Entrepreneur, 25, opens ‘world’s smallest takeaway’ curry house in disused red phone box 

It’s a Rogan SQUASH! Entrepreneur, 25, opens ‘world’s smallest takeaway’ curry house in disused red phone box

  • Tayyab Shafiq, 25, set up business in a red phone box on Uxbridge High Street
  • He is renting from the Red Kiosk Company, which buys phone booths from BT 
  • The 25-year-old plans to open up other boxes in London and make it a franchise

An entrepreneur has opened the ‘world’s smallest takeaway’, opening a curry house from a disused red phone box.  

Tayyab Shafiq, 25, set up his business in a red phone box on Uxbridge High Street in  North West London.

He is renting the three booths from the Red Kiosk Company, which works with BT to provide unused telephone boxes to local businesses.

Tayyab Shafiq, 25, set up his business in a red phone box on Uxbridge High Street in North West London

The 25-year-old told MailOnline: ‘It’s the first of its kind as it’s going to be the world’s smallest takeaway. I thought it would be a great benefit to turn a place where people vomit on Friday nights into a useful thing.

‘I discussed it with my landlord [who runs the Red Kiosk Company] and he agreed. I had all the professional cleaning and everything done and then started.

‘From afar it looks like a small telephone booth but it has refrigeration, drinks, cookies, curries, biryani, samosas and kebabs. We have a wash basin too, and we had a full hygiene inspection with a good response.’

He is renting the three booths from the Red Kiosk Company, which works with BT to provide unused telephone boxes to local businesses

He is renting the three booths from the Red Kiosk Company, which works with BT to provide unused telephone boxes to local businesses

He added: ‘We have a lot of regular clients who are part of the community. The plan is to scale up and open other places in London to make it a franchise, people are loving it. 

‘It gets attraction, and we make sure to give the best quality food, taking twice a day from a kitchen company and making sure health, safety and quality is maintained.

‘It makes me sad when I see these telephone booths which have been used as toilets for people on nights out. I want to maintain this iconic British heritage.’

The Red Kiosk Company was conceived by a pair of market traders who found two unused phone boxes by Brighton Pier and asked BT if they could buy them to use as a kiosk for sunglasses and hats.

Mr Shafiq: 'It makes me sad when I see these telephone booths which have been used as toilets for people on nights out. I want to maintain this iconic British heritage'

Mr Shafiq: ‘It makes me sad when I see these telephone booths which have been used as toilets for people on nights out. I want to maintain this iconic British heritage’

They have since accumulated 125 booths from across the UK, including sites in Edinburgh, Leeds, London and Plymouth.

Eddie Ottewell, one of the market traders who helped to come up with the idea of renting out unused telephone boxes, told MailOnline: ‘Most people use the booths as a coffee or souvenir shop, Tayyab is a little bit different and a bit of a one-off really.

‘We’ve refurbished it for him and the public love him, they think it’s great. I believe he’s been helping the homeless people too by handing out the food to them at certain points. 

‘He transformed the boxes and attracted loads of attention. We rent sites out from £5 a day and up to £50 a day on a long-term let.

‘We’ve been inundated with enquiries since the lockdown, and we’ve ended up selling some of our sites so it’s been really good from the government’s view financial wise. It couldn’t have worked better for some of our tenants.’

Mr Shafiq plans to 'scale up and open other places in London to make it a franchise'

Mr Shafiq plans to ‘scale up and open other places in London to make it a franchise’