Raise a glass to Satoshi’s Place: the challenge of running Bitcoin businesses
A Bitcoin-themed bar and education center has popped up in Northern England and Cointelegraph swung by to interview the founder and raise a glass.
A Bitcoin (BTC) hub in Greater Manchester opened on Sept. 16, where everything–absolutely everything is Bitcoin themed or oriented. Cointelegraph took a trip to the bar and workshop space, called Satoshi’s Place to interview the founder and raise a glass to the latest Bitcoin speakeasy.
Named after the anonymous creator of the world’s largest and most widely accepted cryptocurrency, Satoshi’s Place offers workshops, coworking spaces for local businesses and Bitcoin-inspired cocktails. Naturally, they accept Bitcoin over the Lightning Network, and there’s even a Great British Pound to Bitcoin price ticker in the entry hall.
Adam, the founder (who chose not to share his surname), first heard about Bitcoin in 2012 and has spent the past 10 years experimenting with ways to onboard and educate people about the magic internet money. He told Cointelegraph over a beer — paid for by Bitcoin over the Lightning Network — that it’s the first of many forays into the Bitcoin business.
The space is unashamedly Bitcoin. From orange being the dominant color to rare Bitcoin art adorning the walls to the hand dryer in the loos, which generates heat from — you guessed it — a Bitcoin miner plugged in upstairs, it’s a space where those obsessed with Bitcoin feel at home. It’s also a space for those new to Bitcoin, “precoiners”, to learn, ask questions and be curious about Bitcoin, away from the at times tricky online environments such as Twitter.
Adam explained that Satoshi’s Place was the result of several Bitcoiner ventures. Over the past four years, he’s focused his efforts on Bitcoin merchant adoption, a growing trend in the United Kingdom. Satoshi’s Place began life as a coffee shop and then a pizzeria back in 2018. At first, customers could buy coffee with Bitcoin and even use a Bitcoin ATM to buy and sell Bitcoin, “Back when it was legal,” he joked.
“People were putting £20,000 worth of cash into an ATM on a monthly. From teenagers to I think the eldest was 93 years old.”
Bitcoin ATMs were forced to shutter by the Financial Conduct Authority in March this year. Adam explained that despite doing everything by the book — “a full exchange system literally to the minute,” — the banks made life hard.
An example that’s part of a wider trend, Bitcoin businesses in the United Kingdom are beleaguered by banks. Adam’s experience is no different: He had issues with Barclays while operating a U.K.-based crypto festival called CoinFest. Worse still, bank blocked his accounts were ignored messages despite his best efforts to do business above board.
Satoshi’s Place is his third attempt at creating a by-the-book space for Bitcoin enthusiasts and precoiners to meet and learn what is moneyand why Bitcoin might be a better one. Thanks to the Lightning Network, a layer-2 Bitcoin solution, payments are now near-instant, frictionless and basically free. Many punters, Bitcoin enthusiasts and even first-timers bought burgers and beverages with Bitcoin at the bar on Friday.
The youngest of the Satoshi’s Place crew buying a drink! @theboltcard @CoinCorner #SPTeam #bitcoin pic.twitter.com/o2uQdfJTEc
— Satoshi’s Place® – A UK based Bitcoin Hub (@SatoshisPlaceUK) September 17, 2022
The bar uses solutions from Fast Bitcoins and CoinCorner, two Bitcoin companies based on the Isle of Man. CoinCorner’s team made the trip across the Irish Sea to mingle on Friday and hosted a Bitcoin workshop the following day.
Elsewhere, Nathan Day, “Pleb at Large” and contributor to BTCMap.Org, an open source map to show where Bitcoiners can spend Satoshis, demo’d Bitcoin-themed games. Jordan Walker, CEO at the Bitcoin Collective, the group behind the U.K. Bitcoin Conference, was schooled by Day’s son at the game, Sats-Man (like Pac-Man but with Satoshis).
https://t.co/Xi10jsz6TBhttps://t.co/afm5iJCwJ4 pic.twitter.com/AQjZcrKypB
— ⚡ BTC Map ⚡ (@BTCMapDotOrg) September 19, 2022
The workshops at Satoshi’s Place will be as close to free as possible and open to all, Adam Explained. Bitcoin the currency doesn’t discriminate, after all. Workshops cover “Everything from Lightning education to Bitcoin for kids, Bitcoin development, all different types. There are about 16 hosts that I’ve got up to now that want to do workshops,” Adam explained.
According to Bitcoin educators like Ben Arc of LNBits, the first night was a success–while more and more Bitcoin-centric developments and installations are to come to the place. The Bitcoin full node Lightning Node and Lightning Beer machine are still work in progress.
Related: The UK ‘Bitcoin Adventure’ shows BTC is a family affair
It’s been more than a decade since Satoshi Nakamoto stepped away from public involvement in the blockchain community. It makes you wonder what they would have thought of spaces like this, a decade later.