111 Pioneer St

Building · Red Hook

111 Pioneer St

Building · Red Hook

1

111 Pioneer St, Brooklyn, NY 11231

Photos

111 Pioneer St by null
111 Pioneer St by Robert Wright (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by Mathew Galindo (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by Mathew Galindo (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by ARW (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by ARW (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by ARW (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by Eve Sussman (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by Mathew Galindo (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))
111 Pioneer St by ARW (Chico MacMurtrie / ARW (Used with Permission))

111 Pioneer St, Brooklyn, NY 11231 Get directions

pioneerworks.org

Information

Static Map

111 Pioneer St, Brooklyn, NY 11231 Get directions

+1 718 596 3001
pioneerworks.org
PioneerWorksFoundation
𝕏
@PioneerWorks

Features

Last updated

Mar 4, 2025

Powered By

You might also like

Terms of Use • Privacy Policy • Cookie Policy
 © 2025 Postcard Technologies, Inc.
@atlasobscura

21 Cool and Unusual Kid-Friendly Places in New York City

"Thanks to mechanical art collective Amorphic Robot Works, the former Norwegian Seaman’s Church in Red Hook, Brooklyn is slowly filling up with twisted, clanging robots who, when activated, form a caterwauling orchestra of futuristic junk life. Spearheaded by multimedia artist Chico MacMurtrie, the collection of 35 kinetic bots was started in the 1980s and has been slowly growing ever since. Inside the old church that acts as the collective’s studio, the robots are arrayed on the floor, hung high up on the walls, or stand peering over the catwalk. Most of the contraptions take on a humanoid form (some more than others), but the sizes of the metal musicians range largely from only a foot tall to a towering 15 feet tall. Each of the robots is designed to perform a unique task that creates their singular noise, be it by strumming the strings pulled taught on its body, or by clanging itself against the floor. Some of the robots are controlled by pre-programmed commands while others are played live via computer commands. While each of the robots can be activated independently, the effect created when the entire church space is alive with raucous robotic rhythm is stunning. Most days the new denizens of the Robotic Church lie dormant, acting simply as the workshop for MacMurtrie and the Amorphic Robot Works. It is only during special performances that the church opens its doors to allow visitors into the most robo of holies to hear hymns created in a language only robots can understand." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/things-to-do-new-york-city-kids
View Postcard for 111 Pioneer St