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Only In New York

PHOTOS: Are Automats, a Former New York Institution, Making a Comeback?

December 18, 2016 1:07pm | Updated December 19, 2016 2:51pm

It sounds futuristic: at a fully-automatic restaurant that opened its doors in Midtown earlier this week, you can order, pick up and eat your $6.95 quinoa bowl without talking to a server or cashier. 

Eatsa, located at 285 Madison Ave. between 40th and 41st streets, is the East Coast anchor for a San Francisco-based chain popular among tech industry employees.

But its format — which entails customers opening small locker doors to access their meals — will ring familiar to New Yorkers who remember the city's last automat, which closed in 1991.

Decidedly high-tech for the pre-computer era, automats featured chrome and glass vending machines that displayed beef stew, mac-and-cheese, and huckleberry pie in their own small, well-lit compartments.

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