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THE GREEN MENU OPTIONS ARE MOBILE FRIENDLY AND ARE FASTER SO THEY ARE RECOMMENDED. THE RED MENU OPTIONS ARE SOMEWHAT SLOWER DEPENDING ON YOUR DEVICE OR BROWSER AND ARE MORE SUITABLE FOR DESKTOPS AND LAPTOPS. THE BLUE OPTIONS ARE PAGE LINKS AND WILL BE PHASED OUT GOING FORWARD
THE DECLINE OF A RED K6 TELEPHONE KIOSK
In 2016 it was becoming obvious that the area was been neglected and the weeds greatly increased with the passing of timed. I am assuming that the growth of crass and weeds is because of neglect rather than by design.
The phone kiosk in my photograph is an example of a 1936 K6 'Jubilee Box' and it is listed. It is a pity that it is not better maintained. As you can see from my photographs (September 2021)the kiosk, on North Street, is in very poor condition and the Belfast Bikes docking station is no longer at this location.
When I first photographed the kiosk in 2015 it was in good condition and appeared to be well maintained and there was a new Belfast Bikes docking station beside the Kiosk.
The Belfast Bikes station became operational at the location on the 15th April 2015 but it was removed sometime between my visit in 2018 and my visit in 2019. Late in 2017 it was announced that a few Belfast Bikes docking stations in the city centre were to be re-located to "areas of higher demand". The following were listed for removal: East Bridge Street/Stewart Street, Winetavern Street, Dunbar Link, Writers' Square and North Street.
Belfast City Council claimed that the stations to be closed were in "close proximity" to alternative stops, and "therefore would not create gaps in the network.
Lower North Street which has been described as “the street that time passed by”. It was external to the security barriers during the bombing campaign and as such it was avoided by shopkeepers and customers alike. It has never recovered especially following destruction and neglect of the North Street Arcade by fire.
The phone kiosk in my photograph is an example of a 1936 K6 'Jubilee Box' and it is listed. It is a pity that it is not better maintained. As you can see from my photographs (September 2021)the kiosk, on North Street, is in very poor condition and the Belfast Bikes docking station is no longer at this location.
When I first photographed the kiosk in 2015 it was in good condition and appeared to be well maintained and there was a new Belfast Bikes docking station beside the Kiosk.
The Belfast Bikes station became operational at the location on the 15th April 2015 but it was removed sometime between my visit in 2018 and my visit in 2019. Late in 2017 it was announced that a few Belfast Bikes docking stations in the city centre were to be re-located to "areas of higher demand". The following were listed for removal: East Bridge Street/Stewart Street, Winetavern Street, Dunbar Link, Writers' Square and North Street.
Belfast City Council claimed that the stations to be closed were in "close proximity" to alternative stops, and "therefore would not create gaps in the network.
Lower North Street which has been described as “the street that time passed by”. It was external to the security barriers during the bombing campaign and as such it was avoided by shopkeepers and customers alike. It has never recovered especially following destruction and neglect of the North Street Arcade by fire.
THE DECLINE OF A RED K6 TELEPHONE KIOSK PHOTOGRAPHS FROM 2016 AND 2017 VISITS
Commercial DisclosurePLEASE NOTE THAT LINKS BELOW MAY REDIRECT YOU TO THE AMAZON LOCATION MOST LIKELY TO SHIP TO YOUR ADDRESS
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