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Recycling of old phone booths in London

by Arushi Madan | 25-03-2015 22:38



The retrofitted payphones in London might be outmoded, but they're not useless. People across the world have found ways to repurpose them, building pop-up libraries and Wi-Fi hotspots in New York, surreal goldfish aquariums in Osaka, and now free cell phone charging stations in London.


The first "Solarbox" debuted at Tottenham Court Road in October, and since then the battery-juicing apparatus has had an incredible run. As many as 80 people a day plugged into the box (which is fueled by the sun). They did this without spending a pound, thanks to advertising that's split 70 percent for companies and 30 percent for community purposes like art and music shows. The "Solarbox" snagged a runner-up position in last year's Mayor's Low Carbon Entrepreneur contest, and now there are plans to plant 10 more around the city by the end of 2015.


"Solarbox" cofounders Harold Craston and Kirsty Kenney got interested in the project from the idea that came due to 3 reasons :

1)    Phone boxes have become sites of anti-social behaviour, they are no longer a good use of our public spaces.

2)    Battery life on our phones just isn't good enough! It was found that there wasn't really anywhere that one could charge their phone in the public realm.

3)    They  saw an opportunity to do this in an environmentally friendly way. Bringing solar down to the human level sends a really powerful message to the public.

and it was out of these 3 things that the concept was born.

Isn?t it just awesome?