A New York City park is showing us what the new normal could look like.
Last weekend, management at Brooklyn’s Domino Park painted circles on the grass to encourage people to socially distance as they got some much-needed vitamin D. The circles, which were drawn in chalk, measure 8 feet in diameter and are 6 feet apart, a spokesperson for the park confirmed to Travel + Leisure .
Writer and publisher Jennifer 8. Lee posted a video of the surreal scene on Twitter, calling the circles “little round human parking spots.”
Lee told the New York Post that she was surprised by how seamlessly park-goers adapted to the rings.
“If you were to take video footage from the world today and show it to someone from 2019, they would think it was from some near-future Hollywood dystopian television show instead of real life,” she said.
Domino Park is not alone in coming up with creative safety measures as public places begin to reopen during the coronavirus pandemic.
Temperature-checking stations have been installed at Universal Studio’s Citywalk in Florida; a restaurant in Maryland will attempt to have its customers wear “bumper tables” to keep them 6 feet apart; and those who miss frequenting strip clubs can go to a drive-thru version in Portland, Oregon.
Companies like Starbucks and Walgreens have also added clear designated, socially distanced waiting areas to their store locations.
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