There are only four outdoor phone booths left in Manhattan – and they’re all on West End Avenue. That’s it: four.

This one is at 101st Street:

Phone Booth 01

This is at the corner of 100th Street:

Phone Booth 02

This tree-shrouded booth can be found at the corner of 90th Street.

Phone Booth 04

Finally, this is at 66th Street.

Phone Booth 05

And that’s it.

If you happen to pass by, I seriously advise you to stop in one of these booths while they’re still around. Note that someone still cares enough to keep the overhead light in proper working order. Close the door (be amazed that they even have doors), and you’ll find yourself in a veritable fishbowl plunked down in the center of Manhattan. The walls actually keep out a good amount of sound, and it’s surreal to look out at the world around you with something you don’t usually get on a busy Manhattan avenue: personal space.

Phone Booth 03

It’s funny to think how the idea of an enclosed space to have a phone conversation now seems like an incredible luxury. I have a feeling these are only still around due to a neighborhood advocacy association, and I cannot praise them enough for keeping the phone booth off the extinction list.

This site has tons of pictures of phone booths, both from New York and throughout the world, for anyone interested. Forgotten-NY has a great article on other rare phone miscellany around the city.

-SCOUT

UPDATE: In case it wasn’t clear above, I am referring ONLY to Manhattan outdoor four-walled phone booths. If it doesn’t have a door, it ain’t a phone booth!

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  1. Otto Avatar

    It was nice to see the Phone Booth pix, now that they have been gone for almost a generation I’m sure there will become cult objects but I worry that the few taht are left will be gone soon.. Hey someone needs to change into his Superhero costume.

  2. Natalia Sverchkova Avatar

    Many thanks for a wonderful blog! Your post reminds me of an art installation by the artist Sophie Calle in collaboration with the writer Paul Auster. Calle adopted a phone booth in Tribeca, cleaned it and embellished it with various comfy elements such as water, snacks, a note pad, etc.

  3. Yoshiko Heuangvilay Avatar

    Hi .. thanks for the post, i’d love to see more from you 🙂

  4. […] moonwalkGeorge Washington transcribed these civility and manners rules from an old Jesuit handbookOnly four phone booths left in NYC, all in my ‘hood on West End Avenue“Welcome to our branding house” – great sendup of ironic hipster agenciesMC D. […]

  5. Tulsa Mike Avatar
    Tulsa Mike

    Does this mean that we should charge a person 10 cents if they want to use our cell phones?

  6. Lia Avatar

    This gives me a bit of nostalgia of old 2600 magazines with the photos of phones and phone booths from all over the world on the back. The first being those in NYC.

  7. Toma Avatar

    Thank you very match for this blog!

  8. […] via: Scouting New York Comparteix:Entrades relacionades:Targetes turístiques, quina t’agafes?Anar a museus pagant poc o […]

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  10. George Brooks Avatar

    Does anyone know if any of these are still around today in 2012? Doing a photography project about payphones before MIKE gets here and would like to shoot these!

  11. […] before anybody ever heard of a cell phone, pay phones were everywhere. In addition to the iconic phone booths found at busy intersections, it was common knowledge that you could almost always find a pay phone […]

  12. […] before anybody ever heard of a cell phone, pay phones were everywhere. In addition to the iconic phone booths found at busy intersections, it was common knowledge that you could almost always find a pay phone […]

  13. […] (Image source: Scouting New York […]

  14. Peter Avatar
    Peter

    Ya, the ones on 100 and 101 still there

  15. Heather Ferreira Avatar
    Heather Ferreira

    Stop this Manhattanocentricness! There are two telephone booths with operational doors inside the Brooklyn Public Library on I think the third floor!

  16. […] any phonebooths remain in America, especially of this outdoor type?  The booths had already begun to fade in the late 1970s, […]

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  18. Someone Avatar
    Someone

    I have never even been to New York but in one of her latest trips to NY, my mother-in-law bought my son this great book, The Lonely Phone Booth, about the phone booth on the corner of 100th street:

    http://www.amazon.com/The-Lonely-Phonebooth-Peter-Ackerman/dp/156792414X/ref=sr_sp-atf_title_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1373688860&sr=8-1&keywords=The+Lonely+phone+booth

    I wondered if the booth actually existed and I guess it does!

  19. Dave Avatar
    Dave

    I live off West end on 92nd…the booth on 90th is STILL there, though I don’t think functional. It’s pretty beat up. Soon after I moved I took a picture to show people because everyone was amazed that there was still one around….