
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.
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.
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' ...
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.
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.
• 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.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.)
-- 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?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.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."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.
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."
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.
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.
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.
“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."From SpeculativeBubble.com, an animation of U.S. home prices (adjusted for inflation) plotted as a roller coaster.
Thanks to Curbed.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.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.