TY - JOUR AB - Purpose– Recognizing that crowding in a restaurant waiting area forms a first impression of service and sets service expectations, the purpose of this study is to investigate the impact of crowding in the effective control of the waiting environment. The study seeks to examine the impact of crowding on customers' emotions and approach‐avoidance responses and to examine the mediating role of emotion and the moderating role of desired privacy in the relationship between crowding and approach‐avoidance responses.Design/methodology/approach– Using real‐scale, interactive virtual reality (VR) technology that allows high‐fidelity representations of real environments, the authors created a navigable, photo‐realistic three‐dimensional model of a restaurant waiting area. Through an experimental study which manipulated crowding levels in the VR restaurant, they surveyed the subjects' responses toward crowding conditions.Findings– The study found significant effects of crowding on emotions including arousal and dominance, but not pleasure, and on approach‐avoidance responses. The impact of crowding on approach‐avoidance responses was more direct than indirect, without having emotion as a mediator. It was also found that the desire for privacy as a psychological trait moderated the relationship between crowding and affiliation.Practical implications– The findings of this study offer restaurant managers insights toward the effective management of the pre‐process service environment during the waiting state that minimizes the negative consequences of waiting/crowding. This study provides three courses of management actions that can make unavoidable crowding in the restaurant waiting situation more enjoyable and comfortable.Originality/value– By using VR simulation, this study adds a new approach for crowding studies. Theoretically, this study broadened the scope of crowding studies by adding a potential mediating variable, emotions, and a moderating variable, desired privacy, in examining the relationship between crowding and approach‐avoidance responses. Also, by focusing on a restaurant waiting area, the authors were able to explore the pre‐process service expectations. VL - 24 IS - 2 SN - 0959-6119 DO - 10.1108/09596111211206150 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/09596111211206150 AU - Hwang Johye AU - Yoon So‐Yeon AU - Bendle Lawrence J. PY - 2012 Y1 - 2012/01/01 TI - Desired privacy and the impact of crowding on customer emotions and approach‐avoidance responses: Waiting in a virtual reality restaurant T2 - International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 224 EP - 250 Y2 - 2024/04/25 ER -