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This is our shop bike, except no one else seems to want to ride it,” says Chris Lesser as he points to a patina’d Kawasaki KZ1000P. It’s an old police bike he used as a Sweeper at the Red Hook Crit. “It’s very much like The Blues Brothers. Cop motor, cop tires, cop suspension…it weighs 500 pounds but it’s awesome to ride.” Next to the Kawasaki is a Series I Moto Guzzi 850 LeMans. Further back in the shop there’s another Moto Guzzi and an orange Harley-Davidson Sprint.
The bikes at Union Garage are merely a side attraction, some just for show, others on consignment from shops around Brooklyn. The main attraction is the extensive display of motorcycling gear. “Not to toot our own horn too loudly but there aren’t that many shops that just specialize in gear,” says Lesser. He’s right, you can search Google for motorcycle gear shops in New York City and it’ll turn up just a handful of shops — maybe five or six in all of the five boroughs, and most of those are additions to preexisting repair shops or dealerships.
Lesser started Union Garage in 2012 with the help of two friends, one of whom owns the repair/custom shop, Moto Borgotaro, next door. “I met Peter [Boggia] a few years ago when I was living in the neighborhood working as a freelance writer,” he says. “I walked into his shop and I was like, “Okay, I need to work here.’ He was completely fried, so he said, ‘Okay, whatever.’”
A few days later, Lesser started as an apprentice of sorts to Boggia. Lesser did service work on vintage BMW motorcycles, but eventually decided being a mechanic wasn’t for him. “I loved it, but I realized at 32 that probably wasn’t my next career choice,” he says. After tossing around some ideas, he landed on opening Union Garage. He opened up a couple years after he quit working at Moto Borgotaro in what he refers to as “a little shoebox” two doors down from Boggia’s shop.
Union Garage’s inventory is made up of gear that balances safety and style quite nicely. Staples from brands like Rev’it and Aether fill the shop, but Union Garage is also home to some exotic stuff. Lesser is pretty proud that he’s one of the very few shops in the US that cary armored Belstaff jackets. He also stocks a Lost World horsehide jacket — an incredibly thick motorcycle jacket made in Queens. According to him, they’re almost entirely sold in Japan. Union Garage also collaborated with Vanson Leathers to create their own armored jacket, which became popular with international buyers. “That jacket kept us going through our first winter,” he says.
“A couple times a week during the riding season people come in saying ‘I know nothing,’ or ‘I need everything.’”