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A couple of months ago a Christie’s spokesman told the Times that the auction company intends to have its storage facility on Imlay Street in Red Hook tricked out by January, and if that’s to be the case the crew on the project sure has its work cut out. Per the pics above, the building is in the process of being gutted. Looks like a massive undertaking!
Christie’s Makes a Winning Bid for Red Hook [Brownstoner] GMAP


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  1. The climate controls for art storage facilities has t o be very precise. Temperature, humidity, pollution and light are the primary concerns, especially when you are protecting millions of dollars worth of art. And then there is security as well.

  2. A giant mausoleum is what it looks like.
    Windows would come in handy for the human beings going in there or wprking in there. I assume the art is stored or crated; it’s not like they would be hanging it on the walls by the windows. But I suppose a sealed environement is more secure and easier to control the temp and humidity. Too bad they could not figure out a less drastic way to meet their needs.

  3. The building that Christies is leasing doesn’t have windows – it’s 162 Imlay. Its “twin”, sitting South of it, is 160 Imlay – it’s the one that had “windows” knocked out before work ground to a halt with the law suits about zoning, etc, before it was finally resolved in court, 5 years later, around October, 2008, and the residential variance was restored (though it still sits dormant, cloaked in that black material).

  4. I’m not sure, but i think the windows were already bricked up. But either way, not so strange. They are going to be using it as an art storage facility. The #1 enemy of most artwork is exposure to natural sunlight.