Tag Archives: Blue Mercury

Main Street Merchants To Earth: Screw You!

The 1st selectman endorses it. The Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce does too.

So do the Westport Downtown Merchants Association, Green Task Force and Earth Guardians, a Toquet Hall-based youth group.

All back an initiative asking local businesses to keep their doors closed on hot summer days. Air conditioning is a major contributor to carbon dioxide emissions that lead to global warming.

And open doors are a major contributor to wasteful air conditioning.

Yet despite reminders from all those folks, this was the scene last Saturday on Main Street:

(Photo/Bob Mitchell)

That’s 3 stores in a row with wide-open doors — including Blue Mercury, which has been doing it since at least 2010.

There were many more as well.

I know the usual suspects will jump into the “Comments” section, declaring that unless there’s a law against it, stores can do whatever they want to attract customers.

Of course they can.

But that doesn’t mean they should.

Shut The Front Door!

It’s October, not August. Westporters are turning our thermostats up, not down.

But it’s never too early to think about that scourge of summer: Main Street stores that throw their front doors open, wasting enormous air-conditioning energy in the belief that customers will not come in if they have to actually open the door.

Apparently, that’s an issue in New York too.

But America’s largest city has managed to do something about it.

A new law requires most shops and restaurants to keep front doors and windows shut, while air-conditioners and cooling systems are in use. Exceptions include restaurants with outdoor dining, and sidewalk cafes. Fines range from $250 to $1,000.

A typical summer scene downtown.

A typical summer scene downtown. Previous “06880′ posts on the subject have been met with indifference by store owners.

The Department of Consumer Affairs is advertising the new law with stickers saying “Shut the Front Door!” That’s a polite twist on the texting abbreviation “STFU.”

New York’s law is not meant to punish store owners who think they’ll lure customers with a blast of cold air. It’s an acknowledgment of an enormous waste of energy — and the urgency of reducing the city’s carbon footprint.

Westport was a leader in the national movement to ban plastic bags. It’s time for our RTM to take another step in the war against climate change. Let’s follow New York City’s lead, and shut every front door in town.

The Heat’s On Blue Mercury

Blue Mercury is well known for throwing open its doors on sweltering summer days, blasting air conditioning onto Main Street.

Turns out the makeup/skincare/spa spot is an equal opportunity energy waster.

This was the scene today, 18 days before Christmas:

Blue Mercury

The temperature downtown is 39 degrees.

Unless you’re standing in their open doorway, in which case it’s a toasty — and totally unnecessary — 70 or so.

Main Street’s Open Door Policy

Two summers ago, I blogged about downtown stores that kept their doors wide open. The temperature was not quite 90, but from 1 spot on Main Street I spotted 4 places blasting air conditioning onto the sidewalk.

The post drew 99 comments. In true “06880” fashion they ranged from “I can’t believe they’re wasting so many energy” to “it’s a free country, they can do whatever they want” (with side trips into “our electric grid is outmoded” and “it’s the Gulf War, stupid”).

This afternoon, with the temperature 94 degrees and climbing, I went downtown again.

I am sure you will be stunned to hear that, this time, even more stores had their doors flung wide.

My 1st stop was Blue Mercury. In 2010 it was part of my Gang of Four. Two years later, the only thing that’s changed is that it’s spawned a sister shop, Mercury 2, across the street — and both Blue Mercurys pump cold air basically at each other.

One of the 2 Blue Mercurys. This is on the east side of Main Street.

When I asked why, a manager handed me a card with a toll-free number. I called, and the pert phone-answerer said, “Great! We just had a grand opening there!”

But when I asked why the doors were open, she handed me off to several people. I wound up speaking to someone in corporate communications, who promised that someone else — “most likely our director of operations” — will call back. I’ll let you know if/when he/she does.

Next door, BCBG had its doors open 2 years ago. Nothing has changed, except its name: it’s now the Scrabble-like BCBGMaxazria.

I strolled past the wide-open Shoes ‘N’ More, and up to Brooks Corner. Lux Bond & Green‘s doors were ajar.

Before and after, at Williams-Sonoma.

So was one door at Williams-Sonoma‘s. When I asked why, a woman said, “I just came in. Someone probably opened it. Maybe it’s more inviting to customers?”

She paused. “Maybe I should shut it, to keep air in.”

She paused again. “I’ll do that. I’ll shut it.”

And she did. Twenty minutes later, it remained closed.

Across the street, at Jack Wills, I told a young guy I was doing a story on stores that kept the a/c on, in 94-degree heat.

“Cool!” he said, both non-ironically and bizarrely.  “We like to pump the air.”

But when I asked again about air-conditioning Main Street, he said, “Well, it’s a big front door. Would you come in if it were closed?”

I thought, you mean, the way people do in October and December and April? Instead, I said, “Actually, I’m more likely to shop at store that doesn’t waste energy.”

“That’s interesting!” he replied.

The heavy door at Jack Wills.

For the record: A number of stores kept their doors closed. The list included Banana Republic — a change from 2010 — as well as Gap, J. Crew, Coach and Vineyard Vines.

Also Brooks Brothers Men. (Brooks Brothers Women was open, though. Go figure.)

Oh, yeah: Westport Pizzeria’s doors were shut too. And they’ve got an oven.

Totally Uncool

As we worry about the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, how many of us think about our own waste here in Westport?

From 1 spot on Main Street today — with the temperature near 90 — I saw 4 stores with their doors wide open.

Air conditioning was on full blast — luring customers with the promise of a refreshing shopping experience, while wreaking havoc on the environment.

True, it’s not 2 million gallons a day.  But it’s energy just the same.

Banana Republic

Douglas

BCBG

Blue Mercury