Today, Pfizer is the largest pharmaceutical company in the world, with dozens of factories and research labs across the country, over 100,000 employees, and hundreds of billions in revenue. Amazing to think it all got started in a now-empty factory on the border between South Williamsburg and Bed-Stuy.

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Pfizer was founded as a fine chemicals business in 1849 by German-American cousins Charles Pfizer and Charles Erhardt at the corner of Harrison Ave and Bartlett Street. Their first success was an anti-parasitic called santonin, though citric acid production was the real early moneymaker.

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As the company grew, the cousins bought up land around their property, eventually occupying an entire block bordered by Tompkins, Ellery, Marcy, and Flushing.

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Despite a lack of space, significant downturns in the neighborhood, and the high costs of operating in New York City, Pfizer maintained its operations here for over 150 years in what seems almost to have been a loyalty to its birthplace.

You can find a lot of great remnants from older Pfizer days, like this sign above one of the entrances:

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Another entrance, with a cool art-deco motif:

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And lining the building…

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…are numerous “Pfizer Quality” emblems:

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By 2005, over 2 billion pills were being manufactured here annually, ranging from Zoloft to Lipitor to Viagra. Then, in 2008, the plant was finally shuttered for good.

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A few weeks ago, I received an email from the new owners inviting me to take a look inside. Exactly what this all will become is still being worked out, but in the meantime, they’re more than happy to consider film production and photoshoot rentals (that includes you, student films with a limited budget!). The building is absolutely enormous, with hundreds of possible uses…

…But why don’t we take a look around?

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Very little has changed since the final Pfizer employee walked out the front doors. We started down the entrance hallway, still lined with company slogans…

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…as well as some historical photographs, like this 1936 picture of a man working a citrus concentrator.

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Another, taken in 1945, of the Penicillin labeling line (I love that masked figure through the rear window):

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From there, we headed past the old security desk and into the building:

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This place is HUGE.

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Absolutely enormous.

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Cavernous warehouse spaces can be found at any turn in the 8-story building, and I had lost my bearings within minutes of walking in.

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The pipes alone should give you a sense of the size and scope (note the one for “breathing air”):

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We started our tour on the 7th floor…

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…where dozens of old labs line the perimeter, many with great views of the city:

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Many were built in the 1970’s, and I’m told you really don’t see this sort of design anymore:

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Lots of drawers:

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Chemical hoods, providing ventilation for noxious substances:

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What really surprised me though was how much equipment Pfizer left behind. Like this – what is this?!

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Oh, of course. A Doctor Machine.

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Here’s another, across the room:

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In fact, Pfizer left thousands of pieces of equipment, right down to the old 70’s pencil sharpeners on the wall. And yes, all of this can be used as props for film shoots.

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A biohazard cabinet (glad the sign below says empty):

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Cool old blue shelving:

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I love the glass corner offices in some of the labs.

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Worn steam heaters, used for heating beakers (hence the different sizes):

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What size beaker are you looking for? They had ’em all…

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This is the sort of thing that really gets the science nerd in me excited – I love random high tech electrical equipment, and it’s fun to actually get to push all the buttons without, you know, getting killed or blowing something up:

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The stroboscope control unit. I’ve been meaning to get a new one.

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One of my favorite closets in the building. I wonder if this was ever used?

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There’s a lot of great left-over signage. I like the enormous red hand telling the little man not to come in:

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I was assured that the place has been fully cleaned and inspected a zillion times over, so you can feel safe ignoring signs like this:

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Awesome stencil glass lettering on chicken-wire glass:

signage

Do not enter this room without…

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Every once in a while, we’d come across a room that looked like the Incredible Hulk had ripped a hole through the wall. Apparently, some of the equipment Pfizer removed was so big, these needed to be cut to get it out.

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We then took a stop in this room…

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This is some sort of pill mixer…

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…but what’s especially neat is that it stretches down to the lower floor…

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…where a little tap could be opened at the bottom:

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Two more in the room:

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Inside the mixing unit:

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Nearby were two container lifts…

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…and the computer to operate them (featuring a legendary Shiny Red Button):

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In another cavernous space…

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…I love the mezzanine “overseers” level:

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Further up the stairs are a bunch of sealed off rooms…

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…used for God knows what purpose:

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Ah, photohelics – got it:

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The plant sort of reminded of Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory (er, if Willy Wonka made Viagra). Like this “TopGrade Collection” arm – did you put pills in here to be suctioned away?? (it’s actually a ventilation unit, used if vapors are suddenly in the air):

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On the ground floor is a full doctor’s office, complete with waiting room…

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…and several examination rooms:

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It seems like you were probably in bad shape if you had to go in this very claustrophobic windowed room (actually, writes reader Marie, this was used for hearing tests, which were given daily to employees engaged in louder operations):

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One of my favorite relics in the entire plant – a beautiful old optics desk…

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…filled with those little lenses for checking vision:

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A lens:

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And that’s barely scratching the surface. There’s a cafeteria…

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Food lines:

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A big kitchen:

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A store (could double as a post office):

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A gym for employees:

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Locker rooms (with authentic locker room odor!):

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Cubicle space:

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Hallways and entrance ways (reminds me of a public school):

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And endless numbers of open rooms (police station, anyone?):

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Several areas are large enough to be used as stage space, and qualify for the NY tax credit.

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And I really cannot convey how much stuff was left behind, all usable as props…

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…from filing cabinets and desks…

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…to this…What is this??

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And to top it off, tons and tons of parking:

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Pfizer’s bond with this part of Brooklyn was of the sort that may never be seen again. According to the NY Times, despite numerous companies fleeing New York City during the 1970’s, “Pfizer, wanting to hold onto both its veteran work force and its birthplace, decided to help rebuild the neighborhood, on the theory that it would be both good for business and good for the neighbors.”

It worked with the city to create jobs and housing, donating land and cleaning up the neighborhood (remember: that’s South Williamsburg in the 1970’s). When an educational reform group expressed interest in creating a neighborhood charter school, Pfizer leased an entire 4-story building for $1 a year, spent half a million on renovations, and even lent their engineers to design the school’s science labs.

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Sad to see an era come to a close, but Pfizer left a positive mark on Brooklyn that will be felt for years to come, and hopefully, others will be inspired to follow in its footsteps. Thanks to all the great comments for clearing up some of my questions!

-SCOUT

Finally, one last important device in the old Pfizer lab…

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Yup – that’s the dust collector.

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  1. Jim Avatar

    Quite the memory generator….I spent many days in this plant however only a fraction of the time so many others spent ; some dedicating entire careers across several generations. And many would argue that each person, each family, is better for their experience with Pfizer Brooklyn. Thanks for taking the time to post.

  2. Neda Avatar
    Neda

    It was truely one of the best places I’ve worked at. I am proud that I’ve worked there for 5 years. We were a family and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it.

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Neda,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  3. Paul E. K Avatar
    Paul E. K

    I worked there for 12 1/2 years. It was an awesome place to work, so many great people, just as many have stated. I will always be loyal to the Pfizer that I knew. In 2004 I caught wind that big changes were ahead for Pfizer Brooklyn,…the unfortunate end. What many have not stated is that the corporate greed filth had crept in and was just a matter of time before Brooklyn was done. I hope the Pfizer big dogs read this…like a thief in the night, they stole and ransacked what so many of us built over the years. It WAS more than a business that we helped build, it was family, friends, a good place to work….yes, it was a legacy! It would still be up and running if it weren’t for the greedy ones in charge, believe me, even on it’s worse days it was HUGELY profitable. I miss my Pfizer friends, seeing these pics(while it is a work of art)it still made me feel sad.

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Paul,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  4. Cisco Avatar
    Cisco

    Wow, nice pics, they brought back lots of unforgettable memories, worked there for 10 years, and proud of the experience,and great friends I met, hope everyone is doing great, good times and hands down, great company! Whats up to my PKG WHS Team!!

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Cisco,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  5. Bob Mott Avatar
    Bob Mott

    I worked at the Brooklyn facility from79-86 before I relocated to Groton. Those were some of the best of my 30 years at Pfizer. The people made the building and hence, the product. I was always amazed at how all the people that worked there made everything come together. There was never a problem that could not be overcome. A lot of the respondents noted the “Pfizer family”. In the truest sense of the word it existed in Brooklyn. You could always count on anyone that worked in the plant to take care of one another. In 1982 I had a VW bug that was always in some sort of need. I came in on a Saturday to inspect tanker trucks early in the morning for off-loading of citric production. The car barely made it into the parking lot. One of the mechanics that serviced the Pfizer truck fleet was in, took the car into the garage, and fixed it before my shift was over….all outside the box, all on his own time. Leaving Pfizer Brooklyn and going to Groton showed me how unique Brooklyn was. I never got that sense of “Pfamily” anywhere else in Pfizer as I had there. I would like the opportunity to tour the old facility again but I fear those days are over. I believe the last time I was in the plant was back in 2001 for some meetings. It was a great place with great people.

  6. Richard B. Avatar
    Richard B.

    I worked there from 97-00 over at PK alley (PK21), and man do I miss that place. Great place, great people to work with… Thanks for the site man, it truly takes me back…

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Richard,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  7. Miguel M. Avatar
    Miguel M.

    I grew up in this neighborhood, and my parents still live there. This Pfizer plant is only a few blocks away and when I was a kid, I always said I was going to work for them. I was fasinacted with the building. You can see the Pzifer smoke stack(chimney, if you will)=, from our kitchen and living room window. But I never got to work there 🙁 and I was even more heart broken when I heard the plant closed. I hope they keep the structure as-is and keep it as a landmark.

  8. Bill J. Avatar
    Bill J.

    I was employed by Pfizer from 1990 until 2006. Having been employed by a number of other pharmaceutical companies prior to joining,I can say that for ten years it was the best company I had ever worked for. They did everything right to make employees feel that they were a part of something really great. In 1990 the company was ranked the 13th or 14th largest pharmaceutical company in the world. In less than a decade we made it number one. From that point on the company turned its back on many of us, turning over our positions to newly acquired individuals who came from recent acquisitions. Just months after having been acknowledged for 15 years of service, I was told that I was no longer needed or, more appropriately, that the company was adapting to scale and I was superfluous. I was no longer needed like so much of the equipment the company walked away from in the Brooklyn plant. How sad that a company that prided itself on caring for its Brooklyn neighbors not only turned their back on them, but on the very employees who made them what they are (or at least were), until the age of Hank McKinnel.

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Bill,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  9. Eloise Avatar

    My father had his career at Pfizer since WWII…his father got him a job starting out wtih dumping citric ….he retired after 40+ years as one of the head engineers after putting himself through night school. Even designed one of the filling machines for Pfizer used at this plant. Would love to see it remodeled and restored as a museum. Pretty special place to a LOT of folks – even us Baby Boomer Pfizer Kids – loved those Rye Playland Pfizer outings when we were little.
    Thank you so MUCH for this ‘tour’ since it’s been closed. I got to go back with my father one last time summer of 1999. Met some great folks – young engineers and some folks who still remembered my Dad! It was Pfizer’s 150th Anniversary year. If he were still alive he’d LOVE to talk about every photo here and what was done there.

  10. DAVE Q Avatar
    DAVE Q

    what a waste. i to feel like paul.e k.people put this place above their own families only to be ripped out from under them.Great people and friends were made but too bad the manner in which they stole everything from us can not be forgiven at least by me.many cowardly managers and supervisors shamed the great ones that came before them.i worked the blister area a long time.these lessons will never be forgotten.forever hurt and betrayed. PEACE!!!

  11. Margaret F Avatar
    Margaret F

    Thanks for the memories, but I have never seen the building in an empty state; and this was so heartwrenching to watch. I have worked the 4-12 shift in the blister area at this plant for 17yr; being ATS in 2007. My father, and two uncle all worked there for over 30 yrs. I had a wonderful learning experience, made lasting memories of being a part of the Pfizer Family. Yes, I was one of the many who cried my eyes and heart out….the end was just so overwhelming. Thanks once again.

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Margaret,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  12. Don H Avatar
    Don H

    Ahhhh the memories !!! We had some great times there. My uncle was there for 33 years and me for 15.

    No matter where life takes me, the friendships I made there will last forever.

    Everyone who worked there even for the shortest time knows exactly what I mean.

    These pictures are awesome, but if the walls could talk !!!

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Don,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  13. Sam F. Avatar
    Sam F.

    Wow, seeing all these comments from my “family” is really fantastic. The pictures are great also, but I was at the Plant until the end and I was able to see all of them “live”. I happened to be the only Pfizer-Brooklyn colleague that fell victim to the “Adapting to Change” terminations but returned after re-applying/interviewing. Because of this, I was able to remain as an active employee until the final closing day. Thankfully, I was rehired within the 2-month active-status period after termination so I never was “non-Pfizer”. I was at the Brooklyn Plant for a total of 30 years. It was the best place to work and I met many life-long friends there. I consider myself very lucky to have been a part of this wonderful organization.

    1. Emily Avatar
      Emily

      Hi Sam,

      I am an artist in New York and I have been invited to install artwork in the Williamsburg Pfizer building on one of the floors that is now being used as an art gallery. For the show, I am interested in making a collection of portraits of former employees of the factory to shed a light on the building’s original community.

      I would love to hear more of your story and about your experience working at Pfizer. Should you feel comfortable, I would also like to take your portrait. I know this discussion has not been active for some time, but I do hope to hear from you.

      Kind regards,

      Emily

  14. Sam F. Avatar
    Sam F.

    Just wanted to clarify one thing from my previous statement. I wasn’t the only Pfizer colleague re-hired after being terminated but I was the only one that did so and remained at the Plant until it finally shut the doors!

  15. Kurt Avatar
    Kurt

    The “sealed up rooms” make up an Air Handling Unit (thus the ‘AHU’ label on the side), used for large commercial air conditioning applications. The air passes from left to right through heating and cooling coils and then through a fan to distribute through the building’s ductwork. The airtight doors are to access the spaces in between the coils. The picture through the open door shows the rack where the filters would be installed. The Photohelic is a pressure gage used to measure the pressure drop across the filter bank. Higher pressure drop means the filters are dirty and should be replaced.

  16. Steve Avatar
    Steve

    Seems like a frightening place. Pfizer has a horrible record and has compromised public safety throughout the years. Do you know about Becky McClain? I dont understand how anyone can feel good about supporting the chemical industry or a company like Pfizer or Monsanto given the nightmarish direction we are headed in. It’s a sad state of affairs for the future of humanity and no one seems to care. Everyone just accepts it like a heard of cattle. Shame on us all.

    1. Lynne F. Avatar
      Lynne F.

      The next time you or someone you love gets strep throat, or an ear infection, or a more serious infection, I hope you stick by your guns.

  17. Lynne F. Avatar
    Lynne F.

    My mother and grandmother worked in this building. My grandmother from 1952-79, and my mother from 1959-95. They both worked in Quality Control. My grandmother was Lurella Gilette, my mother was Diane Jobes. My mom passed away April 24 of this year. I cannot convey how muc of a family Pfizer Brooklyn was. It will be missed.

  18. Lynne F. Avatar
    Lynne F.

    I’d be thrilled to hear from anyone who knew my mom and grandmother, or any “Pfizer Babies.” betta2911@aol.com

  19. Arthur Avatar
    Arthur

    This was superb…thanks! But what you saw was only the remaining portion of the plant, which after WWII into the 70s stretched from Ellery Street north of Flushing Avenue all the way to Broadway. The now empty blocks north of Flushing Avenue were filled with immense interconnected Pfizer factory buildings, tanks, smokestacks…it was overwhelming. At night it was eerily dark, with a huge neon lit Pfizer sign hovering over it. The plant was noisy: it hummed and hissed and roared all day. It had a huge factory steam whistle which shrieked three tones: E, C and G, at 8am, noon and 5pm, six days a week. It was so loud you could hear it up in Greenpoint if the wind was right. The plant also STANK, a noxious odor you could smell for blocks, and it spewed ash and dust! We lived across the street in the 50s and I remember waking to filth all over the apartment. No wonder all those blocks to the north are empty. The grounds are probably filled with toxic waste.

  20. Jaclyn Avatar
    Jaclyn

    Do you know who the current owners are or what their contact info is?