UOVO, a collector-founded art storage facility within the U.S., is in search of approval in New York to construct a second location within the Bushwick neighborhood of Brooklyn.
The proposed seven-story, 240,000 sq. ft constructing can be situated at 74 Bogart Avenue, at the moment a parking zone, and would develop the corporate’s footprint close to its present 150,000 sq. ft Bushwick facility, which the corporate opened earlier than the pandemic in 2020.
Based in 2013 by Steven Guttman, a Miami-based actual property developer, UOVO operates 30 places throughout the U.S., with a large-scale headquarters facility in Queens.
The corporate, which shops and manages collections for museums, galleries, and high-net-worth people, is aiming to transform the Bushwick lot right into a cupboard space for personal and company homeowners of artworks, collections of wine, and vogue archives.
The developer, who constructed an adjoining CubeSmart facility, acquired the undeveloped web site for $45.5 million in 2019, in response to native data. Structure agency S9 will oversee the design if the plan is accredited by town.
There are indicators of neighborhood pushback on-line to UOVO’s proposed plan, with a circulating open letter addressed to a Brooklyn zoning board elevating concern over the impacts of growing such a big industrial space that isn’t getting used for residents there.
The lot is situated within the District 34, an space that metropolis officers have stated has skilled a few of the most in depth residential displacement in New York Metropolis.
Scrutiny over the corporate’s enlargement has up to now been heightened by points with its labor document. Through the pandemic, when many artwork handler jobs misplaced employment as a result of non permanent shuttering of public and industrial artwork establishments, UOVO was accused of retaliating in opposition to workers trying to unionize. The corporate has denied the allegations.
In prior statements, UOVO has maintained that’s it dedicated to the general public profit in New York, citing a $25,000 annual artist prize it distributes in tandem with the Brooklyn Museum and forthcoming plans to assist renovate Bushwick’s Maria Hernandez Park.