Archive for June, 2006

Coney Island All Lit Up with Fireworks and Parachute Jump

June 30, 2006

parachute

The photo above, which was posted over at Curbed today, offers a cool preview of what Brooklyn’s Eiffel Tower will look like when Boro Prez Marty Markowitz throws the switch at 9:00 PM next Friday, July 7. (It’s also pictured in the paper he mails out to Brooklynites, which hit mailboxes yesterday.) Plenty to do in Coney before then, though.

Friday Night Fireworks got off to a stormy start last Friday, but the weather may be better for tonight’s edition, which starts at 9:30. So, get you’re pre-July 4 fill. They’re also happening every Friday night through Labor Day, and the (getting beaten up on the ball field) Cyclones are shooting off their own fireworks on July 3 and September 4. (They say they’re doing fireworks tonight too, but we assume they’re talking about the Coney Friday night show.)

And, of course, if you’re up for seeing people shove hot dogs down their throats, there is the famous Nathan’s Hotdog Eating Contest on July 4. Starts at noon. Go see if Japan’s Takeru Kobayashi can hold on to his crown.

Gowanus Goes Green

June 30, 2006

Gowanus, Sunday MorningCall Gowanus green, at least, if the vision presented last night by the Gowanus Canal Community Development Corporation pulls any weight. The GCCDC’s updated plan for Gowanus, which was unveiled at a meeting at St. Agnes Parish Hall on Sackett Street, divides the neighborhood into South, North and Hinge zones. The South Zone would lean heavily on industry, with a new emphasis on business producing environmentally-friendly products in green facililities. The North Zone would include a mix of residential, light industrial and retail uses. The Hinge Zone, around the Smith and Ninth subway station, would include parks, housing and retail.

The plan envisions a “green” future for Gowanus that includes a cleanup of the still heavily-polluted canal, green residential and commercial architecture and efforts to develop businesses that produce environmentally-friendly products. “We want to market Gowanus as a green zone,” said Bill Donohoe, who presented the plan. “We want to make something special out of Gowanus.”

The entire plan runs to 120 pages and is too complicated to dissect here in one piece–so we’ll be following up. Suffice to say that it emphasizes public access to the canal, with pedestrian and bicycle paths and, even, new pedestrian bridges that would connect streets on the canal’s east and west banks. It also features numerous parks–at least one of which would be developed on the Keyspan site near the Smith and Ninth subway station, once an environmental clean up happens. (It would also suggest moving at least one of the concrete businesses currently on the canal.) The GCCDC even goes so far as to imagine approaching the MTA to allow a restaurant at the Smith and Ninth Street stop (the highest in the system and one that affords excellent views of Brooklyn and Manhattan). The updated plan–which will continue to be the subject of community discussion and revision–will be available on the GCCDC website soon.

Real power in determining Gowanus’ future, of course, rests with city planners, those who will redo zoning regulations in the area, designs that developers have on land they are already stockpiling and public and private entities that will have to finance community-oriented projects. “If you sell the idea of Gowanus as a green community and it begins to happen, people will believe in it,” Mr. Donohoe said.

GCCDC chair Michael Ingui also announced the creation of a Gowanus Canal Conservancy that will work to promote public access to the canal and promote efforts to clean it up. The conservancy will be modeled on those that exist for Central Park, Prospect Park and other NYC parks. “Our aim is to create a clean canal,” Mr. Ingui said. A “Water Quality Summit” is planned for the fall.

There is much more to consume and relate about all of this, so Gowanus Lounge will be returning to it often. For now, we’ll simply say that the plan presents an exciting vision of the neighborhood’s future and we hope that it will influence the government decisions that will determine Gowanus’ future.

Brooklinks: Friday Taking it Down Edition

June 30, 2006

Taking it Down
Brooklinks is a selection of Brooklyn-related blog items and news story that are worth checking out:

Brooklyn Parrots: The Movie

June 30, 2006

Ah, urban wildlife. The other day, we turned to Brooklyn’s cool parrot colonies and to the wonderful blog dedicated to them at brooklynparrots that has been set up by Steve Baldwin, the man who runs Brooklyn Parrot Safaris (there’s one on Saturday, July 1…check the brooklynparrots site for info) and is the Parrot King of the Borough of Kings. Turns out that Mr. Baldwin is working with a team to create a film about the parrots and that there’s a trailer for it. (GL was so asleep at the switch on this one that we qualify as comatose.) Just click on the play button above to watch.

Truth in advertising requires GL to disclose being a total sucker for The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill, but we have faith that a Brooklyn Parrot could teach a San Francisco Parrot a thing or two about life in the big city.

“The story of the Brooklyn parrots includes many dramatic elements which will not make this ‘just another bird movie,” Mr. Baldwin writes of the Brooklyn parrot movie. “The struggles of these birds — so far from home, strangers in a strange land — a jungle of stone, really — subject to predators ranging from hawks to poachers to utility companies, makes for a fine drama.”

Also, Animal Planet did a great segment on the parrots that features Mr. Baldwin. Check it out.

Rescheduled Billyburg Short Film Fest is Tonight

June 30, 2006

billburg film festx500
The 3rd Annual Billyburg Short Film Festival, which was rained out on Saturday is now happening tonight at our favorite spot–McCarren Pool in Williamsburg. Festivals showcasing their work include The Coney Island Film Festival, The Brooklyn International Film Festival, and the Billyburg Short Film Festival. The event starts at 6:30. Admission is $10. There will be DJs, plus BSFF
6.30pm June 24th, 2006 at The McCarren Park Pool, Williamsburg Brooklyn
10 bucks at the door. There will be installations and booths from local community artists including Open Ground, 3rd Ward, Antimart, Peripheral Media, Interrupcion, Indamine Ochre Architecture, Harry Rosenblum, Action Direction, Fnerd, Jennifer
Jaser, Feed Tank, Brooklyn Parents for Peace, Not An Alternative Arts
Collective, and others.

Lonely Gowanus Building is Landmarked

June 29, 2006

Brooklyn Improvement Company BuildingWe’ve been following the tale of the building at the corner of Third Avenue and Third Street in Gowanus for some time and knew that it had been up before the Landmarks Preservation Commission a few weeks ago. The building is on the corner of the site of the planned Whole Foods and, yesterday, it was landmarked. This has generated much happy coverage today, including the following:

3rd and 3rd Gets Landmarked [Brooklyn Record]
Pippin Gets its Place in History [Callalillie]
It’s Official: Pippin Won’t Be Eaten by Whole Foods [Gothamist]

We also wrote about it at Curbed in the item called Facadomy Averted in Gowanus.

In any case, the building which is now completely by itself on the large empty parcel, used to be the home of the New York and Long Island Coignet Stone Company. (The Gowanus company manufactured artificial stone that was used in parts of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, the Metropolitan and the American Museum of Natural History.) Then, it became the home of the Brooklyn Improvements Company, which among other things, helped build the Gowanus Canal and much of Park Slope. More recently, it housed an auto parts and auto repair shop. The LPC chair calls the 2 ½-story, Italianate-style structure “mysterious” and “elegant.”

We’re thrilled to see that this pretty little building will survive, and hope it is not swallowed up by the Whole Foods, no matter how much we want a big grocery store nearby.

In the Event of a Hurricane, Take the A Train

June 29, 2006

New Hurricane Mapx500
There is a lot of new and fun information now available at the Office of Emergency Management’s website about the updated city hurricane evacuation plan, including a brochure in 10 languages and a long primer on the Evacuation Plan (click here for the full PDF).

The new $30 million hurricane plan that will triple the number of shelters was announced by the Mayor yesterday. According to the plan, the city will be able to evacuate 3 million people and shelter 600,000. There are 65 evacuation centers (up from 23) and 509 hurricane shelters. Less reassuringly, the plan relies heavily on the MTA to help us run for our lives. (Fun thing for today: Make up examples of the helpful announcements you would hear on the train.) The city would increase bus and subway service from flood zones. It would ask the state to make mass transit free (!!!!) and let cabs stuff in as many people as possible. GL assumes the taxi plan is for Manhattan, because Brooklyn and Queens don’t got no freaking cabs in good weather, let alone when a killer hurricane is racing toward us.

OEM is going to mail hurricane preparedness brochures to 300,000 residents in the most vulnerable parts of the city, which one supposes is a way to tell people who don’t bother looking to see if they’re in “evacuation zones” that they should get out of Coney because they’re New Orleans Screwed when the Big Blow comes.

Pay attention Brooklyn: One in four New Yorkers lives in a hurricane evacuation zone and an awful lot of those evacuation zones are in the Borough of Kings. Check out the map and you will see just how much of Brooklyn potentially becomes Underwater World. It looks like the Incredible Shrinking Borough. The only saving grace here is that the odds of a hurricane hitting the city are just one percent.

According to OEM, New York City is particularly vulnerable to storm surge due to a geographic characteristic called the “New York Bight,” a sharp bend in the Atlantic coastline where New York and New Jersey meet. (This is not to be confused with the “Brooklyn Bite Me” and the “Bronx Eat Me,” which have nothing to do with hurricanes.) The New York Bight amplifies the effects of a storm surge and can create severe flooding in coastal areas, particularly when the storm tide coincides with normal high tides. If a Category 1 hurricane made landfall in the City, portions of the Rockaway Peninsula, South Brooklyn, Red Hook Piers, communities bordering the Newtown Creek in Brooklyn and Queens, Lower Manhattan, Staten Island’s North and South Shores, and low lying areas of the Bronx would be vulnerable to flooding and damage.

One part of Brooklyn where they apparently are worried about the Big One is Brighton Beach, at least, according to a recent NY Sun story about Brighton Beach hurricane paranoia. Makes you wonder if those old Russian ladies on the boardwalk know something we don’t or if there are just a lot of hurricane-fearing people in Brighton Beach. It makes a fascinating read.

Do you know what should be in your Go Bag?

Brooklinks: Thursday Prepare to Evacuate Edition

June 29, 2006

Jogging Past Painted Door
Brooklinks is a selective daily review of news stories and blog items related to Brooklyn:

Celebrating the Gowanus (Comprehensive Plan)

June 29, 2006

Carroll St Bridge
The Gowanus Canal Community Development Corporation is holding a get together tonight to showcase the comprehensive plan in its current iteration for the Big G and environs. The group has been developing a plan that emphasizes public access to the Gowanus and dreams of a “green” neighborhood with environmentally-friendly projects. The group’s chair says that the plan is especially important because time is running out to try to superimpose a plan before development simply happens. The planning process has been funded with nearly $250,000 arranged by Rep. Nydia Velazquez.

The GCCDC is expecting elected officials, community groups and residents at the meeting, which takes place tonight (June 29) at 7:00PM in St. Agnes Parish Hall, which is located at 433 Sackett Street between Hoyt and Bond.

Moving? Call GE8-5800

June 29, 2006

From Brooklyn Ramblings and the in-depth research and extensive photography of Sonja Shield comes a priceless look at the era when New York (and Brooklyn) telephone exchanges started with letters rather than numbers, and 718, 917, et. al. were just a twinkle in Bell Telephone’s eye. Check out excellent examples of Brooklyn signage that can still be found with the old phone exchanges as well as Sonja’s wonderful histories of some of the businesses and buildings represented. Cool stuff. The photo here is, of course, one of Sonja’s shot of a sign for Molloy Bros. Moving & Storage that is visible from the F Train on the east side of McDonald Avenue. Sonja writes that the GE might have stood for GEneral or GEneva.