
Wander to the back of this narrow, dark, crowded 
centro comercial on Carrera 9 and Calle 22 and you'll feel like you've walked backed decades - acoustically speaking, at least. 
 

There are cassette players which you thot went out with The Kinks, a turntable which might have played The Beatles' Yellow Submarine the year it came out. Stacked against the walls are old reel-to-reel players, with a few eight-track tape players squeezed in there. Nearby, for good measure, sits a typewriter, ready for that person in rebellion against everything digital.
 

Who might buy these old machines, along with the stacks of LPs, tapes and even vacuum tubes, I can't imagine. But the owners of the little repair shops evidently hold out hope that some 
Bogotano somewhere is still holding onto a machine with a vacuum tubes which will need those tubes replaced sooner or later. 
 
And when that happens, this is the place - and perhaps the one and only place left. 
 
  | 
| The 'Museum of Telecommunication and Electronic Media.' | 
  | 
| A mystery machine. | 
  | 
| Those LPs offered lots of space for bathing beauties. | 
  | 
| But, how does this Olivetti connect to Facebook? | 
  | 
| What you're looking for is in there somewhere. | 
  | 
| Vaccuum tubes anybody? | 
  | 
| The center's entrance. | 
  | 
| A neighboring business shows off its neon.  | 
By Mike Ceaser, of 
Bogotá Bike Tours
 
1 comment:
Awesome, awesome, awesome post, Mike. Bogota does not stop surprising me. I have a Russian friend here in Chicago that would get absolutely crazy in a place like this. Again, awesome post, Mike. Amazing shots.
M. Forero.
Post a Comment