Page 7 - NY Cooperator October 2020
P. 7

COOPERATOR.COM  THE COOPERATOR —  OCTOBER 2020    7  Help your residents get the extra   space they need right now.  Bargold will turn your unused building space   into a secure,  state-of-the-art storage facility   FOR FREE  . We will handle everything from   start to finish, and we’ll   PAY YOU   monthly.   Contact us today!  WWW.BARGOLD.COM  Our Investment. Your Return.  (718) 247-7000  Storage4U@bargold.com  Our Investment. Your Return.Your Return.Your Return.Your Return.  Just when you thought the   nest was empty...they’re back  to up their game to compete now for sales.”  What Are Owners & Boards Seeking?  “Storage always has been—and still is—  the number one issue in apartments,” says   Sygrove. “Now with many apartment dwell-  ers collecting multiple packages of paper   towels, wipes, disinfectant, and toilet paper   because there were shortages, our personal   spaces are exploding. Closets are being out-  fi tted more precisely for the types of storage   needed. People are seriously purging items   that they don’t need so they can recapture   that space. We have requests from families   with kids doing everything on the dining   table. I’m designing a multi-purpose din-  ing/work/craft  table \\\[for one such client\\\]   to accommodate the additional duties this   table must perform. Th  e work is challeng-  ing and stimulating at the same time.”  Sygrove is also receiving inquiries from   building boards. “In particular, we have   come up with a unique design for door-  person stations that  protects the  staff ,  as   well as incoming residents and visitors.   Our desks are now designed with an inte-  gral recessed groove to accept the kind of   frameless protection screen you’re seeing   crop up everywhere. When COVID is over,   this groove can also be used for changing   signage about building activities, instruc-  tions that all visitors must be announced,   the name of the door staff  on duty—what-  ever is needed. It’s designed for both func-  tion and aesthetic. We are also designing   functional space into the desk that we call a   ‘sanitation station,’ right at the doorperson’s   fi ngertips. It can house wipes, disinfectant   spray, surgical gloves, and masks so that   he or she does not have to go elsewhere to   get these supplies. We’ve also designed en-  closed trash receptacles into our desks so   things don’t fall out and have to be picked   up later. Th  ere’s a trash cabinet with a door   and a slot so the door staff  can simply dis-  pose of trash through the slot.”  A Deeper Dive  Co-op and condo owners and boards   are looking more deeply into upgrades   that may be less immediate but are no less   necessary, adds Sygrove—like cleanable   upholstery and surface materials. Prior to   the pandemic, interior designers working   in residential buildings didn’t oft en look   at products designed specifi cally for the   healthcare industry, but now have found   these materials very handy for use in high-  traffi  c common areas that require the kind   of regular cleaning and disinfection proto-  cols that formerly were the domain of hos-  pitals and other care facilities. Of course,   along with using easily cleaned or disin-  fected materials, it’s also important that   building staff  knows how to clean every   item, and what cleaning products to use.   For her part, Sygrove provides a manual for   her clients with all of this information.  WHAT’S HAPPENING...  continued from page 6   Outdoor space has become even more  such a space would have on residents aft er   important than ever for co-op and condo  so many weeks and months cooped up at   communities, particularly now that things  home, the board is focusing on fortifying   are a bit more open, but people still need  and upgrading the outdoor space now; “It’s   room to observe prudent social distanc-  ing. Boards are looking into the viability  focus point, limited seating but enough for   of adding roof decks to their buildings, or  residents to enjoy the out of doors,” says Sy-  turning ground-level courtyards into us-  able residents-only outdoor spaces. Out-  door amenities may be the key to holding  sprawling development or a small, tight-  value in the future; Sygrove says she’s work-  ing with a building now where earlier this  tional design can not only help make things   year the board had deferred investing in the  a little easier during this stressful time, but   outdoor space until the lobby and hallway  can also help retain—or even increase—the   design projects were completed. Recogniz-  ing not just the monetary value of outdoor   space,  but  also  the  morale-boosting  eff ect   a clean space with a central sculpture as the   grove.   No matter whether your building is a   knit walk-up of just a few units, smart, func-  values of the homes in your community.      n  other automated building features will be   a subject to highlight in sales listings.   As time goes on and we understand   more concretely about COVID-19, its   spread, its  prevention,  and  its  effect  on   residential real estate, developers and   brokers will be looking for other selling   points for their properties. Some will   require architectural overhauls; others   merely some creative Streeteasy spin.       n  PLAYROOMS...  continued from page 6


































































































   5   6   7   8   9