Byrd Hoffman’s New Dumbo Nest

Photo: Joe Schildhorn/Patrick McMullan

Four months ago, avant-garde theater director Robert Wilson was evicted from the Vestry Street loft he’d lived and worked in for 34 years by developer Aby Rosen (whose art-patron instincts were trumped by his desire to build more condos). Now Wilson has signed a lease at 111 Front Street, where he’ll unveil a 2,400-square-foot gallery in January. “I do not like Soho so much anymore,” Wilson says. “Dumbo seems more interesting. It reminds me a little of Tribeca 30 years ago.” Wilson’s new building is owned by David Walentas’s Two Trees company, which has a policy of subsidizing the arts to spice up the neighborhood it owns so much of. The company gave Wilson and his Byrd Hoffman Foundation a break on the lease. “We really wanted the esteemed Robert Wilson in Dumbo,” said Zannah Mass, Two Trees’ cultural-affairs director. The new digs are about half the size of his old place, but he doesn’t have to live there too. He’s staying with friends when he’s in the city, and doesn’t yet have a new home here.

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Byrd Hoffman’s New Dumbo Nest