Sign up for the Brownstoner daily email
« Mega-Projects Dropping Like Flies Calling All Interns »

March 28, 2008

Downtown Office Collective Tries to Go Green

creative%20collective%20flatbush%20sm.jpgAl Attara has owned his early-20th Century, seven-story office building on Flatbush Avenue for 30 years. Now he wants to share ownership with freelancers and small firms in the design, architecture and planning, media, and literary world. Collectively, he said they could pool their money to build a "green" addition 100 feet tall, "but we'll go up as high as we can to take advantage of the southern exposure and wind." Though a collective has always been his vision, up until two years ago Attara said his building was part of an urban renewal area, meaning it could be seized by the city at any time. Now, some tenants are ready to invest but the group is looking for more partners.

With Brooklyn gaining creative freelancers faster than any borough at 33 percent over five years, and more small creative firms moving here, Attara's vision seems like an attractive option for those with capital. Currently, a large desk and free run of the building's many cavernous, curio-filled rooms runs $400 per month. The problem is "creatives," stereotypically bad with money and more concerned with self-fulfillment than financial gain, are competing for space in a profit-driven society. Which is why Attara said forming a collective is necessary for survival - it's the only protection from getting the boot.

Downtown Brooklyn, with scores of vacant office space, has struggled to identify with the creative class, which along with big business, like yin and yang, is the city's lifeblood. But Bob Hebron of Ingram & Hebron Realty said Downtown is "too boring" and "too corporate" for creative taste; it's more suited to the tie and briefcase set. Attara said it's too expensive. "People who are from the creative class want to be able to reconstruct their own spaces ... they don't need the extravagance of a Class A or a Class B or even a Class C building," he said. "The price you have to pay for space is too high, because most of them don't just need a desk, they need a place to lay out their work and fabricate." Not everybody agrees: Several brokers said Two Trees Management's turn-key office space has been hugely successful with creative firms, though they get a discount, and Downtown Brooklyn Partnership president Joe Chan remains optimistic that his domain will become the next DUMBO.
Creatives Flock to Bklyn, But Are They Endangered?[Brownstoner]
Partnership Working To Revitalize Downtown Brooklyn[NY Sun]

Photographed, from left to right, Kaja Kuehl, freelance architect; Daniel D'Oca, principal of architecture and planning firm Interboro Partners; Bi Li, organic fashion designer; and Al Attara.




Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.brownstoner.com/mte/mt-tb.cgi/4345

Comments

Holy crap ... is that Jerry Garcia?!

... and that girl is hot and has nice sneakers.

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 10:18 AM

Brilliant idea. More of this should be happening.

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 10:23 AM

Great Idea!

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 10:25 AM

The girl in the photo standing up is really cute. Who is she?

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 10:39 AM

A bunch of my friends used to live in that building. I used to party there all the time! It's a wild place. Brownstoner should move his office in there.

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 10:40 AM

The girl in the photo standing up is really cute. Who is she?

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 10:40 AM

cute? she could be a dude from this pic.

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 11:18 AM

That's Santa Claus.

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 11:38 AM

With Santa Claus on board, this project can't fail!

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 11:41 AM

Ah, zee collectiv!
Izznt zat ze vay ve uoosed to do it in ze mother Russia ... Brezhnev vas such a nice man ...

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 11:56 AM

Since Santa Claus is aligned with Christians, and its cool to disassociate yourself from Christianity, I am against this project.

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 12:27 PM

Na, Santa works for Coke now.

Posted by: guest at March 28, 2008 1:06 PM

I thought Paul Giammati lived in Brooklyn Heights. What's he doing in this photo?

Posted by: Biff Champion at March 28, 2008 1:56 PM

We are Borg you will be assimilated.

Posted by: guest at March 29, 2008 12:46 AM

Offices to rent on a yearly lease, not own through a collective, are sorely needed for freelancers and small businesses in creative fields. We ended up leaving a Park Slope coop and buying a house in another an office close to home and couldn't find one. We're happy with the choice, but it was frustrating at the time. There are lots of retail spaces and some doctor office suites, but no individual offices for rent in Brooklyn except DUMBO or downtown.

Posted by: guest at March 30, 2008 6:59 PM

Sorry, that's "in another neighborhood close to home".

Posted by: guest at March 30, 2008 8:19 PM

Post a comment

Please be patient while your comment is published. It may take a moment.

Latest Restaurant Additions