Have you ever watched a show like Mad Men and wondered where they found those early Xerox machines? Or where The Americans got their hands on all the Reagan-era IBMs that you thought would be piled in a landfill? Well, there’s a good chance these historically-accurate gadgets came from a massive warehouse in Brooklyn with a specific mission: to preserve some of the world’s oldest, most cherished electronics.

Since early 2012, the E-Waste Warehouse has been helping New Yorkers get rid of their unwanted electronics in an eco-friendly fashion. Some of the best finds however, make it into the warehouse’s very own prop library, where they are made available for film and television productions to rent and use.




The operation is part of the Lower East Side Ecology Center, a non-profit organization founded in 1987 and one of the first to pioneer community-based recycling programs in New York City. The E-Waste Warehouse is where you can take that old VCR or your grandfather’s console TV so that their e-waste and the toxic chemicals it contains stay away from landfills at all costs.

Photo : Raul Marrero ( Gizmodo )


At the warehouse, huge piles of electronics are sorted through, dismantled, and shipped out for recycling on a daily basis, while others are are chosen to be refurbished for reuse. “What we do here is all about sustainability.” shares Nicole Swient, a veteran reuse technician working at the warehouse.

“By repairing and properly reusing items, we’re able to cycle it back to the public without it going in our landfills,” Swient told Gizmodo. “We give these electronics a second life, a second home, where they can be reused and make somebody else happy.”

In addition to passing older electronics on to new users, the Lower East Side Ecology Center also repurposes some of the rarer finds for a museum-like collection of over 2,000 vintage items. These include beepers, Royal typewriters, personal computers, CRT monitors, news cameras, vintage Macs, slots machines, and countless more items, all preserved in order to display the development of technology over the last eight decades.

The collection also doubles as a prop library, where art directors and production designers can find the perfect pieces of technology for films and shows based in the past. As the Lower East Side Ecology Center’s co-founder and executive director Christine Datz-Romero explains, the organization realized this mission after understanding the historical importance of its collection.


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“That’s when we started to develop this prop library,” Datz-Romero said, “because we really felt that keeping some of these older technologies really educates us about how fast technology really has developed over the last ten, twenty years.”


So the next time you’re watching a TV show set in the ‘80s, you should thank these technicians not only for making our favorite shows and movies look accurate but also for preserving so many of these vintage gadgets. That and keeping them away from our landfills.