How do we synthesize a melting pot of ideas, cultures, people and identities like Brooklyn and make it part of our daily lives, our homes? Gino Carollo ventured this answer.
Between the eucalyptus and zebrano wood structure, the smoked glass section and the marble top, Brooklyn is a product of extraordinary ingenuity, not so different from that neighborhood that even a genuine New Yorker like Anthony Bourdain confessed he had never been able to “get to know completely”.