4274 provided interior architectural and exhibition design and fabrication services for this new storefront facility, which is both meeting place for tours and exhibition space. The history of Jewish migration to lower New York, as well as the diaspora story of a Jewish family with Lithuanian roots are presented in the exhibitry and media programs.The stained birch plywood exhibit structures are designed to echo the structures associated with the previous occupant of the storefront space, Ruby’s fruit and vegetable market, which served the neighborhood for some 60 years. Graphics topping the “produce crates” sit on homasote panels. Both graphic and homasote can be removed easily for display of artifacts or other items in the crate; each crate can also present a smaller graphic and object/s at the same time. Salvaged doors front the reception desk, underscoring the LESJC's mission to conserve the Jewish Lower East Side.