Corona's Junction Blvd Got Two Secondhand Dealer Licenses. Same Name. One Day Apart.
Huesocell Inc filed two separate "Secondhand Dealer - General" licenses on consecutive days in early March 2026 β one at 3774 Junction Blvd in Corona, Queens (filed March 6), and another at 3771 Junction Blvd (filed March 5). That's essentially the same block, one day apart, under the same company name.
Junction Boulevard in Corona is one of Queens' most densely commercial strips, running through a neighborhood that is predominantly Latino and home to a large Ecuadorian community. Secondhand dealer licenses in NYC cover a wide range of businesses β from pawn shops to used electronics to resale shops β and the city requires separate licenses for each physical location. Filing two licenses at nearly identical addresses on consecutive days could indicate a business expanding into adjacent storefronts, or a company reorganizing its existing footprint under a new corporate entity.
Queens saw 86 new business license filings in FebruaryβMarch 2026, the highest volume of any borough in that period. The borough's license activity skews heavily toward secondhand dealers, electronics stores, and tobacco retailers β categories that reflect the outer-borough retail economy's reliance on value-oriented, cash-friendly businesses. Astoria, Jamaica, and Corona account for a disproportionate share of Queens' new filings, consistent with their roles as the borough's most active commercial corridors.
The Huesocell double-filing is the kind of thing that's easy to miss in a spreadsheet but worth watching: when a company files multiple licenses at nearly the same address in rapid succession, it often signals either rapid expansion or a regulatory workaround. The city's licensing data doesn't tell you which β but it does tell you someone is paying attention to Junction Blvd.