In the Autumn of 1932, Oslo Telefonanlegg (the Oslo
Telephone Exchange) announced an architectural competition for a Norwegian public telephone box. The winner was the architect Georg Fredrik Fasting
(1903-1987) with his Riks booth (literally The National) which was made of spray-painted
sheet metal plates riveted to an angle iron frame, and was strong enough to withstand the freezing winter weather.
Production of the booth started in 1933, and the first
one was installed that year at the Norwegian America
Line quay in Oslo. By the time production ceased in
1995, more than 9,000 red Riks booths had been made.
The Norwegian American Line Pier and telephone box, 1930s |
The irony was that Fasting himself couldn’t hear as he was born without ears. But at the age of 56, he became the first person in the world to have ear canals constructed, so he could finally use his own creation!
In 2009, Norway Post Office issued a stamp of Fasting's legendary creation as part of their Year of Cultural Heritage's 'Communication' set.
The designer was Inger Sandved Anfinsen.
A nice cancel of a reindeer over the 2009 TELEFON stamp |
The Norwegian Year of Cultural Heritage 2009 (Kulturminneåret 2009) was aimed at highlighting the diversity and importance of Norway's cultural heritage for all sectors of the community.
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