NYC Design Contest Reinvents the Payphone

Community computers could replace payphones on the streets of the Big Apple


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An artist's conception of an NYC payphone of the future. Image: NYCMayorsOffice

Will community computers soon be replacing public payphones on city streets? If the winning prototypes from this week’s Reinvent Payphones Design Challenge in New York City are any indication, then yes. The six winners used modern designs and technology to turn anachronistic amenities into digital information hubs.

Participants in the city-sponsored contest were charged with creating a prototype that will replace the nearly 11,000 public payphones in New York’s five boroughs. The franchise contracts for the installation, maintenance, and operation of the existing phones were signed in 1999 and are set to expire in October of 2014.

In advance of that date, the Bloomberg administration has already begun testing ideas for alternative uses for these public spaces, including launching interactive touchscreens around Union Square and free public Wi-Fi at payphone locations around the city.

“New York City’s public pay telephone network has incredible potential,” said Rahul Merchant, Chief Information and Innovation Officer for the mayor’s office, in a statement. “By collaborating with the city’s vibrant technology community to develop creative and forward-thinking ideas, this infrastructure could become one of our most important technological assets, helping define the 21st century streetscape in cities around the world.”

The Reinvent Payphone prototypes were judged and awarded in six different categories: connectivity, creativity, visual design, functionality, and community impact. The connectivity award went to Sage and Coombe Architects for its NYfi design, a prototype that serves as an “interactive portal to public information, goods, and services.”

FX Fowle won in the creativity category for its its NYC LOOP, a “contemporary payphone with a uniquely tailored public space.” The design includes a smart screen for making calls, as well as an “information puddle” powered by a projector that creates images on the sidewalk.

Other designs included an environmental sensor network, created by a team of students from local universities, and another student-designed prototype called Smart Sidewalks, which seeks to raise community awareness about issues like climate change and the digital divide.

To see the winning designs and vote on your favorite, visit the City of New York’s Facebook Page at http://on.nyc.gov/votepayphones.

Copyright 2013 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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  1. 1. jtdwyer 06:26 AM 3/10/13

    They'll still tear out the phone book...

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
  2. 2. alan6302 11:16 PM 3/10/13

    make sure they are waterproof. NYC may sink .

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
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NYC Design Contest Reinvents the Payphone

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