repurposed phone booth library in NYC

the phone booth library installed by john locke in new york city
on the streets of new york architect john locke has repurposed phone booths into communal libraries or book drops,
installing bookshelves within the structures filled with books for residents to take, borrow, or exchange.
the phonebooth shown here, 'DUB 002', is part of his 'department of urban betterment' interventionist project.
adopting the same concept as james econs's 'phoneboox' in the UK, locke's project consists of a machine-cut
and assembled plywood shelf, designed with indents to hang securely to the interior of the phone booth
without the need for any additional fasteners. the pay phone and all signage remains completely viewable
and operable, nestled within the frame of the bookshelf. installed in manhattan valley and morningside heights,
the design is easily replicable in phonebooths throughout the city.

additional and closer views of the shelving unit

passersby stop to browse the books

detail on shelving unit, imprinted with john locke's insignia for the 'DUB' ('department of urban betterment')

construction diagram: milled from a single sheet of plywood, the shelf hangs freely from the phonebooth without the need for additional fasteners
'even as they are rendered obsolete by the ubiquity of smartphones, I’m interested in pay phones because
they are both anachronistic and quotidian. relics, they’re dead technology perched on the edge of obsolescence,
a skeuomorph hearkening back to a lost shared public space we might no longer have any use for.
but they can also be a place of opportunity, something to reprogram and somewhere to come together
and share a good book with your neighbors.' - john locke
all books in the project were donated by local residents.
brooklyn-based fabricators kontraptionist milled the plywood for the shelving.

part of a series of poster graphics designed by locke about the project
Unfortunately it will become a trash cubbyhole. This story will lose its luster quickly and the project will do the same shortly after. No follow up to the project 6 months from now will take place from the media or from the designer. The best feedback will come from the men that clean these booths, who unfortunately will never be heard.
I found it interesting also that a project hopes to revive an obsolete piece of equipment with books which are unfortunately becoming obsolete as well.
“The road to hell is paved with good intentions “this road is traveled more frequently than not by today’s designers. There is a great opportunity to study this project and learn from its successes and failures, learn from them, and then revisit opportunities to truly engage the neighbor communities. Maybe there is a way for each booth to address and display neighborhood specific activities and events. A place for neighbors to come and read/see neighborhood news perhaps…
Apart from that, I think you've got a point, "o0odesigno0o".
and operable"
That would be something. I can hardly find a payphone at all here in San Francisco anymore, let alone an operable one!
Instead to throwing books to the trash, we can try to use them to help the community.
This is the kind of project that starts slow; however, after it takes inertia, it can be hard to stop.
Keep going! Education is the only future this country have.
It is easy to call out all the possible failures of something like this, but that pessimistic mentality is one of the reasons humanity is in such a terrible state.
Books won't ever die. They may go out of fashion, but there will always be a certain romanticism to print media that the internet will never capture, and to have the opportunity to walk down the street and pick up a good read will only add to that experience.
The world needs more positive people like James Econs and John Locke. Learn from them and do something good, if only for the sake of doing it.
http://www.facebook.com/YouAreWhatYouRead
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