HELL’S KITCHEN FLEA MARKET OPENS
HEART & HOME TO BOBBI & THE STRAYS
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 10AM-4PM
NEW YORK, NY (August 2009)– Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market, rich in treasures from around the world, is proud to support the rescue of stray and abused animals by opening its doors on September 26,, 2009 for a pet adoption drive. Bobbi and the Strays will bring homeless cats and dogs to the flea from 10AM to 4PM, hoping to find new loving families and homes for these abandoned animals.
Bobbi and the Strays is 100% non-profit no-kill animal organization, owned by Bobbi Giordano who quit her job in the Fashion District to create an organization that is dedicated to not only saving animals but keeping them healthy and obedient. Actress Glenn Close, of the television series Damages, has become a supporter of Bobbi and the Strays after paying a visit to their facility and witnessing the passion Bobbi and her team have for the treatment and care of the animals.
“Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market is happy to support Bobbi and the Strays! Organizations committed to finding homes for unwanted pets are doing a great service for both the community and the animals. Helping those who cannot help themselves gives these pets the chance to be the givers of love to those who love them.”–Alan Boss
Named one of the Top Ten Shopping Streets in the World by National Geographic, Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market sets the standard for distinctive vendors, where the fashion éclat, collectors and top-notch hagglers still delight at fine old things, memorabilia, original art & antique. Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market is open year-round, running the block of West 39th Street between 9th & 10th Avenues, every Saturday & Sunday from 10am- 6pm. For media contact STATE Public Relations, at 646.714.2520 or email [email protected]
About Alan Boss “Lord of the Fleas”
Started in 1976 as “penny-jar” investment on an estranged corner lot in Chelsea, entrepreneur Alan Boss marshaled 11 vendors to single-handedly shape the outdoor mecca that became known by treasure hunters worldwide as The Annex Antiques Fair & Flea Market. In 2006, after almost 30 years of outdoor commerce-delight and top-notch haggling, The Annex was displaced by a high-rise residential building.
Foreseeing the fate of the market Boss had already planned for a new location. After almost four years of discussions Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market opened in May 2003. In 2006, The Annex moved to Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market. Boss also owns the famed Antiques Garage on 25th Street between 6th & 7th Avenues.
Armed with street smarts, an economics degree from City College, and a pioneering spirit, Bronx-born urbanite Alan Boss has been described by Empire Magazine as “a remarkable entrepreneur who built a retail empire without any bricks or nails.” A son of a grocer, Boss cultivated his readiness to experiment with just about anything to make money, from hauling furniture to managing a fruit and vegetable stand. Boss reinvented himself many times over before trailblazing his career in 1976 one early Sunday with the birth of The Annex Antiques & Flea Market. As Founder and President of Metropolitan Pavilion, one might say that Alan Boss is in the business of filling empty spaces.