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Monday, April 30, 2007
Trader Joe's Coming to Brooklyn Bridge Park?
UPDATE: An insider told McBrooklyn that Trader Joe's is "not denying" this report. More to come.
Past Brooklyn bridge Park postings here.
Photo by Hyku on Flickr, Creative Commons license.
Judge Phillips, Nearly Plucked Dry, May Be Released from Involuntary Incarceration Soon
At a hearing Friday, according to the Eagle, state Supreme Court Justice Michael Pesce gave his tentative approval of plans for Phillips to move into Castle Senior Living, an assisted living facility on Prospect Park West in Park Slope, Brooklyn — pending approval from Phillips’ niece and personal guardian, Symphanie Moss.
In the six-plus years since the guardianship proceeding was begun by the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office, Phillips’ $10 million estate has all but vanished beneath a mountain of paperwork — the victim of court-appointed attorneys who’ve sold nearly all of Phillips’ real estate holdings with hardly a sign of any of the proceeds, says the Eagle.
The most recent property guardian, Taylor, was held in contempt by state Supreme Court Justice Michael Pesce — the result of funds she paid to herself without the court’s permission.
The Brooklyn Eagle's story is here.Previous story here.
Sunday, April 29, 2007
Another Eerie Atlantic Yards Occurrence: 'Ratner Curse'?
First the Ward Bakery parapet, now this. Could it be connected to the Ratner Curse?
Officials Knew Greenpoint Oil Spill Would Take 20+ Years (Maybe Never) to Clean
CBS2 brings us the news, via this video posted on YouTube (thanks to Gowanus Lounge), that officials have known for a long time that it could take 20 years -- if ever -- to clean up the worst oil spill in U.S. history, in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Apparently, Exxon Mobile (which spilled the oil in the first place) said back in '81 that it would be possible to clean up only five percent, to at maximum fifty percent, of the still-spreading underground plume.
But just how dangerous is it? A poster on Gowanus Lounge refutes (or disagrees with) many of the points made by CBS2. One good point: Greenpoint appears a have a lower cancer rate than many other Brooklyn neighborhoods, including Downtown Brooklyn.
On the other hand, this poster seems to have an awful lot of inside information -- such as the address of the cancer survivor interviewed in the news clip, which was not mentioned in the video.
I'm not saying that this poster has anything to do with Exxon Mobile, I'm just sayin' ...
Jehovah's Witnesses Getting Outa Dodge?
And, according to the SkyscraperPage, the JWs have abandoned their plans to build a Watchtower complex at 85 Jay Street in Dumbo: "The Watchtower Society has decided not to build the complex, instead continuing the gradual transfer of its facilities to upstate New York."
UPDATE: According to the Brooklyn Eagle's May 2nd paper, not yet online, the Jehovah's Witnesses deny the Skyscraper story, saying they have NOT abandoned Dumbo. More later.
UPDATE UPDATE: The Eagle story is online: Richard Devine, a spokesperson for the Watchtower Bible & Tract Society (Jehovah’s Witnesses), denied there was any truth to the rumor. Story here.
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Spring in the Heights
Photo by MK Metz.
Good Help Was Easy to Find in Brooklyn Heights Saturday
Cadman Plaza Park was inundated with yellow-shirted helpers Saturday as part of a Chinese Christian Herald Crusade march across the Brooklyn Bridge. Hundreds of marchers gathered on a narrow strip of pavement in the middle of the park by the War Memorial (all that is currently open to the public) to hear music and chow down on traditional favorites.
The vast majority of Cadman Plaza Park is still fenced off -- the north oval was recently hydro-seeded (see story here), and the southern field is still fenced off after being converted to synthetic turf. (Several stories here.)
Photo by MK Metz
Atlantic Yards Demolition Suspended After Ward Bakery Parapet Collapse
WNYC reports that demolition work has been suspended on the Atlantic Yards project. Friday's decision from developer Forest City Ratner came after a partial collapse of the Ward Bakery's roof parapet on Thursday. Workers were removing asbestos, and readying the building for demolition.
In related news, an all-day workshop to create a community-driven development plan for Brooklyn's Vanderbilt Yards took place today at Hanson Place United Methodist Church. More details at the Develop Don't Destroy Web site.
Previous post on collapse here.
Photo of the Ward Bakery after the roof parapet collapse by MK Metz.
Friday, April 27, 2007
FOBs in Brooklyn Heights
What was happening? It was a $4,500-a-head fundraiser for his wife’s presidential campaign, says the Eagle. More details (and photos) here.
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Ward Bakery Rains Down on Cars Below as Ratner Prepares for Demolition
More pictures on Curbed.
New Starbucks at Polytechnic/ MetroTech
Book Vending Turns Nasty on Joralemon
Photo by Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz.
Blue/ Green Slime Invades What Remains of Cadman Plaza Park
It turns out that the slime is actually grass seed, suspended in a bluish gel and paper mulch. As the sign explains, the seeds should sprout in about two weeks.
A Parks Department employee said that the "hydro-seeding" is quite expensive, and he hoped that park-goers didn't knock down the fence and run on the turf before the seeds got established.
The 800-odd kids from a nearby private school who use the park as their daily playground/ gym/ sports field will have nowhere to run until the fences are removed from both sections of Cadman Plaza Park -- the now synthetic field to the south, and the newly seeded blue/ green oval to the north.
See previous Cadman Plaza Park stories here.
Photos by Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz.
KeySpan/ National Grid Merger: Another Snag
This unexpected move adds to the "rising chorus of calls for KeySpan to take action on the manufactured natural gas plants and gas storage sites, which have languished for decades under prior owners and which KeySpan acquired in 1998," Newsday says. LIPA has decided to delay a vote on the National Grid agreement.
See full story here.
See previous postings (with other possible merger complications) here.
Photo of the KeySpan logo, taken at company headquarters in Downtown Brooklyn, by photojournalist MK Metz.
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Pace Student Throws Cinder Blocks Off St. George Dorms
When police and fire officers showed up, according to the Eagle, they immediately taped off the entrance to the hotel and subway arcade and told shopkeepers to stay in their stores. Shortly afterward, "Jason" was led off in handcuffs past onlookers, as one officer remarked, “There’s a lot of pissed-off people out here.”
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Joke or No Joke? Deck Over BQE to Connect Cobble Hill, Columbia Street District
The mayor said his administration would consider constructing decks over rail yards, rail lines and congested highways -- including the sunken stretch of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway bordering Hicks Street, dividing "Carroll Gardens West" (the Columbia Street District, mistakenly called Carroll Gardens in the illustration above) from Cobble Hill in Brooklyn.
"A platform could be constructed over the below-grade section of the BQE to create nine new blocks of housing reconnecting two neighborhoods," said a mayoral panel, according to the Post.
This would reconnect the Columbia Street District once again to Mother Brooklyn, leading, we suspect, to skyrocketing property values. But rather than nine new blocks of housing, we would like to suggest a nine-block swath of greenery: a new public park with all the amenities.
Smith Nearly Sold Out
Previous postings on the Smith here.
Photo by Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Cadman Plaza Park Opened -- But Not by Parks Department
Fire, Police, EMS Tear Down the Wall!
While groups of fun-loving locals have been climbing the sagging chain-link perma-barrier surrounding Cadman Plaza Park -- fenced off from the playing public by the Parks Dept. after installing artificial turf last year -- it took the combined efforts of the Fire Department, Police and EMS to "tear down the wall" this afternoon.
As families played baseball and young men kicked soccer balls on the new synthetic turf, a jogger trying to get into shape for summer overextended himself and collapsed. (Was this the "toxic" turf's first victim?)
Help was summoned and fire engines, police cars and two ambulances circled around -- and around -- the park, perplexed to find no official entrance. Eventually, wire cutters were pulled out and before you could say "Bob's my uncle" a grand new entrance was created.
The unfortunate jogger was taken to LICH and the multitudes of sun-loving ball players didn't have to climb out over the fence on the way home -- thanks to our uniformed services.
UPDATE: The Parks Department resealed the fence Monday -- but that didn't stop fun-seekers from climbing over the sagging section again to enjoy the grounds this week... Word is the park won't open officially until mid-May.
Photos by Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz.
Saturday, April 21, 2007
State Street Townhouses Nearly Sold Out?
The one remaining unit, a four-story with three or four bedrooms, is also the model unit and was part of last year’s Brooklyn Design Show -- and is considered "very desirable."
Photo by Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz
Brooklyn Mourns Virginia Tech Shootings
Bunch of Properties in Desirable Areas for Sale
• In Brooklyn Heights — 100 Clark St., and 182, 186 and 188 State St.
• In Park Slope — 217 and 129 St. John’s Place, 43 Prospect Place, 9 St. Mark’s Ave., and 888 Carroll St.
The firm has seen "a great deal of interest from the investment community,” according to the Eagle.UPDATE: The Brooklyn Heights Blog has a lively discussion going about just when 100 Clark Street will actually fall all the way down...
Friday, April 20, 2007
Horseman is Down
UPDATE: Here it is July 2009 and the building has not sold. Not only that -- the For Sale signs are gone and Horseman is still in business.
Photo by MK Metz
No Restraining Order for Ratner Demolitions
The Mystery of the Fenced-Off Atlantic Avenue BP
Reading a bit like a mystery novel, the Eagle has uncovered a variety of clues: Dept. of Buildings applications, a stop-work order, a possible change of ownership, and a mysterious lack of contact with Community Board 2 or any of the usual persons of interest.
Stay tuned! (Full story here.)
What Does KeySpan/ National Grid Merger Mean for Brooklyn?
Long Islanders seem to be expressing themselves much more than Brooklynites about the soon-to-be-accomplished KeySpan/ National Grid merger. Do the Islanders have more of a beef?
At a public info session in Smithtown Friday Long Islanders expressed "a mix of concern and optimism" about Long Island Power Authority's proposed service agreements with National Grid and KeySpan, reports Newsday. Long Island residents want National Grid to overhaul the region's "antiquated" power plants, Newsday says.
A representative for Assemblyman Marc Alessi said he was concerned Long Islanders were signing on to "subpar service for their hard-earned money" given National Grid's much criticized service record in the Northeast. So what does that mean for Brooklyn?
(History: The Long Island Lighting Co. (LILCO) merged with Brooklyn Union Gas in 1998 to form KeySpan.)
Previous stories about the KeySpan/ National Grid merger here.
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Surveyors at Work on Brooklyn Bridge Park Entrances
Surveyors were at work this morning at the foot of Old Fulton Street (Fulton Ferry Landing), and (a McBrooklyn source tells us) also at the corner of Hicks and Joralemon Streets.
As it stands now, the major automobile-type entrances to Brooklyn Bridge Park will be in Dumbo at Old Fulton Street, and at Atlantic Avenue. According to the Brooklyn Bridge Park FEIS, the southwest sidewalk at the Old Fulton Street Ferry Landing will be widened. If approved by the New York City Department of Transportation, Joralemon Street would be closed to vehicular traffic at Furman Street but would remain open for pedestrians.
Photo courtesy of Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz.
Whale Nearly Wanders into Gowanus Canal
The animal, a baleen whale about 15 feet long, was cruising around Gowanus Bay, the outlet from the Canal. People who see the whale outside of the Gowanus Bay are asked to call 631-369-9829, 24/7.
UPDATE: The unfortunate whale died two days after swimming into Gowanus Bay. See Brooklyn Eagle story here.
Toxic Park in Brooklyn Heights?
"The city recently announced plans to carpet nearly 100 more fields with synthetic turf, made springy by a bed of rubber pellets spread beneath their surface. The problem is the lack of conclusive studies on the safety of the pellets, which stick to bloody scrapes and sweaty skin and find their way into socks, said one local professor calling for a moratorium on synthetic turf until more research is conducted. Preliminary testing indicated the rubber pellets, made from recycled tires, contain high levels of polycyclicaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that exceed levels deemed safe by the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation, according to City College psychology professor William Crain ...
See here for the full story.
Previous articles on this topic here.
Photo of youth playing football on the new synthetic turf in the still unopened Cadman Park (after sneaking under the fence) by MK Metz, Brooklyn photojournalist.
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Dumbo Landmark Meeting
The Dumbo Neighborhood Association sent an email to The Gowanus Lounge saying: "Elected officials who support us--including David Yassky, Sam Cooper from Joan Millman's office and Rob Perris of Community Board 2--will be there."
Photo of Dumbo by photojournalist MK Metz
Saturday, April 14, 2007
Where to Eat Saturday Night in the Heights?
Chowhound asks, where do you eat on a Saturday night in Brooklyn Heights? Correspondent Peter gives his take:
"In my opinion, the only places in Brooklyn Heights proper that are worth eating at for a 'nice Saturday night out' are:
-- Henry's End
-- Noodle Pudding (Italian, no reservations, cash only)
-- Petite Marche (new French place)
-- Queen (kinda sleepy old school Italian but very good)"
Peter adds: Way South Heights / Cobble Hill-- cross over Atlantic and go to Hibino, the very new Japanese place on Henry and Pacific; Way North Heights -- cross over Front St. and go to Five Front; Best bet: Noodle Pudding.
What do you think? Anything else worth adding to the list?Photo by EverydayLife, Creative Commons license.
Friday, April 13, 2007
Another Tragic Death on Brooklyn Streets
The impact knocked the pedestrian's shoes off his feet; the front bumper of the Accord was ripped off and the left front of the car was smashed in. The driver of the Accord, a young man who seemed very shaken by the event, said that he had the right of way. Officer Smyth of the 84th Precinct said that the pedestrian "stepped in front of the car." A witness said, "He hit him. The guy flew, and he was down. They tried to do CPR on him." A Long Island College Hospital ambulance took the pedestrian to LICH.
Traffic to the bridge was snarled for hours as the scene was investigated. The pedestrian's shoes and parts of the car remained on the street.
The driver of the Accord.
UPDATE here.
Photos by Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz.
Rally Against Demolition for Parking Sunday
According to BrooklynSpeaks, the Rally is being held to call on the state and the city to rethink their plan to permit Forest City Ratner to demolish two entire city blocks to create “temporary” parking lots for over 1600 cars. The lots will remain for 15 - 20 years, until something is eventually built on top of them.
The parking lots will occupy approximately 7 acres of the Atlantic Yards site – an area twice the size of Union Square Park, BrooklynSpeaks notes.
“Once you demolish buildings, you can’t go back,” said Deb Howard, Executive Director of the Pratt Area Council.
Rally to take place at the Layfayette Presbyterian Church on South Oxford Street and Lafayette Street at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 15.Photo by iboy_daniel, creative commons license.
Thursday, April 12, 2007
What Were Those Potted Palms Doing on Montague Street Thursday Afternoon?
Pedestrians gamely walked a gauntlet of potted palms on the eastern end of Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights today. What was up? According to the Brooklyn Eagle, the Brooklyn office of Massey Knakal Realty Services was celebrating $1 billion in Brooklyn sales in four years with a little reception.
The reception also honored Timothy King, a senior partner, and Brian Leary, the Brooklyn office’s current managing partner, as well as the accomplishments of the rest of the Massey Knakal Brooklyn staff.
“The Brooklyn office, in four short years, has dominated the commercial real estate market in Brooklyn,” said King. To read how they did it, go here.
Photo by Brooklyn photojournalist MK Metz.Deadly Pet Food Still on Shelves
"FDA believes most companies have removed the recalled product; however, some have not," the agency said in a statement. See here for more.
Photo courtesy of T. Keller, Creative Commons license.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Artsy Affordable Housing Near BAM?
Queer Eye's Ted Allen Buys Clinton Hill Brownstone
$1.7 Million Yields Five Bedrooms, 3,600-square-feet, Brownstoner 'House of the Day'
The Big Time Listings blog is all over this celebrity real estate exclusive: Ted Allen -- nationally known as one of the five cast members of Bravo’s “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” -- and his partner, interior designer Barry Rice, have paid $1.7 million for a brownstone at 241 Washington Avenue in Clinton Hill.
According to BTL, Allen sold his five-room, 2,258-square-foot condo loft in New York City’s Chelsea neighborhood for $2.75 million. The Brownstoner blog listed the building last year as its "House of the Day."
'Something Very Broken in New York City ...'
After a rash of tragic deaths on city streets, the City Council Transportation Committee held a hearing today to investigate pedestrian safety. Karla Qunitero, Deputy Director of Planning at Transportation Alternatives, testified that more than 10,000 pedestrians are injured on city streets each year, and more than 150 are killed. Transportation Alternatives is asking the city to adopt a comprehensive Pedestrian Safety Action Plan. (The text of her testimony and the Action Plan may be found here.)
This excellent video from Nickdigital features an interview with Aaron Naperstek of Transportation Alternatives regarding the recent death of a four-year-old boy on 3rd Avenue and Baltic in Brooklyn -- and the Department of Transportation's broken promises. "Something is very broken in the New York City bureaucracy," Naperstek says.
Going Postal In Brooklyn 11218
This famous five-minute video -- viewed more than 30,000 times on YouTube -- shows a VERY irate Kensington Post Office customer. He's so irate that the cops are called in. While he does appear a bit unbalanced, many note that the poor service at the Kensington branch will do that to you.
Video by pngnyc.
Meet the Neighbors
Previous posts on this topic here.
Photos by MK Metz, Brooklyn photojournalist.
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Crazy Naked Brooklyn Law Student Bares All...
The Wall Street Journal's Law Blog Question of the Day: "If Dominguez passes the bar, New York’s Committee on Character and Fitness will have to decide whether to grant her admission. If you sat on the committee, would you?"
The votes are pouring in. They range from the tolerant: "This has ZERO to do with her qualifications to be an attorney;" to the judgmental: "Which firm would hire her when there are 100 other law students with her qualifications who didn’t do porn?" See them all here.
Monday, April 9, 2007
Do Not Pass Go ...
The Eagle's Dennis Holt (who is said to know where Brooklyn's bodies are buried) begins his "Brooklyn Broadside" with this thought: "The obvious answer is, of course not. It makes no more sense today than a jail would at the World Trade Center site, at Hudson Yards or at the Javits Convention Center." More here.
See previous post about the Brooklyn House of Detention here.
Photo of the Brooklyn House of Detention courtesy of MK Metz.
Greenpoint is Oh So Toxic -- See the Video Here
Sunday, April 8, 2007
Q: What Do These Groups Have in Common?
Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods, Inc. (representing 41 community organizations)
NY Public Interest Research Group, Inc.
Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats (CBID)
Sierra Club, Inc.
Atlantic Avenue Betterment Association, Inc.
The Brooklyn Bear’s Gardens, Inc.
Bergen Street-Prospect Heights Block Association, Inc.
Boerum Hill Association, Inc.
Brooklyn Vision Foundation, Inc.
Carlton Avenue Association, Inc.
Carroll Street Block Association (5th and 6th Ave), Inc.
Crown Heights North Association, Inc.
Dean Street Block Association, Inc. (4th to 5th Ave)
East Pacific Block Association, Inc.
Fort Greene Association, Inc.
Fort Greene Park Conservancy, Inc.
Friends and Residents of Greater Gowanus
Park Slope Neighbors, Inc.
Park Place-Underhill Avenue Block Association
Prospect Heights Action Coalition
Prospect Place of Brooklyn Block Association, Inc.
Society for Clinton Hill, Inc.
South Oxford Street Block Association
South Portland Avenue Block Association, Inc.
Zen Environmental Studies Institute, Ltd.
A: On Thursday, these twenty-six co-petitioners filed another Atlantic Yards lawsuit -- to annul the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) and approval of Forest City Ratner's "Atlantic Yards"project. The suit alleges that former Governor Pataki's Empire State Development Corporation's FEIS was fatally flawed.
The group seeks a "fresh look from Governor Spitzer..."
According to a press release issued Thursday, New York City Councilwoman Letitia James said, "The preliminary injunction sought by this lawsuit would postpone demolition while protecting my community and constituents for intimidating and premature destruction. Once the buildings are torn down they cannot be put back..."
UPDATE: The Brooklyn Eagle provides many more details, including this: there are six more lawsuits ongoing against the megaproject.
Photo of Atlantic Yards courtesy of MK Metz, Brooklyn photojournalist
Saturday, April 7, 2007
Second Attempt to Buy Starrett City Rejected
The original $1.3 billion plan to purchase Starrett City came under fire from advocates concerned over losing affordable housing in the neighborhood. Story here.
Judge Phillip's Funds Running Low...
The latest article details the deterioration of the judge's physical health and mental state, after being restricted from having any visitors (including family) without the permission of a court-appointed watchdog.
When the judge was first incarcerated, his estate made up of Brooklyn real estate was worth $10 million. After a couple of years of (let's call it) "mismanagement," plus the failure to report the sale of his buildings and the failure to pay income taxes, and the improper and illegal writing of hundreds of thousands of dollars in personal checks from the judge's account (and the "disappearance" of $300,000), guess what? The judge is broke!
The Eagle reports: "In a matter of four-plus years, almost all of Phillips’ buildings have been sold at auction. Despite this, the former judge now finds himself broke, a virtual prisoner in a nursing home where he’s still restricted from receiving visitors without the approval of his current property guardian."
The whole affair is a chilling reminder that this could happen to anyone -- especially in Brooklyn.
Photo courtesy of Katielip's Photostream, Creative Commons license.
Friday, April 6, 2007
$100 Sanitation Tickets City's Cash Cow?
“The city is using this as an opportunity to generate funds, but they’re picking on the wrong people,” said Theresa Maresca, 60, a Bay Ridge resident.
Maresca said she picks up litter on her block on a daily basis. But with a 24-hour diner and a school in close proximity, the deluge of litter is impossible to keep up with, especially since the city removed the trash receptacle from her corner last year.
The Eagle reports that Councilman Vincent Gentile’s office gets 15–20 calls a week from residents who have received litter tickets with angry comments like, “We’re not the city’s ATM machine."See the Eagle story here.
Photo courtesy of William.Ward's Photostream, Creative Commons license
KeySpan, National Grid Merger One Step Closer
National Grid, a British utility, has agreed to give pay raises to its 3,210 unionized employees across upstate New York in return for union support of the company's contested merger with Brooklyn-based KeySpan Corp., reports the AP via Newsday.
As recently as two months ago, union officials had criticized the KeySpan deal in testimony to state regulators, according to this report.
See here for previous posts about the KeySpan/ National Grid merger.
Transformer Blows on Atlantic
Photos by MKMetz
Thursday, April 5, 2007
Real Estate Roller Coaster
From SpeculativeBubble.com, an animation of U.S. home prices (adjusted for inflation) plotted as a roller coaster.
Thanks to Curbed.Wednesday, April 4, 2007
Parks Dept. Refuses to Study Synthetic Turf Health Risks
It seems that William Crain, a developmental psychologist at CUNY, collected a handful of rubber pellets from a synthetic turf field in Riverside Park and sent it to Rutgers University for a toxicology test a year ago.
The rubber comes from recycled tires, and Crain’s toxicology test showed levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and the highly carcinogenic benzo(a)pyrene far above safety standards set by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Metro reports.If this was found in dirt, Crain said, the state would declare the fields contaminated.
Brooklyn Heights residents have long protested the installation of synthetic turf in Cadman Plaza Park, for environmental and other reasons. (See the series of stories published in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle here, and here and here and here.)
Photo of the non-Astroturfed portion of Cadman Park by MK Metz.
BBPark Units Go For $$$
Image courtesy of Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy.
What Should We Name the Brooklyn House of Detention Hotel?
The Correction Department's plan to add retail space to the Brooklyn House of Detention at 275 Atlantic Avenue prompted BP Marty Markowitz to suggest a unique tenant: a boutique hotel. "If it's designed in such a way that the guests feel totally comfortable," he said, "why not?" (See the entire NY Times article here, or here.)
Posters to the Brownstoner just love the suggestion, predicting it will become THE hipster place in Brooklyn. "Shoplifting should not be a problem," notes one correspondent.
UPDATE: The Brooklyn Daily Eagle details how the jail will double in size. See here.
Photo of side gate of Brooklyn House of Detention by MK Metz.
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
Middle Class Disappearing in NYC?
Monday, April 2, 2007
Two Trees General Store
The New York Observer announces Big News In Dumbo: David Walentas' Two Trees Management will soon open Two Trees Real Estate, the firm's first general walk-in real-estate sales office. The office will broker listings in Two Trees' developments as well as in other projects.
"There were so many calls to the main Two Trees office for listings in Dumbo that this just made sense," Asher Abehsera, Two Trees' vice president of sales and marketing, told The Real Estate on Tuesday afternoon. More here.
Thanks to DumboNYC.