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What will superman do now? New York City's last phone booth near Times Square is taken down and dismantled: 'Truly the end of an era'
Over the decades, the phone booths have featured widely in pop culture, from comic books to Hollywood blockbusters and TV shows.
Famously, the cramped but private spaces served as the impromptu changing rooms for journalist Clark Kent as he transformed into Superman, the Man of Steel.
That ended Monday morning, when, in front of assembled media, Manhattan borough president — the equivalent of the mayor — Mark Levine had the last booth housing two Bell System payphones at the corner of 7th Avenue and 50th Street dismantled and lifted on to a flatbed truck.
Levine said on Twitter he was 'on hand today to say ''Bye Bye'' one last time to the famed [infamous?] NYC pay phone.'
'I won't miss all the dead dial tones but gotta say I felt a twinge of nostalgia seeing it go,' he added.
Fixed-line payphones began disappearing from the streets of New York in the early 2000s as cell phone use spread, and then vanished even faster in the 2010s with the explosion of smartphones.
The final blow came when, in 2015, then-mayor Bill De Blasio went ahead with the installation of thousands of LinkNYC hotspots offering WiFi and free local calls around the city, expected to be completed by 2025.
Those new kiosks are to be gradually connected to the emerging 5G network. They will come with an app to download, which will connect users to social services and provide them free phone-call features and interactive maps. A UBS charging station is also expected at each kiosk.
'Truly the end of an era but also, hopefully, the start of a new one with more equity in technology access,' said Levine, referring to neighborhoods in northern Manhattan, such as Harlem, that are less well covered by telephone and internet networks.
The revenue generated by the high-tech project has also not been meeting its initial projections, slowing down the revolution, Bloomberg reported.
According to local media, Manhattan will keep four of the old-fashioned phone booths on the Upper West Side, on West End Avenue at 66th, 90th, 100th and 101st streets.
The pay phone will also be put on display at the Museum of the City of New York exhibition, called 'Analog City', which was first shown to the public last Friday.
Source:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-New-York-removes-iconic-payphone-booths.html
- New York City's last phone booth was located at the corner of 7th Avenue and 50th Street near Times Square
- It was dismantled Monday and shipped off on a flatbed truck in what Manhattan borough president Mark Levine called the 'end of an era'
- Phone booths have gradually decreased in the Big Apple due to the emergence of free Wi-fi and smartphones
- All 8,000 public telephones across New York have been removed over the past several years
- In 2015, then-mayor Bill De Blasio went ahead with the installation of thousands of LinkNYC hotspots
- The high-tech boards offer free Wi-Fi and local calls around the city, expected to be spread around by 2025
- Phone booths in New York were once popularly referred to as changing rooms for journalist Clark Kent as he transformed into the Man of Steel — Superman
Over the decades, the phone booths have featured widely in pop culture, from comic books to Hollywood blockbusters and TV shows.
Famously, the cramped but private spaces served as the impromptu changing rooms for journalist Clark Kent as he transformed into Superman, the Man of Steel.
That ended Monday morning, when, in front of assembled media, Manhattan borough president — the equivalent of the mayor — Mark Levine had the last booth housing two Bell System payphones at the corner of 7th Avenue and 50th Street dismantled and lifted on to a flatbed truck.
Levine said on Twitter he was 'on hand today to say ''Bye Bye'' one last time to the famed [infamous?] NYC pay phone.'
'I won't miss all the dead dial tones but gotta say I felt a twinge of nostalgia seeing it go,' he added.

- New York City removed the last of its iconic payphone booths, which was located at the corner of 7th Avenue and 50th Street, victims of the cell phone and free hotspots the city is providing

- The phone booths in New York were popularized as Superman's changing room, but locals also often found them frustrating, as they frequently did not work and afforded little privacy

- Almost all 8,000 public telephones across the Big Apple have been gradually removed over the past several years

Manhattan borough president — the equivalent of the mayor — Mark Levine (center) was with councilmember Julie Won (right) at the relic's removal on Monday to wave the booth goodbye

- Levin shared on Twitter that he 'wont miss all the dead dial tones' provided by the phone booth but that its removal gave him a 'twinge of nostalgia'
Fixed-line payphones began disappearing from the streets of New York in the early 2000s as cell phone use spread, and then vanished even faster in the 2010s with the explosion of smartphones.
The final blow came when, in 2015, then-mayor Bill De Blasio went ahead with the installation of thousands of LinkNYC hotspots offering WiFi and free local calls around the city, expected to be completed by 2025.
Those new kiosks are to be gradually connected to the emerging 5G network. They will come with an app to download, which will connect users to social services and provide them free phone-call features and interactive maps. A UBS charging station is also expected at each kiosk.

- WHERE WILL SUPERMAN CHANGE NOW?: Phone booths in New York were popularly referred to as changing rooms for journalist Clark Kent as he transformed into the Man of Steel

- A LinkNYC digital screen, often seen in the streets of the Big Apple. Then-mayor Bill De Blasio launched a digital project in 2015 to have more internet hotspots throughout the city. Users can charge their phone, connect to Wi-Fi, make free phone calls, look up interactive maps of the city and commute times

- Phone booths around the city (pictured) are a rare sighting nowadays due to the explosion of smartphones and free internet service

- The last phone booth in the Big Apple, built by TITAN, will now be part of an exhibition called 'Analog City' at the Museum of the City of New York

- The phone booth was loaded on a truck after it was removed from the street near Times Square

- Construction workers are seen removing debris from the phone booth after it was detached from the concrete
'Truly the end of an era but also, hopefully, the start of a new one with more equity in technology access,' said Levine, referring to neighborhoods in northern Manhattan, such as Harlem, that are less well covered by telephone and internet networks.
The revenue generated by the high-tech project has also not been meeting its initial projections, slowing down the revolution, Bloomberg reported.

- Phone booths have often been depicted in pop culture, from comic books to Hollywood blockbusters and TV shows

- Phone booths were an effective way to communicate before the start of the 20th century
According to local media, Manhattan will keep four of the old-fashioned phone booths on the Upper West Side, on West End Avenue at 66th, 90th, 100th and 101st streets.
The pay phone will also be put on display at the Museum of the City of New York exhibition, called 'Analog City', which was first shown to the public last Friday.
Source:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-New-York-removes-iconic-payphone-booths.html