Industry City Logo

NOT SURE WHERE TO START? HERE ARE SOME TOPICS TO GET YOU STARTED.

YOU CAN ALSO CHECK OUT OUR FAQ PAGE HERE

.

How Industry City Provides Space For Companies To Continuously Evolve

October 11, 2021
Logo
In 2015, Tamara Mayne signed a lease for a 500-square-foot space at Brooklyn’s Industry City for her two-year-old manufacturing company, Brooklyn Candle Studio. At the time, Mayne was her company’s only employee. Since then, Brooklyn Candle Studio has grown to 11,000 square feet and around 20 employees, within a contiguous space housing production, shipping, a buyer’s showroom and storage. She’s expanded her company three different times; but thanks to the unique and spacious set-up at Industry City, every move has been within the complex, where Brooklyn Candle Studio remains today. “I feel very lucky to have found a place —...

In 2015, Tamara Mayne signed a lease for a 500-square-foot space at Brooklyn’s Industry City for her two-year-old manufacturing company, Brooklyn Candle Studio. At the time, Mayne was her company’s only employee.

Since then, Brooklyn Candle Studio has grown to 11,000 square feet and around 20 employees, within a contiguous space housing production, shipping, a buyer’s showroom and storage. She’s expanded her company three different times; but thanks to the unique and spacious set-up at Industry City, every move has been within the complex, where Brooklyn Candle Studio remains today.

“I feel very lucky to have found a place — especially in Brooklyn, where rents are very competitive — that was able to accommodate our growth,” said Mayne. “As we continue to grow, they have bigger and different kinds of spaces, to accommodate our needs.”

TAMARA MAYNE, CEO AND FOUNDER OF BROOKLYN CANDLE STUDIO IN HER SPACE AT INDUSTRY CITY. IMAGE COURTESY OF INDUSTRY CITY.

Industry City is a 6 million-square-foot mixed-use campus, occupying 16 buildings and the courtyards in between them over 35 acres. It serves as home to over 550 businesses in industries including media, production, technology, design and many more. The complex is unique in that, in a city known for office and warehouse districts, Industry City can accommodate multiple functions for the same company with contiguous spaces ranging from 2,000 to 120,000 square feet.

At Industry City, a company can have its retail store, offices, warehouse/storage unit and manufacturing and fulfillment centers all in the same place, then enjoy the complex’s more than 30 food and beverage vendors, plus entertainment options such as live music. Businesses also benefit from access to a robust talent pool, complementary workforce training and hiring services and convenient placement near the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway and the 36th Street subway station.

AERIAL VIEW OF THE INDUSTRY CITY CAMPUS. Photo Credit: Selvon Ramsawak

“The modernized infrastructure of Industry City is simply unmatched in the New York City region,” said Andrew Kimball, CEO of Industry City. “The ability to have your warehouse, industrial operations or content studios right next to your offices, and then an extraordinary array of amenities including food, music, and fun activities on your doorstep makes Industry City the best potential headquarters in the city for companies of any size.”

IC TENANTS ENJOY FREE HEALTH AND WELLNESS PROGRAMMING IN THE COURTYARD.

Kimball noted that Industry City has the unique advantage of being extensive but also unusually nimble.

“We really want tenants to be here for the long haul,” Kimball said. “We often see tenants suddenly need an additional 10,000 or 15,000 square feet of warehousing space within days to meet new demand. When you have 16 buildings and 6 million square feet of space, you have the flexibility to provide that.”

Established in the 1890s, Industry City, then known as Bush Terminal, was initially a warehouse distribution center, accommodating large-scale distribution by rail, sea and truck. The terminal enjoyed success until, like many other industrial waterfront properties, it fell into a period of decline in the 1960s.

In  2013, a $450 million redevelopment effort was initiated, bringing about a modern vision for the property. This included installing some of the fastest and most robust power and high-speed internet connections in the city to handle 21st century business needs, as well as creating outdoor space for work and leisure, and defining a retail corridor at the heart of the campus. These changes not only rejuvenated Industry City, but transformed it into a vibrant neighborhood of collaborative local businesses. Since 2013, Industry City has quadrupled its number of businesses across sizes and sectors, and it has created over 8,000 new jobs.

THE $450 MILLION REDEVELOPMENT INCLUDED THE CREATION OF A PEDESTRIAN PATHWAY AND RETAIL CORRIDOR THAT CUTS THROUGH THE CENTER OF THE CAMPUS.

“We’ve taken Industry City into the 21st century,” said Kimball. “We have massively diversified the sectors we have here, with 550 tenants representing every sector of today’s economy from traditional warehouse distribution, now evolving into e-commerce, to content creation, biotech and a robust mix of small makers.”

As such, the Brooklyn businesses at Industry City span a wide variety of uses — sometimes placing different divisions of their businesses in separate buildings, other times under “one roof.” AbelCine, a film and video equipment rental company, houses its offices, camera rentals, showroom, repairs center, warehouse and a state-of-the-art training center and auditorium in a 50,000-square-foot space at Industry City. The Garage, a video production company specializing in commercials for food and beverage companies, co-locates its offices with a workshop, storage and content studio with robotic cameras in its 14,000-square-foot space.

High-end furniture rental start-up ZZ Driggs also has its office, warehouse and fulfillment at Industry City. ZZ Driggs, which opened in 2014, relocated to Industry City from a location half a mile away this April. Whitney Frances Falk, the company’s founder and CEO, was inspired to seek out new accommodations by the uncertainty caused by the pandemic. At Industry City, she found a flexible multi-use space that offered greater warehouse space along with significantly cheaper rent, and a team she saw would work closely with her to ensure that all of ZZ Driggs’ needs were covered.

SPACES UNDER 2500 SQUARE FEET, KNOWN AS CREATIVE WORKSHOPS, REPRESENT OVER 350 OF THE COMPANIES AT INDUSTRY CITY.

“They take a really human approach, which was needed in such a time of unknowing and instability with COVID,” said Falk, who also credits the complex’s high-touch, personalized management style with making it a more attractive home for her business. “It’s a campus for growing companies. There are food offerings, community events and a newsletter. They’re always updating you on goings-on, or if, say, a tropical storm is heading our way. It’s a partnership. It’s such a community of growing companies that are primarily in the design/creative camp. As business owners we have so many overlapping needs, so it’s great that we can share and utilize resources.”

Kimball noted that making Industry City this sort of creative incubator is exactly what the developers intended when they redeveloped the complex.

“We help companies like Brooklyn Candle start very, very small in affordable spaces, and then as they grow and diversify, we help find spaces for them to expand throughout the campus,” Kimball said. “We now have 550 tenants, and over 350 are in these really, really small creative workshops, but they provide the backbone of the ecosystem, the energy that attracts bigger companies.”

INDUSTRIAL BUILDING IMPROVEMENTS. RENDERING CREDIT: THE MONUMENT.

While Industry City has become known as the premier home for creative maker companies with varying space needs, the complex is not resting on its laurels, instead making continuous improvements while keeping rents competitive. Industry City recently announced a major upgrade to five of its industrial buildings including updated lobbies and covered loading docks, speed-enhancing modifications to both its freight and passenger elevators as well as additional food amenities.

As long as young, growing companies continue to have complex and unpredictable needs in servicing their growth, Industry City will remain their comfortable and accommodating home.

“Our growth has been pretty unpredictable,” Mayne said. “We know that if we do grow to the point where we need a lot more space, Industry City will be able to accommodate that growth as soon as we need it.”

*This is an article from Commercial Observer published on October 11, 2021; See the original article here.


Learn more about leasing space at IC here.


Keep reading

RELATED STORIES

Onwards and Upwards: Staged to Sell Home

December 19, 2024 Tyler Urquhart

"The year has flown by, and the holidays are fast approaching. This week, we asked 10 designers—Alyssa Alon, Margaret Donaldson,...

View

ARTIST D’ANA NUNEZ UNVEILS MAKERS GUILD MURAL

August 20, 2024 Tyler Urquhart

We’re thrilled to announce that multidisciplinary artist and creator D'ana Nunez, known as COVL, has completed a vibrant new mural...

View

Brian Polen gives sake a Brooklyn twist in Industry City

August 12, 2024 Tyler Urquhart

Brooklyn Daily Eagle August 8, 2024 Alice Gilbert Brian Polen. Photo courtesy of Ward 8 Studios Brooklyn might not be...

View

Equinor Breaks Ground on Marine Terminal Key to Supporting Offshore Empire Wind 1

June 13, 2024 Paul Gerke

"Today Equinor broke ground on construction at the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal (SBMT), kicking off the revitalization of the venerable...

View

Gizmo Maker Adafruit Leaves Manhattan for 42K SF at Brooklyn’s Industry City

June 5, 2024 Abigail Nehring

"Open-source electronics manufacturer Adafruit Industries is breaking up with Manhattan to join a growing hub of tinkerers at Brooklyn’s Industry City. Adafruit signed...

View

How Athena Calderone Managed to Make a Bare Industrial Warehouse Feel Homey

May 14, 2024 Lindsey Mather

"Plus more design tricks from her Brooklyn office. Athena Calderone practices what she podcasts. Back in 2020, the EyeSwoon founder offered up a...

View

Celebrate Asian American Heritage Month With Brooklyn Night Market

May 14, 2024 BK Reader Staff

"The first Asian American Heritage Month Celebration and Night Market is on May 23 at Industry City. On Thursday, May...

View

9 Craft Distilleries to Visit in New York City

May 10, 2024 Kara Newman

"When Alex Clark started Fort Hamilton Distillery in 2016, he was among just a handful of craft producers making spirits in New...

View

Skanska USA Opening 15K-SF Brooklyn Office for Offshore Wind Project

May 7, 2024 Mark Hallum

"The U.S. arm of construction giant Skanska will breeze into a new Brooklyn outpost to serve as a center of operations for...

View

BK Magazine Names Industry City’s HiFi Provisions Among Brooklyn’s Best Record Shops

April 22, 2024 Colin Kirkland

HiFi Provisions237 36th Street, Industry City "After years of selling records and stereo equipment at the annual Carroll Park flea...

View

Social Media Company Puff Media Expands to 15K SF at Industry City

April 16, 2024 Abigail Nehring

"A company that specializes in going viral online needed more space in the material world — and found it in...

View

Creating an Artistic Buzz, One Real Estate Development at a Time

September 16, 2024 Dave Montgomery

By Dave Montgomery Sept. 3, 2024Artwork has been part of urban projects for decades, but a new push from developers looking...

View

Loading...0%

Lease at IC

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Cras pharetra massa ut erat porttitor, vitae tristique massa imperdiet. Proin neque velit, tempus posuere suscipit eu, porttitor vitae massa.

Discover IC

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Cras pharetra massa ut erat porttitor, vitae tristique massa imperdiet. Proin neque velit, tempus posuere suscipit eu, porttitor vitae massa.