Business & Tech

Brooklyn Factory Converts To Coronavirus Mask Maker In 4 Days

A printing company and a design firm teamed up in Brooklyn Navy Yard to make protective gear in what the mayor called a "wartime" effort.

Companies converted space in Brooklyn Navy Yard to a face shield factory in four days.
Companies converted space in Brooklyn Navy Yard to a face shield factory in four days. (Google Maps)

BROOKLYN, NEW YORK — Two companies took four days to convert space in Brooklyn Navy Yard into a factory making face shields protecting against the new coronavirus.

The quick turnaround and collaboration by printer Duggal Visual Solutions and designer Bednark Studio is nothing less than a "wartime" effort, said Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Volunteers working at the Brooklyn Navy Yard facility will make 50,000 plastic face shields by the week's end alone for first responders and others fighting the coronavirus, de Blasio wrote in a tweet.

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"This is really an example to everyone in this city and everyone in this nation about how we're going to fight back," he said.

Workers in the facility put together sheets of plastic and strings of elastic into face shields for nurses, doctors and other front line coronavirus responders, Bednark owner Michael Bednark told Gothamist. He worked with his Duggal counterpart Michael Duggal to secure a supply chain and put their Brooklyn Navy Yard spaces to use, the Brooklyn Eagle reported.

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Health officials have reported shortages of vital protective supplies as the coronavirus epidemic grows.

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