A new moving company in the Bronx is green to the max, offering “biodegradable packing materials, reusable plastic boxes and hybrid vehicles,” and donating a portion of its profits to tree-planting efforts in the Brazilian rainforest. “I am not a tree hugger at all,” its owner Jeffrey Sitt told the Times. “The goal of iMoveGreen is to encourage a simple premise: Be respectful of the environment when moving to a new home.” On top of being the first moving company to gain EPA-certification, he boasts of prices comparable to other city movers, and offers a companion product: iStoreGreen, a Brooklyn business specializing in eco-friendly storage units.
Bronx Boasts First EPA-Certified Mover
Christie's Classes Up Red Hook Waterfront
Red Hook is getting another big name, but this time it's not a Big Box store. The NY Times reports that the once corrupt waterfront location is getting classed up by Christie's Auction House! They'll be moving into "an enormous, high-tech warehouse with security worthy of James Bond, all to protect the multimillion-dollar artworks, manuscripts, furniture and even rare cars." The luxury storage facility will be housed in one of the former New York Dock Company loft buildings, which is being renovated, and by January "will boast infrared video cameras, biometric readers and motion-activated monitors, as well as smoke-, heat- and water-detection systems," as well as private viewing galleries. This sounds primed for an art caper, Hudson Hawk style. The lofts were originally going to be luxury apartments, but the developer has said, “I still think it will be a fantastic residential conversion, but with the economic climate being what it is today. it may make sense to do a Christie’s-like commercial deal and treat it as a bond—you, know, put it away for 30 years, let my children see what’s happening 30 years from now.”
CBGB Lives on in Storage
When most venues close they don't necessarily get all sentimental and pack up every piece of floorboard and pint glass that resided there...but CBGB was different, with every peeling sticker a commodity. The NY Times takes a look at where it all went following their closing and dismantlement in 2006, and keeping in tune with the venue's recent history: it's pretty grim.
Where Mr. Big Stashes His Stuff
In the Sex and the City movie, Mr. Big promises to build Carrie a bigger closet, but life doesn't imitate art for Mr. Big's portrayer Chris Noth. Apparently you can find his unwanted odds and ends at the Cutting Room, the bar he co-owns with Steven Walter. Walter tells gossip reporter Jo Piazza, "He cleans out his apartment, especially now that he is a dad, and he just dumps it all here. We have a lamp on the bar that Chris' girlfriend didn't like. Who has a lamp on their bar? It's an ugly lamp."

