Firm to turn phone boxes into mini-offices

Firm to turn phone boxes into mini-offices

Performers stand next to telephone boxes at the start of the New Year's Day Parade in London on January 1, 2016. (Reuters photo)
Performers stand next to telephone boxes at the start of the New Year's Day Parade in London on January 1, 2016. (Reuters photo)

New York: A former venture capitalist is planning to restore the former glory of Britain's famous red telephone boxes by turning some of them into mini-offices for on-the-go workers.

Jonathan Black, chief executive of New York City-based Bar Works Inc, said his company was refitting phone booths in five British cities with 25-inch screens, scanners, printers, a wireless mouse and Wi-Fi connection -- as well as free coffee.

"It's an alternative to, say, Starbucks but obviously it provides you with total privacy," said Black, a Brit who lives in New York.

Privately-owned Bar Works launched in Manhattan last year, offering bar-themed workspaces in popular locations. Users pay a monthly subscription in return for access to the premises and unlimited use of office facilities.

The phone boxes will operate using the same model. Monthly membership of "Pod Works" will cost £19.99 ($29), and Black said he expected at least 10,000 members by the end of this year.

Though their original purpose has all but disappeared with the advent of mobile phones, the classic red phone box, designed in the 1920s, was voted the greatest British design of all time in a survey last year.

Bar Works has leased 15 of BT Group Plc's old phone boxes in cities such as London and Edinburgh and plans to launch the first of them in about eight weeks.

"The red boxes were actually put in for convenience," said Black, "so naturally they all hold very high-profile locations."

Bar Works also plans to open four or five larger premises in Britain by 2017. Globally, the market for flexible workspace is dominated by Regus Plc and New York City-based WeWork.

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