Why the Hottest Fall Accessory Will Be the Patio Heater

From restaurants to schools, everyone’s prepping for a lifeline during a long, cold, Covid-19 winter

Zara Stone
Marker

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Outdoor gas heater at night.
Photo: slobo/iStock/Getty Images Plus

In cities and towns across the country, makeshift outdoor restaurants strung together with pop-up tents, plants, and string lights have colonized sidewalks and newly pedestrianized streets. With indoor dining not encouraged — or in some places like New York City, still off-limits — these on-the-fly adaptations have become the only lifeline for an industry bludgeoned by the pandemic. “It is very hard, hard times for me; I only survive here,” Amritpal Singh, the owner of Angel Indian, a restaurant in Queens, recently told the New York Times. Singh reportedly spent $3,000 to upgrade his outdoor dining area, and it’s just barely keeping the business afloat.

In New York City, some 9,500 restaurants have been granted outdoor permits; San Francisco has an equivalent Shared Spaces program with 1,000 restaurants approved; and Chicago has granted permits to hundreds more through its Expanded Outdoor Dining Program. But what happens to these restaurants when fall and winter settle in, there still isn’t a vaccine, and people are told the only safe place to gather is outdoors? There is about to be a huge run on outdoor heaters.

The outdoor heater…

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