A week ago, I was out taking pictures of Citi Field…

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…and for some reason, I found myself paying attention to the long line of car repair places across the street.

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I’ve always been peripherally aware that the neighborhood has a high concentration of autobody shops along the main drags, but it never occurred to me that it might be any different from similar streets in the Bronx and Brooklyn.

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I decided to head deeper into the little neighborhood known as Willets Point, and quickly found myself in one of the most surreal places I’ve ever been to in New York City.

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For street after street, endless rows of dilapidated autobody shops go on…

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…and on…

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…and on…

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…and on.

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There are no sidewalks. There are no stoplights or street signs. There are no sewer grates or manhole covers (because there are no sewers). It doesn’t take long before any sense of New York City completely disappears, and you begin to feel like you’ve somehow been transported to a strange apocalyptic world of tin shacks and ramshackle garages.

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Nicknamed the Iron Triangle and containing approximately 225 different autobody shops, you can see just how big the literal triangle of Willets Point is on the map below, bordered by 126th Street, Northern Blvd, and Willets Point Blvd.

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Willets Point first came into being in the 1930s, around the time of the 1939 World’s Fair. Looking back at pictures from the time, you can see the first few auto shops making appearances in otherwise empty tracts of land.

auto

Today, most of the structures consist of corrugated tin, usually rusting…

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…or covered with faded, peeling paint:

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Many are of the Quonset hut variety…

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…with the buildings butting against each other at the strangest of angles.

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Then there are the structures made of stacked shipping containers:

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Here’s another, with the skeleton of an old awning:

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An American flag fades away on the side of these containers:

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And of course, the salvage. Towering racks of doors…

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Mountains of dead cars:

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Rows and rows of bumpers:

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Stacks of tires:

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Shelves lined with wheels:

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Tangled piles of tailpipes (ha, try saying that three times fast):

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Willets Point is the sort of place where what seems like just a small driveway suddenly opens into yet another field of decaying automobiles:

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And then there are the robots, welded from old car parts. This guy’s my favorite:

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Here’s a family…

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…and another:

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If you look on the roof of this tire shop…

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…you’ll see an old bread truck:

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This house stands out as being the only one of its kind in the neighborhood, and is home to the one lone resident of Willets Point, Joseph Ardizzone, who has lived here since he was born in 1932.

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If you’ve ever wondered what a post-apocalyptic world might feel like, there are parts of Willets Point that feel straight out of the movies.

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The city long ago stopped servicing the area, and the roads are by far the absolute worst in New York (though probably a boon to all the tire repair places).

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Willets Point is also very loud – the cacophony of whirring and cranking and hammering and sizzling come at you from every direction.

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There are so many derelict cars that they begin to feel like permanent monuments.

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This is one of the nicer lots I came across, which feels like a retreat from the clamor of the neighborhood (and has some rare foliage to boot):

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Where ice cream trucks go to die:

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Willets Point might not be the prettiest place to visit in New York, but look now, because this will probably all be gone in another year or two. The Willets Point redevelopment plan was recently approved, and if the city has its way, all of this will be demolished to make way for new residential buildings that look like this (Citi Field is on the left):

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As I was walking around taking pictures, repair shop guys kept laughing and asking me, “Why are you taking pictures this dump?” They seemed astonished that anyone would care to photograph what could be the ugliest neighborhood in New York.

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I’m fascinated by organic neighborhoods that somehow manage to survive despite the gentrification of the city, and I’m not sure there’s a better example of this than Willets Point. Run-down, polluted, forgotten, and undervaluing its land, a place like Willets Point is the complete antithesis of everything New York has become today. And so the bulldozers will inevitably come in, and bland apartment buildings will go up, and a new world will be created in the most inorganic way possible.

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I’m not saying it’s a reason to save it. It’s just too bad that the alternative sorta sucks too.

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-SCOUT

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  1. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    A.S., remember a big part of the business for these shops is salvage, which means you’re selling the inventory you have. The guy next door doesn’t have the same inventory, so you’re not competing with him. If I needed a specific part for a specific car (which is why I’d be shopping junkyards), my search would end when I found it, not before, not after. This is an example of a business model that works better in clusters.

  2. racing flix Avatar

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  3. Amanda Grace Avatar

    Sure the place is ugly, but to whoever said it’s an eyesore, you know what, not every place in any given country needs to be pretty. Sometimes you need things that are not pretty, and what better place than concentrated in their own little, throwback neighborhood?

    Nope, it might not be glitzy, but it’s functional, real and authentic and genuine, and it’s been here longer than you or Bloomberg himself.

    And who on Earth wants to live directly across the street from Citi Field anyway? It seems like a nightmare. For one thing, ask some residents of streets near Barclay’s center who are constantly having their streets closed and blocked for some event.

    All of these guys are getting a raw deal.

    Signed,
    a New Yorker who cares about more than just shiny, pressed-on glass and plastic facades.

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  5. Gerard Avatar
    Gerard

    As a former Corona resident who remembers this area from the 1950s, I agree that the so-called city fathers should have done more to improve the infrastructure of the Willets Point Boulevard area of Corona. The area clearly was neglected, resulting in sloppy paving, lighting, and sewer construction. Of course it ended up looking like crap. Now, it looks as if developers will cram multistory buildings into this cramped site, merely adding hundreds more people and cars to the already maddening residential and auto congestion in Queens. Instead of the gleaming buildings planned, I would like to have seen the area converted into a park for an area of Queens that is running out of open space and recreational venues for working class folks. Lastly, I don’t think this area was the famous “valley of ashes” so vividly described in “The Great Gatsby.” I think that area was located several blocks further south in Flushing Meadow Park on either side of the LIRR Port Washington Line that runs through Corona along 43rd Avenue. A great deal of the ash dumping was done in that area until Flushing Meadow underwent a massive reclamation effort in preparation for the 1939 World’s Fair. Many photos exist in the NY Public Library Digital Gallery and other online repositories that show these ash mountains as well as the Flushing wetlands as they looked before, during, and after the dumping.

  6. Velouria Avatar
    Velouria

    I would be kind of nervous shooting around there; especially if they are indeed chop shops for stolen cars. I admire the bravery of anyone who can photograph weird places. I tend to drive-by shoot, as I have been hollered at and harassed before when simply photographing a sign or storefront, anywhere from a cruddy nabe to a suburb, all over the east coast. It makes me skittish.

  7. elias Avatar
    elias

    While going towards Spa Castle in College Point, I took a wrong turn and I suddenly thought I was transported to a neighborhood in Peru. I said to myself loudly, am I in Peru?
    I couldn’t believe my eyes. Seriously!!!

    Elias

  8. JACK Avatar
    JACK

    ANYONE Know if there are still any shops open there? I need to get some auto body work done cheaply. I used to always go there for that

  9. Scott C Avatar
    Scott C

    Is it still the same a year on or as the gentrification begun?

  10. Scott C Avatar
    Scott C

    *has

  11. Alexander Heim Avatar
    Alexander Heim

    Almost 2 years later, does anyone have an update on this neighborhood?

  12. Al Avatar
    Al

    There’s been a lot of opposition to pulling an “eminent domain” on this area by locals and local politicians. The most current article I can find is from this past spring, but as far as I know nothing has been demolished yet.

    http://nycitylens.com/2015/04/willets-point-development-project-goes-into-extra-innings/

  13. Al Avatar
    Al

    Sorry, should have included this one too – guess this counts as the little guys winning!

    http://www.willetspoint.org/

  14. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    The skeleton of an old awning used to belong to a large iron works shop. They called the place the iron triangle because of the numerous iron works and steel fabrication shops.