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SMILE CRAFT

| Sawerawork Teferi ( Fortune photographer )


SMILE CRAFT

In the heart of 4 Kilo, tradition is still very much in business. The city’s most underrated essential accessory is on full display: the humble Miswak also known as mefaqiya in Amharic. No toothpaste needed, just grab it and go like past generations. It’s a reminder that success doesn’t always arrive in grand announcements, it gets built, stubbornly and patiently, one small branch at a time. Even ambition here has a manual setting. Keep your focus sharp, your intentions cleaner than freshly polished teeth, and your hustle consistent. Because in Addis, a good smile can open doors faster than a long speech ever will. Wisdom helps, sure, but so does not having spinach stuck between your teeth while you negotiate your future. And so the city moves on: one hand steady, one hand holding tradition, and everyone pretending they didn’t just spend five minutes picking the perfect mefaqiya.

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HEART STRINGS

Perched on a concrete curb in 4kilo, a one-man orchestra strapped to his shoulders, this street musician seems determined to prove that romance does not need a luxury venue, just an instrument, a loyal speaker, and enough confidence to serenade an entire city block. Somewhere in the crowd, a passerby is either falling in love or desperately trying to figure out how one man managed to combine a mic, a traditional string instrument (Kirar) with  stubbornness into a full band. Love may be complica...


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STREET ECONOMY

Rows of sneakers dangle like tropical fruit from improvised racks, while stacks of jeans, scarves, and second-hand treasures compete for attention along the busy Mexico square. What looks like an ordinary street market is really a masterclass in retail efficiency: no rent, no air conditioning, no glossy storefronts, just entrepreneurial grit and a pair of wheels. Beneath the city's growing skyline and construction cranes, vendors have created mobile department stores where customers can shop for...


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AUTOMATIC SHADE

Passengers waiting for public transport at the Qera transit point located at Dej Beyene Merid street, navigate the daily challenges of the city's transport ecosystem. Some commuters shield themselves with personal umbrellas, while a few sit in the narrow shade provided by a leaning section of a corrugated iron barrier. As the capital pushes forward with sweeping corridor modernization projects, the upgrading of suburban transit stations to provide dignity and shelter for daily commuters remains...