A shop selling bitcoin vouchers has opened on the edge of Londonâs financial district. Called Azteco, the store allows customers to buy bitcoin with cash from an attendant.
Customers arrive, decide how much bitcoin they want to buy and hand the attendant cash. The attendant then prints out a voucher containing a code that can be redeemed at the Azteco website. A 3% commission is charged on each transaction. Conversion rates are taken from BitcoinCharts.com.
Aztecoâs founder, Akin Fernandez, said his service is designed to make buying bitcoin as simple as possible for the general public.
âEveryone already understands how to use a voucher to top a mobile phone. I wanted to create a model that makes it as easy as possible for people to get bitcoin. And this is exactly what this does.â
Fernandez said he had performed a âhandfulâ of transactions since the shop opened its doors on 17th February, and that his customers so far have been people with some knowledge of bitcoin but who didnât previously hold the cryptocurrency.
âMostly they come in to chat. Demand is very small at the moment, so I donât expect to have a line of people outside the shop,â he said.
The London shop is just the start of Aztecoâs plans, Fernandez said. He describes the Azteco business model as a âvirtual ATMâ for bitcoin. He plans to market the service to real-world merchants who want to add the ability to sell bitcoin vouchers to existing services.
Merchants would sign up with Azteco, pay a security deposit and split the commission with the firm. Azteco would supply merchants with bitcoin. Several companies are vying to install Londonâs first bitcoin ATM, with one planned for Shoreditch, just minutes from Aztecoâs shop.
âThis is a virtual ATM [business]. The difference is, if somebody wants to buy one of those ATMs, they have to fork out 2,000 euros. Here, they just have to pay a security deposit. So this could spread very rapidly.â
Fernandez said he wrote Aztecoâs software himself, and that his involvement in cryptocurrency dates back to the late 90s. He obtained his first bitcoin from Amir Taaki, a pioneering developer in the bitcoin space.
Azteco is run by Fernandezâs company Irdialini Ltd, which is mainly engaged in publishing work like The Conet Project, an acclaimed series of recordings of mysterious shortwave-radio stations.
The Azteco shop is located at 19, New Goulston St, plying its trade in digital currencies next to the historic Petticoat Lane market, where traders have been hawking their wares for more than 250 years. A stoneâs throw away is the iconic âGherkinâ skyscraper, which houses insurance giant Swiss Re.
Fernandezâs shop is sparsely furnished. The space contains just a desk, three fold-up chairs, a battered inkjet printer that produces the bitcoin vouchers and a titanium Apple Powerbook. Fernandez was browsing the latest story about his shop on the Daily Mailâs webiste when CoinDesk visited.
âIâve been getting a lot of action on Twitter now that the press has picked this up,â he said approvingly.
Aztecoâs neighbours are non-plussed about the new cryptocurrency arrival on the street. Next door at an computer and electronics parts wholesaler, questions about bitcoin and cryptocurrencies drew blank looks from staff.
A market trader who was packing up racks of clothing at the end of the trading day snorted when asked if he had ever heard about bitcoin:
âDigital money? Iâm not interested. Are you going to give me some?â
Photos by Joon Ian Wong