{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: A Molecular Capsule with Revolving Doors Partitioning Its Inner Space. {Author}: Lei Z;Finnegan TJ;Gunawardana VWL;Pavlović RZ;Xie H;Moore CE;Badjić JD; {Journal}: Chemistry {Volume}: 26 {Issue}: 69 {Year}: Dec 2020 9 {Factor}: 5.02 {DOI}: 10.1002/chem.202003247 {Abstract}: Covalent capsule 1 was designed to include two molecular baskets linked with three mobile pyridines tucked into its inner space. On the basis of both theory (DFT) and experiments (NMR and X-ray crystallography), we found that the pyridine "doors" split the chamber (380 Å3 ) of 1 so that two equally sizeable compartments (190 Å3 ) became joined through a conformationally flexible aromatic barrier. The compartments of such unique host could be populated with CCl4 (88 Å3 ; PC=46 %), CBr4 (106 Å3 ; 56 %) or their combination CCl4 /CBr4 (PC=51 %), with thermodynamic stabilities ΔG° tracking the values of packing coefficients (PC). Halogen (C-X⋅⋅⋅π) and hydrogen bonding (C-H⋅⋅⋅X) contacts held the haloalkane guests in the cavities of 1. The consecutive complexations were found to occur in a negative allosteric manner, which we propose to result from the induced-fit mode of complexation. Newly designed 1 opens a way for probing the effects of inner conformational dynamics on noncovalent interactions, reactivity and intramolecular translation in confined spaces of hollow molecules.