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There are warehouses like this in all big cites, and are open (ish) to the public!

I helped get some stuff for a small business earlier this year, and picked up an Aeron for myself while I was there. It was in a legitimately bad neighborhood and there were multiple layers of electronically controlled doors to go through, then you sign in and wait from someone to come down and get you, and you ride a massive freight elevator up to the floorspace.



Which one would you recommend for the greater Boston area?


They're about to get loaded with a bunch of furniture from all the biotech firms downsizing


Why are Boston biotech firms downsizing?


VC Funding dried up in the Life Sciences space by late 2021/early 2022 because there was too much investment during 2018-20 due to the "precision medicine" hype cycle.

Same thing happened to cybersecurity in 2022-23 and will happen in the Generative AI space in a couple years.

There are always expansions and contractions in each sector.


Didnt it dry up due to the interest rates hike? No more cheap money.


The interest rate hikes are just the cherry on top in this particular space.


Interest rates played a role but not significantly.

Renewables (IRA), Battery Tech (IRA), Hardware (CHIPS), Defense (CHIPS), and AI/ML became better investments in the 20-21 period.


Ooooh that’s going to be some cool lab stuff!


Don't know about Boston per se but I've bought some file cabinets from a place in downtown Worcester in the past. Might be Northeast Office Solutions.


I went to Brooks Bargain in Wilmington, MA, to get a used Aeron chair for about $500 if I remember right. They had a ton of different kinds of chairs to try on site. I went there torn between Aeron or SteelCase.

I’ve heard good things about Granite State Office Furniture too, if you don’t mind hoofing it up to Manchester NH.


Steelcase vs. Aeron is mostly about preference for fabric vs. mesh. Though Hermann Miller also has other models that are basically stripped down Aerons or don't require as much personal adjustment.


There's always the MIT Furniture Exchange! [Note to non-Boston folks: this is a joke.]


Is there a way to find out where the nearest one is?


Just do a web search for "office furniture liquidator" and include your nearest big city.

You are probably going to want the least flashy of the results, as all that flash comes at an expense ;)

I know that there are at least 2 good ones in Chicago and another that sells used hotel furniture (which I am not sure that I would willingly go into, but apparently there is a market for such things...).

These places are very much business-focused; it's not like walking into an IKEA. You'll probably have to get buzzed in through many doors and then sign in, where you'll be asked for both your name and business. If you don't have a business they aren't going to throw you out or anything, but probably ask you to write something like "<First Name><Last Name> LLC" so they can put you in their system. You probably have to get escorted to the sales floor but are free to wander around. You have to pay in full for what you want, up front, but will get issued an invoice and bill of sale as if you are a business (from their point of view, they aren't selling anything to you, they are selling to the business you are representing).


There is an awesome one in Wilmington DE, its the goto for startups. Very sketchy warehouse off of 12th street (if you pass the prison, you’ve gone too far). But lots of clean stuff, like the last of office stuff from DuPont clearing out all their locations.


Please share the names!


These opportunities exist due to an inefficient illiquid market, widely sharing them will ruin that.


I'm not sure if that is the case, but if it were that's not really my problem :)

This is the place I generally use, but simply because it is most convenient for where I live (it's about 3 blocks south of I-290 at the Cicero Ave exit)

https://www.officefurniturecenter.com


Nice, thanks for the link. I'm in the western exurbs, so I'll have to make the trek on in!


I don’t think this is really true. Kitchen supply is an example with stores that are open to regular people and there are still deals compared to consumer cookware.


If you go to a restaurant equipment liquidator you can find some good heavy-duty pots and pans, they likely won't be "attractive" as restaurant kitchens don't care about that. Be aware that most of the cooking equipment and appliances won't be usable in your home kitchen because your electrical circuits won't be adequate.

You can pick up beverage glasses and cups, plates, silverware.


There is of course quite a range between totally illiquid and totally liquid.

My best finds for second hand goods were found by intentionally searching obscure marketplaces. Telling a few ppl on HN probably wouldn’t make much of a difference, making a viral TikTok video about it might.


Try craigslist... search for office chair or desk.


To add to this, you're searching CL for those terms so that it brings up a liquidator with a brick and mortar store.


"cubicle" may be better... and "workrite" or similar


Hibid has some of the auctions.


plenty of businesses like this operate online too - had my aeron shipped from a Parisian startup liquidator


Do you happen to have the name of the place you found it ? I'm in France, and I wasn't really able to find anything with a quick google search



My french google-fu isnt great but bureau and restockage seem to turn up a few, eg buroways.fr


> mobilier de bureau d'occasion

Aka second hand office furniture.

This should help in your search tbh. It is on the front page of that website. And don't forget to put the `hl=fr&` in your url search.




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