Covid's empty shops

I have tentatively made  a return to the project of walking the city of Adelaide with a hand held camera. This project  has been tentatively put on the backburner for some time.  Walking the city with a large format camera  and  a heavy tripod  has definitely been placed on the back burner.     

This recent experience  persuaded me to think about  picking it up.  I briefly looked at the archives. I  decided  that it would make a good  break from sitting in front of the computer working on the text for The Bowden Archives and Industrial Modernity  book.  Then I realized that the Walking Adelaide  project, which is about urban psychogeography,  could be interpreted  as building upon  this body of photographs from the 1980s, which form the third section of The Bowden Archives.   There are a lot of photos  from the time when we lived in the CBD, but I am unsure how to conceptually organise them into a book project. That is why this project has been on the back burner with only a blog as its public face.  

So off I went on a tentative foray to Adelaide's  CBD last Thursday (7th October). Below is  a cafe in Hindmarsh Square next to the old central office of SA Health. This cafe used to be quite buzzy: 

There were a lot of people sitting around in the square as it was a warm sunny spring day.  I would have thought this  mass would have kept the cafe open,  given that  there is  currently no Covid-19 community transmission in South Australia.  

I spend a couple of hours walking the CBD -- just a playful, drifting aimlessly around (dérive ) in good Situationist fashion. The city was very quiet even though I was walking  between 11am and 1 pm -- ie., around lunch time.  Many of the cafes had gone, most of the restaurants in the Rundle St East strip were closed, and there were many empty spaces for rent in the CBD.  Some  of the fashion shops had gone and there was only the odd customer  in the ones that were open.  These are strange times compared to even this time.