NEW YORK—On May 18, 1992, a New York City institution for tennis fans was born when Grand Central Racquet opened its doors in Manhattan’s famed Grand Central Terminal.
The concept was simple: Commuters would drop off their racquets at Woody Schneider’s kiosk, he and his staff would restring them during business hours and, before catching their trains home, they would pick them up freshly restrung.
Same-day service at its finest.
Twenty-five years later, Schneider, the owner, is still stringing racquets at that location and offering his expertise on tennis, racquetball, squash, badminton, platform tennis, table tennis and frescobol.
Over time, despite many ups and downs and trials and tribulations, the business has expanded greatly. Schneider opened up another location, on 44th Street between Madison and Vanderbilt Avenues, in 2000. (Schneider could finally do business above ground, he jokes.)
Then in 2005, in what Schneider describes as one of those unexplainable moments that you just marvel at, he and Joan Dziena—his business partner and later girlfriend—were approached by the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, the site of the US Open. The NTC Pro Shop opened in Flushing Meadows shortly thereafter, and their fourth location—NYC Racquet Sports on 35th Street between Broadway and Seventh Avenue—debuted around the same time.