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  4. We smashed things at Break Bar, one of a growing number of 'rage rooms' taking over the US - and found a cathartic retreat from reality

We smashed things at Break Bar, one of a growing number of 'rage rooms' taking over the US - and found a cathartic retreat from reality

Bethany Biron   

We smashed things at Break Bar, one of a growing number of 'rage rooms' taking over the US - and found a cathartic retreat from reality
wrecking room copy
  • We visited Break Bar, a "rage room" in New York City, where visitors can come to enjoy a cocktail before smashing everything from their empty glass to printers and computers.
  • Break Bar is one of a growing number of rage rooms in the US. Today, there are 60 of these venues, where visitors can come blow off steam by destroying household items.
  • We found the experience extremely cathartic. Here's what it was like.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

In the heart of Midtown Manhattan there's a bar where patrons are not just allowed, but actively encouraged, to shatter their empty beer bottles and hurl cocktail glasses against the wall.

The more adventurous - or perhaps more wrathful - can opt to rent out time in The Wrecking Room to smash household items of their choosing. At Break Bar, destroying things is the entire point.

Break Bar is among the growing number of "rage rooms" proliferating across the country in recent years. In the US, there are an estimated 60 of these venues, places designated for destroying household items, according to CNN.

Tom Daly, founder and owner of Break Bar, said he knew he needed to create something unique if he was truly going to carve out a niche in the Manhattan nightlife scene. While the timing of Break Bar's 2016 opening just so happened to coincide with the rise of a particularly fraught and divisive political climate, he said he doesn't view the bar as "tied to anger or rage at all."

While it can offer catharsis in uncertain times, Daly said he views it more as an off-the-beaten path, refreshing experience.

"I think of it as game," he said. "It's a fun activity that's outside of the box and new. It's a different experience and it's something unique."

I visited Break Bar on a recent Friday night and experienced the pure, unmitigated joy of smashing bottles firsthand. So cue up The Vaccines, revisit this moment from Freeform's "The Bold Type," and join me for an inside look at what it's like inside a rage room:



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