Campaign to save the KX100 phonebox

This article was first published by Twentieth Century Society.

The Twentieth Century Society has revived its famous phonebox campaign in an attempt to save three modern KX100 telephone kiosks – in England, Scotland and Wales as the end of the public payphone nears after more than 140 years of service.

Produced between 1985 and 1996, the KX100 has long divided opinion, yet represents the final flourish of design-led telecommunications infrastructure in the public realm. Underappreciated in comparison to its iconic predecessors, C20 Society is now seeking to proactively preserve the best examples before they disappear completely – including one whose location is a mainstay of pub-quiz trivia, one powered by renewable energy, and one in the most wild and remote corners of the UK, in the Outer Hebrides.