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Barn Storming is Brain Storming.
We do our best work in a barn. Think of it as a huge creative clubhouse built by grownup kids. Climb the stairs two floors past
the tractor, the MIG welder, a 1961 Chrysler Imperial Convertible, three grand pianos and way too many boats and you'll reach our
creative playpen.
With 2000 square feet and 26-foot ceilings, we shoot and edit TV spots, build websites, write copy, take photos and think
of inventive new ideas for our clients.
When you need a place to innovate, the barn works, which is why so many of our clients ask to have meetings there (and we
are happy to oblige). The creative juices continue to flow after hours and on weekends when dance troupes, theater
groups and bands use the space to hone their artistry.
Built in 1793 by a U.S. Senator and New Hampshire's first supreme court justice, Paine Wingate, the main section of the
Wingate barn is a timber frame structure that stands 50 feet tall, 80-feet long and 40-feet wide. A 30-foot by 50-foot
hip roofed barn forms a wing attached to the main barn. This ancient structure is said to be one of last hip-roofed barns
in New England.

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