The phalanx of police armed with assault weapons, bomb-sniffing dogs and concrete barricades causing congestion and other headaches outside Donald Trump's home will stay at least until his inauguration.
It's a situation that has prompted the Republican president-elect's hometown to ask his administration to pay ongoing costs for what Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio says is an unprecedented security effort for a US president's unofficial residence.
"We're being asked to do something on a scale that's never been done before," the mayor said at a news conference with New York Police Department and Secret Service officials on Friday.
The mayor spoke at a command centre at NYPD headquarters where four video monitors carried live feeds of the intersection outside Trump Tower, in midtown Manhattan.
The monitors showed how police have closed two of Fifth Avenue's five lanes, completely barricaded the block where residents have a private entrance and set up checkpoints manned by officers in guard booths.
The measures, largely intended to fortify Trump Tower in a terror attack, have slowed motor and foot traffic outside and raised concerns among retailers it could hurt business during the holiday shopping season.
Anti-Trump demonstrations have shut down Fifth Avenue entirely at least three times in the past 10 days.
Authorities are still refining their tactics to minimise inconveniences to workers and shoppers through late January.
In the immediate aftermath of the election, Trump Tower's entrance was walled off by dump trucks filled with sand and its atrium was closed to tourists, measures that were lifted within a couple of days.
What happens after the inauguration will depend on how the new president divides his time between his high-rise apartment and the White House, officials say.
Depending on the answer, the NYPD might create a new command assigned full time to securing Trump Tower.
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