update on the walk exploring Islington’s place in the history of London’s water supply and some of the original buildings at New River Head, that I wrote about in a post a couple of week’s ago. ![]()
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