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What are these boxed doors outside store fronts in New York?



Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
April 2019 photo competition, “Road trip” (Read, rules are different.)
May 2019 Photo competition, StaircasesNew York airports: JFK vs. EWR/Newark?New York park along an old elevated railway?Which district to stay in while visiting these features in New York?Haunted Houses in New York CityWhat are the risks of using Airbnb in New York?Boro cab service in New York CityHow are intersections between two numbered streets named in New York?What are these metallic plates found around Iceland?What are these mysterious green balls in the sea in New Caledonia?What are these mysterious craters?



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43















In New York around lower Manhattan I saw some storefronts with these boxed doors outside.

What are they called and what is their function?





enter image description here










share|improve this question

















  • 6





    Many other towns have these built right into the building. In the suburban midwest you must always go through 2 doors to get into a Mcdonalds, Starbucks, Wendys, Trader Joes, etc.

    – Harper
    Apr 6 at 2:20











  • The same in Sweden. In some buildings, the inner door won't open before the outer door is closed (in particular with automatic sliding doors).

    – gerrit
    Apr 6 at 7:28











  • An interesting point is, I've never known what these are called! People just call them "the double door thingy that you add on in winter".

    – Fattie
    Apr 6 at 23:00

















43















In New York around lower Manhattan I saw some storefronts with these boxed doors outside.

What are they called and what is their function?





enter image description here










share|improve this question

















  • 6





    Many other towns have these built right into the building. In the suburban midwest you must always go through 2 doors to get into a Mcdonalds, Starbucks, Wendys, Trader Joes, etc.

    – Harper
    Apr 6 at 2:20











  • The same in Sweden. In some buildings, the inner door won't open before the outer door is closed (in particular with automatic sliding doors).

    – gerrit
    Apr 6 at 7:28











  • An interesting point is, I've never known what these are called! People just call them "the double door thingy that you add on in winter".

    – Fattie
    Apr 6 at 23:00













43












43








43


1






In New York around lower Manhattan I saw some storefronts with these boxed doors outside.

What are they called and what is their function?





enter image description here










share|improve this question














In New York around lower Manhattan I saw some storefronts with these boxed doors outside.

What are they called and what is their function?





enter image description here







new-york-city identify-this






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Apr 5 at 23:05









aaaaaa

31825




31825







  • 6





    Many other towns have these built right into the building. In the suburban midwest you must always go through 2 doors to get into a Mcdonalds, Starbucks, Wendys, Trader Joes, etc.

    – Harper
    Apr 6 at 2:20











  • The same in Sweden. In some buildings, the inner door won't open before the outer door is closed (in particular with automatic sliding doors).

    – gerrit
    Apr 6 at 7:28











  • An interesting point is, I've never known what these are called! People just call them "the double door thingy that you add on in winter".

    – Fattie
    Apr 6 at 23:00












  • 6





    Many other towns have these built right into the building. In the suburban midwest you must always go through 2 doors to get into a Mcdonalds, Starbucks, Wendys, Trader Joes, etc.

    – Harper
    Apr 6 at 2:20











  • The same in Sweden. In some buildings, the inner door won't open before the outer door is closed (in particular with automatic sliding doors).

    – gerrit
    Apr 6 at 7:28











  • An interesting point is, I've never known what these are called! People just call them "the double door thingy that you add on in winter".

    – Fattie
    Apr 6 at 23:00







6




6





Many other towns have these built right into the building. In the suburban midwest you must always go through 2 doors to get into a Mcdonalds, Starbucks, Wendys, Trader Joes, etc.

– Harper
Apr 6 at 2:20





Many other towns have these built right into the building. In the suburban midwest you must always go through 2 doors to get into a Mcdonalds, Starbucks, Wendys, Trader Joes, etc.

– Harper
Apr 6 at 2:20













The same in Sweden. In some buildings, the inner door won't open before the outer door is closed (in particular with automatic sliding doors).

– gerrit
Apr 6 at 7:28





The same in Sweden. In some buildings, the inner door won't open before the outer door is closed (in particular with automatic sliding doors).

– gerrit
Apr 6 at 7:28













An interesting point is, I've never known what these are called! People just call them "the double door thingy that you add on in winter".

– Fattie
Apr 6 at 23:00





An interesting point is, I've never known what these are called! People just call them "the double door thingy that you add on in winter".

– Fattie
Apr 6 at 23:00










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















80














That is a sidewalk vestibule. The idea is to have an extra door between the building's interior and the outside, so as to reduce the amount of air exchanged when people go in and out. In winter, warm air stays inside and cold air stays outside, reducing the building's heating costs and avoiding uncomfortable drafts for diners sitting near the door.



You could also have a vestibule inside the restaurant's regular doors, but that would occupy valuable floor space, and would be useless during warmer seasons. The temporary vestibule can be put up in winter and taken down in summer.






share|improve this answer


















  • 11





    In general, perhaps. In New York City, not so much - as the article points out, they are used primarily in winter, when flying insects are not found outdoors.

    – Nate Eldredge
    Apr 6 at 2:50






  • 2





    For heating/air conditioning, as stated, is the usual purpose. However, I have been in a couple of places where staff could lock the outer door remotely, and lock the inner while a thief is trying the outer. Temporary jail till the police arrive!

    – WGroleau
    Apr 6 at 10:14






  • 5





    @WGroleau In that case, it's called a mantrap and is usually built much more sturdily.

    – chrylis
    Apr 6 at 20:01






  • 2





    @Tetsujin NYC has plenty of bureaucracy, and I'm sure that there are fire rules for how these must be constructed (e.g., the external door still opens outward into the street, etc.).

    – chrylis
    Apr 6 at 20:02






  • 8





    As the article points out, it is surprising the NYC allows them at all just from the standpoint of sidewalk obstructions. Most cities don't allow businesses to just expand their entryway into the public sidewalk, and NYC does have plenty of bureaucracy. This just happens to be something they don't care about.

    – Zach Lipton
    Apr 6 at 22:06


















13














While I do not know what they are called, their purpose is to keep heat inside by creating an extra air chamber between the inside which is heated and the outside. These are usually removed in the warmer months.






share|improve this answer























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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    80














    That is a sidewalk vestibule. The idea is to have an extra door between the building's interior and the outside, so as to reduce the amount of air exchanged when people go in and out. In winter, warm air stays inside and cold air stays outside, reducing the building's heating costs and avoiding uncomfortable drafts for diners sitting near the door.



    You could also have a vestibule inside the restaurant's regular doors, but that would occupy valuable floor space, and would be useless during warmer seasons. The temporary vestibule can be put up in winter and taken down in summer.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 11





      In general, perhaps. In New York City, not so much - as the article points out, they are used primarily in winter, when flying insects are not found outdoors.

      – Nate Eldredge
      Apr 6 at 2:50






    • 2





      For heating/air conditioning, as stated, is the usual purpose. However, I have been in a couple of places where staff could lock the outer door remotely, and lock the inner while a thief is trying the outer. Temporary jail till the police arrive!

      – WGroleau
      Apr 6 at 10:14






    • 5





      @WGroleau In that case, it's called a mantrap and is usually built much more sturdily.

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:01






    • 2





      @Tetsujin NYC has plenty of bureaucracy, and I'm sure that there are fire rules for how these must be constructed (e.g., the external door still opens outward into the street, etc.).

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:02






    • 8





      As the article points out, it is surprising the NYC allows them at all just from the standpoint of sidewalk obstructions. Most cities don't allow businesses to just expand their entryway into the public sidewalk, and NYC does have plenty of bureaucracy. This just happens to be something they don't care about.

      – Zach Lipton
      Apr 6 at 22:06















    80














    That is a sidewalk vestibule. The idea is to have an extra door between the building's interior and the outside, so as to reduce the amount of air exchanged when people go in and out. In winter, warm air stays inside and cold air stays outside, reducing the building's heating costs and avoiding uncomfortable drafts for diners sitting near the door.



    You could also have a vestibule inside the restaurant's regular doors, but that would occupy valuable floor space, and would be useless during warmer seasons. The temporary vestibule can be put up in winter and taken down in summer.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 11





      In general, perhaps. In New York City, not so much - as the article points out, they are used primarily in winter, when flying insects are not found outdoors.

      – Nate Eldredge
      Apr 6 at 2:50






    • 2





      For heating/air conditioning, as stated, is the usual purpose. However, I have been in a couple of places where staff could lock the outer door remotely, and lock the inner while a thief is trying the outer. Temporary jail till the police arrive!

      – WGroleau
      Apr 6 at 10:14






    • 5





      @WGroleau In that case, it's called a mantrap and is usually built much more sturdily.

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:01






    • 2





      @Tetsujin NYC has plenty of bureaucracy, and I'm sure that there are fire rules for how these must be constructed (e.g., the external door still opens outward into the street, etc.).

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:02






    • 8





      As the article points out, it is surprising the NYC allows them at all just from the standpoint of sidewalk obstructions. Most cities don't allow businesses to just expand their entryway into the public sidewalk, and NYC does have plenty of bureaucracy. This just happens to be something they don't care about.

      – Zach Lipton
      Apr 6 at 22:06













    80












    80








    80







    That is a sidewalk vestibule. The idea is to have an extra door between the building's interior and the outside, so as to reduce the amount of air exchanged when people go in and out. In winter, warm air stays inside and cold air stays outside, reducing the building's heating costs and avoiding uncomfortable drafts for diners sitting near the door.



    You could also have a vestibule inside the restaurant's regular doors, but that would occupy valuable floor space, and would be useless during warmer seasons. The temporary vestibule can be put up in winter and taken down in summer.






    share|improve this answer













    That is a sidewalk vestibule. The idea is to have an extra door between the building's interior and the outside, so as to reduce the amount of air exchanged when people go in and out. In winter, warm air stays inside and cold air stays outside, reducing the building's heating costs and avoiding uncomfortable drafts for diners sitting near the door.



    You could also have a vestibule inside the restaurant's regular doors, but that would occupy valuable floor space, and would be useless during warmer seasons. The temporary vestibule can be put up in winter and taken down in summer.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 5 at 23:22









    Nate EldredgeNate Eldredge

    24.6k886111




    24.6k886111







    • 11





      In general, perhaps. In New York City, not so much - as the article points out, they are used primarily in winter, when flying insects are not found outdoors.

      – Nate Eldredge
      Apr 6 at 2:50






    • 2





      For heating/air conditioning, as stated, is the usual purpose. However, I have been in a couple of places where staff could lock the outer door remotely, and lock the inner while a thief is trying the outer. Temporary jail till the police arrive!

      – WGroleau
      Apr 6 at 10:14






    • 5





      @WGroleau In that case, it's called a mantrap and is usually built much more sturdily.

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:01






    • 2





      @Tetsujin NYC has plenty of bureaucracy, and I'm sure that there are fire rules for how these must be constructed (e.g., the external door still opens outward into the street, etc.).

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:02






    • 8





      As the article points out, it is surprising the NYC allows them at all just from the standpoint of sidewalk obstructions. Most cities don't allow businesses to just expand their entryway into the public sidewalk, and NYC does have plenty of bureaucracy. This just happens to be something they don't care about.

      – Zach Lipton
      Apr 6 at 22:06












    • 11





      In general, perhaps. In New York City, not so much - as the article points out, they are used primarily in winter, when flying insects are not found outdoors.

      – Nate Eldredge
      Apr 6 at 2:50






    • 2





      For heating/air conditioning, as stated, is the usual purpose. However, I have been in a couple of places where staff could lock the outer door remotely, and lock the inner while a thief is trying the outer. Temporary jail till the police arrive!

      – WGroleau
      Apr 6 at 10:14






    • 5





      @WGroleau In that case, it's called a mantrap and is usually built much more sturdily.

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:01






    • 2





      @Tetsujin NYC has plenty of bureaucracy, and I'm sure that there are fire rules for how these must be constructed (e.g., the external door still opens outward into the street, etc.).

      – chrylis
      Apr 6 at 20:02






    • 8





      As the article points out, it is surprising the NYC allows them at all just from the standpoint of sidewalk obstructions. Most cities don't allow businesses to just expand their entryway into the public sidewalk, and NYC does have plenty of bureaucracy. This just happens to be something they don't care about.

      – Zach Lipton
      Apr 6 at 22:06







    11




    11





    In general, perhaps. In New York City, not so much - as the article points out, they are used primarily in winter, when flying insects are not found outdoors.

    – Nate Eldredge
    Apr 6 at 2:50





    In general, perhaps. In New York City, not so much - as the article points out, they are used primarily in winter, when flying insects are not found outdoors.

    – Nate Eldredge
    Apr 6 at 2:50




    2




    2





    For heating/air conditioning, as stated, is the usual purpose. However, I have been in a couple of places where staff could lock the outer door remotely, and lock the inner while a thief is trying the outer. Temporary jail till the police arrive!

    – WGroleau
    Apr 6 at 10:14





    For heating/air conditioning, as stated, is the usual purpose. However, I have been in a couple of places where staff could lock the outer door remotely, and lock the inner while a thief is trying the outer. Temporary jail till the police arrive!

    – WGroleau
    Apr 6 at 10:14




    5




    5





    @WGroleau In that case, it's called a mantrap and is usually built much more sturdily.

    – chrylis
    Apr 6 at 20:01





    @WGroleau In that case, it's called a mantrap and is usually built much more sturdily.

    – chrylis
    Apr 6 at 20:01




    2




    2





    @Tetsujin NYC has plenty of bureaucracy, and I'm sure that there are fire rules for how these must be constructed (e.g., the external door still opens outward into the street, etc.).

    – chrylis
    Apr 6 at 20:02





    @Tetsujin NYC has plenty of bureaucracy, and I'm sure that there are fire rules for how these must be constructed (e.g., the external door still opens outward into the street, etc.).

    – chrylis
    Apr 6 at 20:02




    8




    8





    As the article points out, it is surprising the NYC allows them at all just from the standpoint of sidewalk obstructions. Most cities don't allow businesses to just expand their entryway into the public sidewalk, and NYC does have plenty of bureaucracy. This just happens to be something they don't care about.

    – Zach Lipton
    Apr 6 at 22:06





    As the article points out, it is surprising the NYC allows them at all just from the standpoint of sidewalk obstructions. Most cities don't allow businesses to just expand their entryway into the public sidewalk, and NYC does have plenty of bureaucracy. This just happens to be something they don't care about.

    – Zach Lipton
    Apr 6 at 22:06













    13














    While I do not know what they are called, their purpose is to keep heat inside by creating an extra air chamber between the inside which is heated and the outside. These are usually removed in the warmer months.






    share|improve this answer



























      13














      While I do not know what they are called, their purpose is to keep heat inside by creating an extra air chamber between the inside which is heated and the outside. These are usually removed in the warmer months.






      share|improve this answer

























        13












        13








        13







        While I do not know what they are called, their purpose is to keep heat inside by creating an extra air chamber between the inside which is heated and the outside. These are usually removed in the warmer months.






        share|improve this answer













        While I do not know what they are called, their purpose is to keep heat inside by creating an extra air chamber between the inside which is heated and the outside. These are usually removed in the warmer months.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Apr 5 at 23:20









        ItaiItai

        30.6k973163




        30.6k973163



























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