Englander first got involved with ABC No Rio in the late 1980s. In 1990, he moved into the building and lived there on and off until 1997. As co-director, he curated exhibits and was on-call for building issues. In 1994 he began the three-year fight against eviction. In 1997 Englander and other squatters moved out of the building so that the entire space could be used as a community arts facility. This decision set the stage for negotiations in 2006 in which Englander facilitated ABC No Rio’s purchase of their 156 Rivington building from the New York City government for $1. • Fear, Paranoia and Malevolence (2002) • Three Cities Against the Wall (2006) • The Art in Zines (2007) • Ides of March (2008) • Against Competition/Towards Mutual Aid at Flux Factory (2017) • Taking It to the Streets (2017) held at the
Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space during the "exile" period after ABC No Rio was demolished before being rebuilt. • Many "clothesline" fundraisers, where print works were hung on a line and were replaced as new items as art pieces were purchased In 2007, Englander established the organization's first archives, processing 25 years' worth of material. Under Englander's direction, ABC No Rio raised millions of dollars to build a new facility. The initial batch of donations, largely from the collective members and their networks, totaled $300,000 by 2004. An anonymous check for $1M arrived in the mail in 2009. That same year
Scott Stringer and City Councilman
Alan J. Gerson allocated $1.65 million for a new building. By 2024, the building had received $21,000,000 from the city. With the funding in place and demolition scheduled, Englander oversaw the move of many of the building's furniture and materials to storage and the zine library and archive's move to
Clemente Soto Velez in 2016. ==Squatting==