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Kiosk

Designer: Zupagrafika
Publisher: Zupagrafika
Year: 2024
Zupagrafika

Modular kiosks like the K67, designed by Slovenian architect Saša J. Mächtig, and similar systems such as the Polish Kami, Macedonian KC190, or Soviet "Batyskaf," were iconic fixtures of the Eastern Bloc and Yugoslavia from 1970 to 1990. Known as Jugokioski, they served countless purposes: selling hot dogs, zapiekanki, newspapers, or fresh eggs, functioning as guardhouses or currency exchanges. This album features over 150 photographs of these modernist kiosks, captured by Zupagrafika founders David Navarro and Martyna Sobecka over the past decade. It documents surviving kiosks from Ljubljana to Warsaw and Belgrade to Berlin—some still in use, others abandoned—offering a visual narrative of their enduring presence and gradual disappearance after the socio-political shifts of the late 20th century.

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