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The Kitchen Sisters Present

58 – The Kiosk Strategy, Lisbon — Hidden Kitchens: War & Peace & Food

The Kitchen Sisters Present

The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

Society & Culture

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 8 November 2016

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A story from the plazas of Portugal, where small ornate kiosks that served traditional snacks and drinks once graced the city and brought people together. Neglected by time and pushed into abandonment by a dictator’s regime that suppressed public conversation and gathering, this tradition is now being revived, drawing people back to public space.

For more than a century, Lisbon’s public spaces were graced by beautiful Art Nouveau and Moorish-style kiosks — small, ornate structures that provided chairs and shade and served traditional Portuguese snacks and drinks.

These quiosques de refrescos (refreshment kiosks) were the heart of public life in the city. But, under the long dictatorship of Prime Minister António de Oliveira Salazar, which started in the 1930s, laws actually discouraged public gathering and conversation. Many restaurants closed down and the kiosks \xad\xadfell into disrepair and all but disappeared.

That was, until Catarina Portas, a native of Lisbon, former journalist and entrepreneur stepped in.

“From the 19th to the 20th century, there were some hundred different kiosks in Lisbon. The city was full of them in different colors, different designs,” says Portas. She used to take walks around the city and see these sad, abandoned structures. She said, “I started to think, how could we bring this to our times?”

Portas began hunting down these kiosks — some still in place but boarded up, others in storage. She teamed up with architect João Regal to restore the buildings – not just to their former glory, but to their former place of prominence in Lisbon’s public spaces.

“We went to the city council with amazing photographs of the old kiosks, and we prepared all the old drinks and made them taste the drinks,” Portas says. The pitch worked —\xad\xad Portas is fairly sure it was the drinks that convinced the council members. Their first three kiosks opened in 2009.

The kiosks offer affordable and traditional drinks and snacks, conversation and community – and also employment in a country struggling with the staggering levels of unemployment and a recession gripping much of western Europe.

Transcript

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Thank you very much.

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You're listening to fugitive waves,

1:21.8

lost recordings and shards of sound, along with new

1:25.4

tales of remarkable people from around the world.

1:29.0

We're the Kitchen Sisters, Davia Nelson and Nicki Silva. Today on Fugitive Waves we go to the plazas of Lisbon, Portugal, where small kiosks once served food and drink and where people gathered to gossip, to talk politics politics spend time with their friends in the

1:45.2

19th and early 20th centuries these kiosks were the heart of public life in the

1:50.3

city but under the long dictatorship of Antonio Salazar, from

1:54.4

1932 to 1968, laws actually discouraged public gathering and conversation.

...

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