That didn’t take long.
The plug has been pulled on the New York City to Dublin portal — for now — as raunchy and revolting behavior has run rampant on the 24/7 livestream.
The portal shut down Tuesday evening as staffers will work over the next few days to minimize the shocking conduct, its organizers, the Flatiron NoMad Partnership, told The Post in a statement.
“Instances of inappropriate behavior have come from a very small minority of Portal visitors and have been amplified on social media,” they added.
“In New York, we have had a set of protocols in place since the Portal’s launch, including 24/7 on-site security and barriers to prevent people from stepping onto the Portal.
“The Portals team and our partners in Dublin are working on additional solutions to limit such behavior appearing on the livestream.”
The interactive art installation located in the Flatiron District, with another device located in Dublin, opened last Wednesday to much fanfare — but soon devolved into a chaotic cesspool that mostly came from the Irish side.
The appalling overseas antics included one knucklehead flashing an image of a plane crashing into one of the Twin Towers on 9/11 and another jerk displaying a swastika on his phone.
But the New York side was not completely blameless.
An OnlyFan model obnoxiously posted a video to her 400,000 followers on Instagram on Sunday that showed her flashing her breasts to the Dublin side.
The project was touted as a “bridge to a united planet” that allows passersby to see each other on the 8-foot-by-8-foot video screen but not hear each other.
The portal was temporarily shut down Monday after organizers blamed a “technical glitch” as the Dublin City Council vowed to find solutions to address the naughty behavior.
A Post reporter observed the portal shut off around 8 p.m. Monday before Tuesday’s development.
A 27-year-old finance worker said Monday he was disappointed the portal was closed.
“I was just going to look. I really had no game plan; walk up and see how I’m feeling, you know?” Haskque May told The Post. “We wanted to see the Portal and just walk around and get outside.”
May also was not surprised by the lewd behavior.
“Anything that’s open, that’s like you can kind of do whatever,” he said. “It’s only a matter of time before it’s used for things it shouldn’t be used for. It’s kind of expected to be honest.”
Organizers are considering closing the portal late at night once it reopens to minimize absurd acts, an insider told The Post.
The attraction has drawn tens of thousands of visitors and resulted in more than a billion impressions online in its first week, Flatiron NoMad Partnership said.
“The overwhelming majority of visitors to the Portal have behaved appropriately and experienced the sense of joy and connectedness that this work of public art invites people to have,” the group said.