Springfield News-Sun

A hidden vault guards fun collectibl­es

- By Davidde Corran and Bobby Caina Calvan

The ordinary brown brick building, tucked within a nondescrip­t block on a street in Delaware, would probably not garner much attention if it weren’t for the razor wire and armed guards outside — hints that something important lay inside, possibly even precious.

Fort Knox it is not. But the stash of collectibl­es the building holds is undoubtedl­y worthy of guarding.

There’s a rare Pikachu card and a century-old one of baseball great Honus Wagner, which recently sold for $7.25 million in a private sale. In addition to the trading cards, there are baseball bats and basketball shoes, including a pair of sneakers worn and signed by the late NBA great Kobe Bryant.

In all, $200 million in collectibl­es are stored in two vaults inside the building, equipped with some of the latest technology to keep the valuable cache safe from harm or thieves.

“A lot of people don’t keep jewelry at their house. They keep it at a safety deposit box,” maybe at a secure bank, said Ross Hoffman, the chief executive officer of Goldin Co., a division of industry giant Collectors, which operates the vault, a high-security facility specializi­ng in protecting collectibl­es.

The building has no signage, and the company asked that any hint of its location not be divulged. Inside is a technologi­cally advanced facility with a guarded vault, equipped with seismic motion detectors that will sound the alarm should anyone try to jackhammer through walls.

To move from room to room, a security guard ushers you through a card-activated double door entry way, letting the first door close before passing through the next. There are surveillan­ce cameras everywhere.

Behind one of two 7,500pound (3,400-kilogram) vault doors, each more than a foot thick, are rows of shelves that extend to the building’s rafters. Rows upon rows of boxes are filled with collectors’ items — including some with relatively little monetary worth but that represent sentimenta­l value for their owners or that could someday be worth much more.

Hoffman called the facility a “pain killer.”

“There’s pain of things getting lost. There’s pain in the things getting stolen,” Hoffman said.

Interest in sports collectibl­es and memorabili­a has boomed in recent years, not just high-ticket items but also for rediscover­ed pieces that had been tucked away in attics or basements. In

August, a mint condition Mickey Mantle baseball card sold for $12.6 million, surpassing the $9.3 million paid for the jersey worn by Diego Maradona when he scored the contentiou­s “Hand of God” goal in soccer’s 1986 World Cup.

“A lot of times people have collectibl­es for the bragging rights to show it to other people so they can go, ooh and ahh,” said Stephen Fishler, founder of Comicconne­ct, who has watched the growing rise — and profitabil­ity — of collectibl­es being traded across auction houses.

But some people don’t want the burden of being responsibl­e for securing their property, which they view as investment­s akin to stocks, Fishler said. These storage facilities help better liquify collectibl­es by treating them as assets that can be more easily bought and sold.

Hoffman, whose parent company also runs one of the leading grading and authentica­ting services, said his newest venture is an acknowledg­ment of the big money now involved in collectibl­es.

 ?? AP PHOTOS/DAVIDDE CORRAN ?? A security guard opens a steel door leading into a vault containing hundreds of collectibl­es at Collectors Vault, a new company that is making it easier for collectors to store and trade memorabili­a, on Oct. 21, in Delaware. The door is nearly two feet thick and is meant to protect the valuables from harm and thieves.
AP PHOTOS/DAVIDDE CORRAN A security guard opens a steel door leading into a vault containing hundreds of collectibl­es at Collectors Vault, a new company that is making it easier for collectors to store and trade memorabili­a, on Oct. 21, in Delaware. The door is nearly two feet thick and is meant to protect the valuables from harm and thieves.
 ?? ?? Ross Hoffman, CEO of Collectors Vault, shows a shoe worn and signed by NBA legend Kobe Bryant on Oct. 21, in Delaware. The footwear is among hundreds of items stored at Collectors Vault.
Ross Hoffman, CEO of Collectors Vault, shows a shoe worn and signed by NBA legend Kobe Bryant on Oct. 21, in Delaware. The footwear is among hundreds of items stored at Collectors Vault.

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