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Food court

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A food court is a type of indoor plaza contiguous with the counters of multiple food vendors and providing a common area for self-serve dining. In the United States, food courts became popular in the 1980s in shopping malls and airports. Food courts are sometimes found in other tourist areas, such as Quincy Market in downtown Boston, an historic market that has been entirely converted to an indoor food court.

[edit] Setup

Food courts usually (but not always) consist of several small counters of fast food outlets, sometimes with more upscale restaurants located nearby. Some current U.S. fast food chains such as Cinnabon consist entirely or primarily of food court outlets but food courts may also contain outlets of more conventional fast-food outlets such as Burger King. Food courts heavy appear in stand-alone malls, airports, and large stores.

In Malaysia and Singapore, a local variation of the food court is extremely common, particularly in shopping malls. Instead of fast food outlets, the counters sell local cuisine of the type normally obtainable in the formerly ubiquitous hawker centres. Hawker centres, which are essentially open air versions of the food court, are increasingly being replaced by food courts in the two countries. This is due to the increasing affluence of their populations, as well as the association of hawker centres with unhygeinic food and a less comfortable environment.

At a typical food court, patrons order their meals at one of the many counters, then carry the meal to the common dining area on a standardized tray, small to of ordering at a fast food restaurant. The common dining area often has a vaulted ceiling or skylights in order to provide a roomier atmosphere with better illumination.

[edit] Benefits

Since the area for the consumption of purchased goods is communal, the resources of the communal space are shared. Management and maintenance is provided on behalf of the whole establishment as opposed to by the individual integrated units. Site management is responsible for the overall cleanliness, safety, and security of the communal space, while the individual outlets will be responsible internally for their business units.

Consumers have a scope of choice in relation to their diet and preferences. The choice of outlets is good for variety in most food courts, especially for customers whose employers are situated near the food court, and food courts are commonly situated near to high density business centres due to this, as well as shopping malls and entertainment centers.

[edit] Criticisms

Food courts provide the consumer with variety of food, but this does not mean the variety of companies that provide it is directly proportional. Due to the fact food courts are located in central areas, the high density of customers and money means the value and demand of the food court is great.

Hence, there will usually be a premium cost for renting a business unit in a food court, which restricts the outlets to companies with the most financial and marketing power. This is why one will find more McDonald's, KFC, and Pizza Hut type locations inside a food court more often than smaller chains of fast service food outlets. Furthermore, some smaller chain restaurants limit their food court menu, mainly to limit the food stocked in these small areas.

Also, because of the high volume of customers awaiting orders at any given moment, along with the tendency of consumers not wanting to stand around waiting for food in a busy, densely-populated food court, the food served is predominantly fast food. The health risks of the frequent consumption of fast food have been subject to public debate for decades. [citation needed]de:Food-Court fa:صحن غذا fr:Food-court ja:フードコート

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