Archive for August, 2006

"Virtual Tour" of a Brooklyn Apartment

August 31, 2006

polandkoreaapartment
Our friends at Poland Korea Relations — the Polish guy and his Korean girlfriend that periodically produce urban life videos and postings from an interesting perspective — are at it again with a “virtual tour” of their Brooklyn apartment. You can see it by clicking on over to polandkorearelations or go directly to it by clicking this link.

Let’s go to the words:

I am subletting this apartment from a 79 year old Polish man who is away in Poland. This apartment has not been renovated in 40 years and some of its fixtures may even be a hundred years old. For instance, my bathtub is right in my kitchen, right next to the door to the apartment. Everything else is very old too, including the antique furniture and the stove. This is just a very dingy place and it’s so hard to keep clean since it looks dirty to begin with.

But anyways, I love this apartment, and I decided to make a virtual tour/walkthrough of it so you too can experience it. This “Brooklyn Apartment” is a drama art-piece. In each episode there will be more places to explore starting from my apartment, and more scenes which will clue you in to the unfolding story. Watch the drama unfold in this one of a kind interactive art piece. Next episode is coming on October 1st.

Why so long, we don’t know.

Question of the day: Do they live like this? Or is it part of the “interactive art piece”?

A Taste of the (Original) Robert Moses to Close Out August

August 31, 2006

If you read Gowanus Lounge, you know we often cite Robert Moses and use his name as a pejorative, frequently to refer to the arrogant planning process surrounding Atlantic Yards and the community-violating nature of some of other big projects going up in Brooklyn. The superb Brooklyn Heights Blog offers up some wonderful background on Moses in an item called Heights History: Nabe vs Robert Moses. We’ll share some excerpts:

Among his accomplishments, Moses built the Belt Parkway and replaced Brooklyn’s shorefront towns with horrific high-rise apartments worthy of the Eastern Bloc.

His 1947 master plan for the BQE would have cut through Brooklyn in a manner similar to his borough hacking construction of the Cross Bronx Expressway proposed at about the same time.

Moses succeeded in destroying a portion of Hicks Street by laying down his 6 lane highway through Red Hook. He met with little opposition from the poor, immigrant Italian community there who feared retaliation — or worse, deportation — from City Hall if they protested…Here in Brooklyn Heights, more affluent and influential residents were able to persuade Moses to accept a compromise — one with roots dating back to Hezekiah Pierrepont’s plan in the 1820s to build a vista point near the water to rival Manhattan’s Battery…The “Power Broker” came to an agreement with the community, resulting in the construction of a two-tiered highway and the creation of the Brooklyn Promenade. Both opened in 1954. Reconstruction of this section of the BQE is scheduled to begin next year.

You can find more about Big Bob at Wikipedia and, of course, by reading Robert Caro’s The Power Broker, which ascribes virtually everything that is wrong with New York to him.

8th Annual Waterfront Festival in Sunset Park

August 31, 2006

[Photo courtesy soupflower/flickr]

Via Community Board 7 comes notice of its 8th Annual Waterfront Festival, which will be taking place on Saturday, September 16th from 11:00AM-6PM on the Brooklyn Army Terminal Pier at 1st Ave. and 58th Street. The festival, dubbed “Celebrating our Success” will highlight Sunset Park HS, the proposed waterfront park, downzoning and the refurbishing of the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal. It’s billed as, “the biggest event ever with featured dance and music performances representing the different cultures of Sunset Park; a Petting Zoo; NYC Police and Fire Department Demonstrations including the “Smokehouse” ; vintage MTA busses; a treasure hunt; and many CBO’s will be on hand with information about services for Sunset Park.” Call Community Board 7 at 718-854-0003 for more information.

Brooklinks: Thursday Fare Thee Well August Edition

August 31, 2006

Williamsburg-Greenpoint Rezoning Send Up

August 31, 2006

We found “Rezoned So You Can Own” while trawling around on You Tube, and it’s definitely worth a few minutes of spare time, if only for its funny bitterness about the entire issue and its take on gentrification in Williamsburg and Greenpoint. Click on the embedded video or on this link. The vid comes from Null Set Films.

Old Time Gowanus Canal: "The Lavender Lake"

August 31, 2006

Lavender LakeOf all the pages on the wonderful Forgotten New York site, one of the closest to GL’s heart is “The Lavender Lake,” which provides much detail and a lot of photos of our namesake Big G. Here, you’ll find tons of info, like the following on the South Brooklyn Seine’s history:

It was created in 1849 (finished in the 1860s) by narrowing its predecessor, the Gowanus Creek, into a one and a half mile long commercial waterway to provide commercial access to Gowanus Bay. Developer Edwin Litchfield formed the Brooklyn Improvement Company for the express purpose of dredging the Gowanus Creek, then a fresh stream, and making it navigable. With the creation of the new waterway, barges brought in sandstone from New Jersey that was used to build the beautiful brownstones that today still line the streets of surrounding Boerum Hill and park Slope. Unfortunately the buildup of the area contributed to the pollution of the canal, which would go on for over a century: the surrounding area’s raw sewage would be pumped directly into the canal, and the new gasworks, coal yards and soap factories along the canal’s length also dropped tons of pollutants directly into it as the years went by. As early as the 1880s the canal was foul and miasmic and its color had changed to a dark Pepto-Bismol shade, prompting locals to call it “Lavender Lake.”

So, now, you know, in case you didn’t.

Lola Staar Founder Talks About Coney Island

August 30, 2006

lolastore[Photo courtesy of Coney Island Shortcakes]

Coney Island fashion designer and boutique owner Dianna Carlin is the subject of a fascinating new Q&A conducted by Jonathan Bowles, the Executive Director of the Center for an Urban Future. In the interview, the owner of the Lola Staar boutique on the Coney Island boardwalk talks about her business, obstacles she faced setting up shop on the boardwalk, the neighborhood and her insights and opinions about the Coney rebuilding plans.

Here’s a sample of what Carlin said she’s had to endure, which certainly was a bit of an eye opener for Gowanus Lounge:

I don’t even know how my business has survived through six years, because there are tremendous obstacles here. I know firsthand from my experience here that there are some really corrupt, crazy things going on here. And those just have to be moved out in order for any small business like myself, for anything positive to open up here. I’ve had tremendous problems. Every year, there’s somebody threatening me, trying to extort money out of me, people putting glue in my locks. Every year, there’s something. And it’s because people here feel threatened by me, because I’m new and I’m a woman and I’m not from Coney Island.

The people that own businesses here don’t want to see anything new. They see this newness and this change as something that’s going to threaten their businesses, which have sold the same products, as charming as they are. I mean, I love Coney Island and I love what’s here, despite everything. Coney Island has always had that dichotomy between the bright, circus lights and the dark, seedy underside. There’s been corruption—Sodom by the Sea has been its name since the beginning. There’s always been that element here. And that’s part of what attracted me to it. But I know for sure that if new businesses are going to open up here, there are many things that need to change.

Carlin’s comments about Coney redevelopment and why she is basically supportive of the Coney Island Development Corporation and Thor Equities plans for Coney are very much worth reading.

As for the Center for an Urban Future, if you’re not familiar with their work, they’re absolutely worth getting to know as they do some of the most perceptive and interesting research around about important New York City planning, community and quaility of life issues. The organization’s most recent study took a hard look at New York City street fairs, concluding that they are seriously lacking because a handful of firms have a stranglehold on them. The Q&A with Carlin is actually part of an ongoing series of interviews.

If you’re in Coney check out Lola Staar, then head over to see our friends Dan and Kalene at Coney Island Shortcakes, who continue selling their excellent shortcakes and putting words and photos up on their always-fun blog. In fact, they have an item and some photos right now on their blog (from which we borrowed the one above) about Lola Staar, who is one of their neighbors.

Atlantic Yards Wednesday #2: Planned Shrinkage End Game?

August 30, 2006

Of all the fascinating things swirling around the hyper-controversial Atlantic Yards project in the days since last week’s public hearing, the most interesting is the discussion about a possible scaling back of the project before it goes to the Empire State Development Corporation’s board for a certain vote of approval.

Is the talk of shrinkage a spontaneous move on the part of public officials who have heard the drumbeat of opposition in Brooklyn? Or is it calculated ploy by the same powerbrokers so they can say they listened to the public while, in reality, simply cutting fat that was pre-built into project plans in anticipation of this day?

Most likely it’s the latter, but the volume and staying power of opponents has no doubt made an impression on both the public officials that have steadfastly supported Atlantic Yards and those that have supported it but have raised some questions about the top-down, unresponsive nature of the planning and approval process (either because they’re genuinely troubled by spectre of Robert Moses hovering over the process or because they find it politically expedient to make it look like they are).

Most curious, of course, are the comments of Borough President Marty Markowitz, who has been Atlantic Yards Cheerleader-in-Chief while voicing vague concerns about the project’s density. Markowitz used the public hearing to declare that some of the buildings need to be scaled back, that Miss Brooklyn shouldn’t exceed the Williamsburgh Savings Bank tower in height and that transportation planning has been seriously flawed.

Forest City Ratner officials including Jim Stuckey reacted by laughing, according to community activist Philip DePaolo who was sitting behind Mr. Stuckey and took note of the fact they found the Borough President’s remarks funny. One can only conclude that (a). Ratner’s people knew ahead of time that Markowitz would be making these remarks in order to do some damage control or (b). They thought that Markowitz’s modest suggestions were, well, laughable or (c). They find Markowitz himself a joke. (Note to Marty: You should ask Ratner staff people not to laugh at you in public. Or, at least, not to laugh when you’re not telling jokes. It looks bad.)

For the record, Gowanus Lounge believes there are many, many things wrong with Atlantic Yards as currently proposed, and the height of several of the buildings is just one of them. This is why the project needed a locally-based planning process and why we find the ram-it-down-their-throats approach of the Empire State Development Corporation and the Pataki Administration offensive.

Others, including City Council Member David Yassky, are suggesting a scaleback of up to 50 percent. (Yassky, for instance, told Atlantic Yards Report’s Norman Oder that a scaling back of 50 percent might be in order.)

Of course, it is worth pointing out that the project has grown since it was first proposed, perhaps in order to find ways to make it look like it is being shrunk without actually shrinking it. To a many observers, the project is so huge that cutting it by half will still leave Brooklyn with an oversized and far too dense project. In his Atlantic Yards Report today, for example, Mr. Oder engages in a perceptive discussion about a 50 percent scaleback, saying “there’s a certain ridiculousness to the exercise–a reduction in scale wouldn’t be accomplished by shrinking the buildings; it would be accomplished by various forms of surgery. Had the project proceeded via the city’s land use planning process, a ceiling would have been set by zoning at the start.”

Gowanus Lounge will go out on a limb and predict a 25-33 percent reduction in density from what it currently is on paper. Call us crusty and cynical, but that’s probably in the neighborhood of the “shrinkage” everyone had in mind from the very beginning. That way, the developer still has a project that will produce hundreds of millions of dollars in pure profit. And the public officials like Markowitz and Governor Pataki and Mayor Bloomberg who’ve been the project’s biggest supporters can say they listened to the public and took heroic steps to get the developer to make the project smaller and better.

Just a hunch, of course.

Yassky Almost Publicly Gets in Bed with Architect, Then Blinks

August 30, 2006

Maybe it was the bad press from Brownstoner and The Politicker that did it? Or the call from the Daily News?

First, Brownstoner reported that Congressional candidate and City Council Member David Yassky would be holding a fundraiser with Robert Scarano, the controversial Brooklyn architect who recently gave up the right to self-certify his work after a number of complaints about odd things about some of his buildings were filed with the Department of Buildings. Then, The Politicker reported that the event was cancelled. Specifically: “The fundraiser which had been tentatively scheduled for tonight has been cancelled because the campaign didn’t think it was appropriate.”

“Tentatively scheduled”? There was nothing “tentative” about the invitation quoted by Brownstoner, which called Yassky the “Council’s most accomplished, progressive legislator… We need to help him now since he is a supporter of our industry.” (Emphasis added.) Among the industry supporters of Yassky are Moishe Kestenbaum, the owner of 184 Kent in Williamsburg, whose de-landmarking Yassky championed, and Joshua Guttman, owner of the ill-fated Greenpoint Terminal Market.

Candidate Chris Owens told the Daily News that the fundraiser and its abrupt cancellation is indicative of “Yassky campaign games with developers, and playing games with people who are willing to cut corners to make money.”

Brooklinks: Wednesday Midweek Edition

August 30, 2006