
Dunk Island photo by Melalouise, Creative Commons license
Materials from demolished military barracks would be recycled into fill for rolling hills and climbing cliffs; public art would inhabit a forest; and wooden bicycles would be available for free. The design, led by Dutch firm West 8, calls for 90 acres of parkland and a two-mile promenade. More at the Brooklyn Eagle
- Water Taxi from Brooklyn to Governors Island Starts Saturday
- Chapin Family to Gather on Governor's Island for Big Sing
- Circle Line Statue of Liberty Tour Boat to Leave from Brooklyn Bridge Park?
Rendering by West 8
* Because We Could Actually Hit the 2008 Election Trifecta
* Because Broadway Is Back
* Because We Proudly Harbor Illegal Immigrants
* Because Your Foot Can Make You Famous
* Because Philip. Seymour. Hoffman.
* Because the Yankees are the New Red Sox
* Because Brangelina Is Gone
* Because Rupert Murdoch Thinks Newspapers Are a Growth Business
* Because We're Finding Out Who's Worth Their Paychecks on Wall Street
* Because We Shed Our Skin Like Lizards
* Because You Can Find Love Underground
* Because the UES Isn't Interested in Being Cool
* Because of the Retro Glamour of 'Mad Men'
* Because We’re Not Afraid of Frying
All reasons to love New York here.
According to the Sheepshead Bay/Plumb Beach Civic Association blog, the home -- located at 2825 Haring Street -- is owned by Mikhail Gourgov, but has been occupied by tenants who may have been involved in an outgoing dispute.
Go here to see this story, and more photos.
These are just a few of the conditions parents say they found when they dropped their toddlers off at Brooklyn Children’s Academy Preschool at 25 Dean Street (near Boerum Place) last month, according to the Brooklyn Eagle. The preschool moved to the Dean Street location on Nov. 5 -- it was originally located in Brooklyn Heights, but lost its lease.
It appears that the preschool didn't even have a license to operate at its new location.
On one side of Fort Greene Park, nine sets of park benches offer a seat. Take a stroll on the other side, says the Brooklyn Eagle, and only gnarled chunks of concrete and metal jut out of the sidewalk.
Apparently, the park serves as a geographical dividing line between the Walt Whitman public housing projects on one side and the historic district of mid-19th century brownstones on the other. The benches along DeKalb Avenue were torn out long ago by the Parks Department, and there are conflicting stories about why that happened.
More here.
Tuesday, BCAT's (Brooklyn Community Access Television) Neighborhood Beat gets all festive for the holidays in Bay Ridge. See chic gift ideas at Patouki boutique; then over to Hip Squeak, to outfit those uber-cool youngsters; have a heart to heart with dynamic community leader Rev. El Yateem; and grab a hearty bit of traditional German fare at Schnitzel Haus.
Premiers Tuesday, December 11 at 12:30 and 8:30 p.m.
More good stuff at BCAT's web site here.
It Looks Like Five Buildings. But It's Not.
Just when you thought you knew everything there was to know about the really tall tower (and smaller buildings) soon to be built by City Tech and Forest City Ratner at the corner of Jay and Tillary Streets in Downtown Brooklyn ...
News came Thursday from the Brooklyn Eagle that the "complex" of five buildings isn't really five buildings, even though the rough draft looks like five buildings.
“Note that there will be one foundation for the building that will replace Klitgord,” a City Tech spokesperson said in an email to the Eagle. Though the rendering appears to show five separate buildings, “there will actually be just one.”
The taller "section" -- read tower -- will be residential and the shorter section will contain the City Tech classrooms and offices, an underground theater and a gymnasium. The tower section will have its own entrance; the City Tech section another entrance.
More here.
- Brooklyn's City Tech -- It's Not a Tower, It's a Complex!
- You Compare: City Tech 'Old Model' to City Tech 'Today Model'
- Biggest Building in Brooklyn -- So Far -- Proposed for City Tech's Klitgord Auditorium Site
"City Tech spokesperson Michele Forsten told the Brooklyn Eagle that the college, in partnership with Forest City Ratner, is building not one, not two but five connecting buildings in the one block fronting Jay Street."
“The two towers will be residential,” Forsten told the Eagle. “The three others will contain college classrooms and offices, an underground theater and a gymnasium.”Photo of the existing Klitgord Auditorium by MK Metz
Michael Lappin, president of the Community Preservation Corp., told the Brooklyn Eagle at an apparently exclusive meeting, “We have pledged both a higher percentage of units and a deeper income level” than other developments in Brooklyn.”
More here.Compare the rendering to the draft shown today on the City Tech Web site (lower right). The configuration, adjusting for angle, is remarkably similar, though the final height is hard to fathom.
City Tech's site confirms: "City Tech will soon be the home to what is sure to be the architectural landmark of Brooklyn. Standing at the corner of Tillary and Jay Streets, directly across from the Namm Building will soon be the most original piece of architecture since the Brooklyn Bridge, a masterpiece conceived by the celebrated architect Renzo Piano."
- Biggest Building in Brooklyn -- So Far -- Proposed for City Tech's Klitgord Auditorium Site