Archive for November, 2006

Brooklyn Holiday Lights Viewing Guide

November 30, 2006

Willamsburg Xmas
We already have Prospect Park in Lights, the lighting display that was officially turned on on Monday. This weekend and early next week should mark the start of an awful lot of outdoor decorations being lit up, if they’re not already blazing. Here are some other spots where you can get your fill of Christmas lights, Brooklyn-style:

Dyker Heights. First among equals in Brooklyn, the Lights of Dyker Heights are something to behold. They’re insane, over the top and so Brooklyn you’ll want to scream. And, you’ll have plenty of company because they’re estimated to attract 100,000 visitors during the holiday season, including bus loads full of kids. The area where the lights are centered is between 80th and 86ths Street and 10th and 13th Avenues, with 84th Street between 11th and 12th Avenues having some displays that words simply can’t describe. If you’ve never been, Dyker Heights is next to Bay Ridge. You can click on this Google Map for help finding the area.

Dumbo. This year, for the first time, Brooklyn Bridge Park is going to have some lighting displays that are being promoted as being pretty cool. We’ll have to wait until the switch is flipped on December 5 at 6PM to see for sure. The show runs through January 7.

Carroll Gardens. Among the many things we love about Carroll Gardens is the exuberant nature of the Christmas displays. Take a walk through the neighborhood and see for yourself. There are some very enthusiastic displays not far from the Gowanus Canal.

Downtown Brooklyn. Brooklyn’s tree is in front of Borough Hall. It’ll be lit on December 13th with a Hannukkah menorah to follow on December 18. Metrotech and the area around the Marriott also have some cool lighting.

Williamsburg. Some people in the Burg pull out all the stops to decorate their houses. There are some very lit up houses around Berry. One street that is also heavily decorated is Ainslie between Graham and Humboldt.

Bergen Beach. We haven’t personally seen the Bergen Beach lights, but the lights on National and Arkansas Drives are said to be one the borough’s “biggest and brightest displays.” You have a car and you have a Google Map and you’re right there.

(Some of the information here comes from the Borough President’s Brooklyn!! publication, which arrived in Brooklyn mailboxes last week. As always, we’re sure there are some very decorated Brooklyn streets and neighborhoods that we’re missing. Feel free to add them in comments or to email us so that we can add them.)

Coney Island Deathwatch: More Eulogies

November 30, 2006

Astroland Burger Guy, Tagged, with Moon
Reaction to the sale of Astroland to developer Thor Equities is continuing. Here are some tidbits we’ve found here and there, from writers and bloggers we haven’t linked to before:

1) No. No No No No No. No. I don’t believe a word Thor Equities has said. I have no faith in their claims. I don’t believe they wish to keep the amusements in Coney Island. Not when they claim their development will contain “the first roller coaster built in Coney Island since the Cyclone.” (Hello, Jumbo Jet?) Not when their concept art is just that — conceptual. And not when they’re actively pursuing a giant mall/condo complex. Revitalizing a depressed area is one thing (and let’s face it, Coney Island deserves all the revitalization it can get, especially year-round stuff) but not when it’s one developer calling all the shots and buying up all the land. Yes, all the land. Today I learned of a big purchase they just made. Thor Equities is finishing the job that Robert Moses started over 40 years ago and Fred Trump, Donald’s father, tried to finish as well. They’re finally killing Coney Island. [Derspatchel/Live Journal]

2) The Beginning of the End. A major shoe has dropped in the redevelopment plans for Coney Island…I’m trying to stay positive. Coney Island’s history is cyclical — over the years it’s gone through countless transformations, so perhaps this will just be another “phoenix moment” for the area. And anyway, the job’s not done yet — there are still zoning variances to slog through before “Joey” and his mallrats can do anything. To those who oppose what Thor is proposing, find out when the variance hearings are and SHOW UP. You might not be able to stop the wholesale gentrification and obliteration of Coney Island’s history, but I know from experience that a few angry villagers can at least create some headaches and slow the process down. [Out and Back]

3) Coney Island (as you know it) R.I.P. it’s hard for me to tell you how much this saddens me. [girlhattan]

4) Coney Island Only Has Until Summer ’07 to Live. i m sad to announce that it was in the paper today that astroland in coney island bk will close after summer 2007,making this upcomin summer the last season open.This to me,was the last place in nyc that hasnt changed since it opened.Look back at the movie,The Warriors,and you can see very little has changed.My family all worked in astroland,running the wonder wheel and the cyclone,my father helped buid the boardwalk dock outside cyclone stadium.My earliest childhood memiores were of going there wit my brother mike and my parents,who have been seperated since i was 4.It killed me today to open the paper and see that there closing it to make a diney world knock off for tourists and upper class yuppie fucks from west bubble fuck.i was fortunate enough to spend my halloween in coney island with my close freinds and music makers.Preforming on the boardwalk to a very small crowd.but in all,it was defintily worth while.I plan on spending many nights there this upcoming summer,and encourage every one else to as well,espically those of you who somehow have never been.Hopefully we can pull anotha gig or 2 out of our ass for the summer, and rock a crowd in coney one last time RIP ASTROLAND CONEY ISLAND 1962-2007 [Phantom Enigma/My Space]

Brooklinks: Thursday Focus on Food Edition

November 30, 2006

Loucali[Loucali photo courtesy of slice/flickr]

Brooklinks is a daily selection of Brooklyn-related news and images. On Thursday, we focus on food.

Eat:

Read:

Gowanus Water Quality Update: Somewhat More Icky Than Usual

November 30, 2006

[Photo courtesy of daltonrooney/flickr]

The photo above was shot by photoblogger Dalton Rooney, whose blog seriously excited! is one of our favorites and worth checking out. He had emailed the other day to say that the Gowanus is looking extra funky this week, with extra-murky water and a lot of floating debris. “The greyish-green color was really disturbing, and the water wasn’t moving at all,” he writes. Is the flushing system, which keeps “fresh” water circulating in the Big G and has been responsible for improvements in water quality (and is slated for a major upgrade) out of whack? There is a oil visible on the surface in the photo, which we have previously noted coming from the area around the Union Street Bridge. This serves to remind us that the Gowanus Canal Conservancy was formed earlier this year and that the Big G could really use its advocacy services.

None of this helps the Gowanus’s image. For instance, take this morsel from Gridskipper: “Carroll Gardens and Park Slope are separated by a twenty-minute walk during which the fetid Gowanus Canal must be traversed.”

Fetid. They said, “fetid.”

Gowanus Back in the Day: Fourth Avenue Under Water

November 30, 2006

So, you’ve been ignoring all those maps that show what could happen in Gowanus (and Brooklyn generally) during a hurricane. A kind reader that saw our post of an old-time Gowanus photo yesterday emailed us some others. For the moment, we’re going to post only a couple of them that show Fourth Avenue flooded by the Gowanus. Twice. Once in 1922 and once in 1947. Someday all those 12-story buildings going up on Fourth Avenue will have water views! We have two bits of advice: (1) Don’t buy any lower than the second floor and (2) Very good hip waders.
1922 Flood
Gowanus Canal Floods Fourth Avenue, 1922

1947 Flood
Gowanus Canal Floods Fourth Avenue, 1947

Brookyule: The Daily GL Holiday Photo

November 30, 2006

Brooklyn Christmas Twelve
Fifth Avenue, Park Slope, Brooklyn

Is Coney Island the New Atlantic Yards and Joe Sitt the New Bruce Ratner?

November 29, 2006

Sitt-Ratner
The moment we saw the item late yesterday afternoon about the sale of Astroland to Thor Equities we realized why we started doing a “Coney Island Deathwatch” months ago: because Thor’s plan is to erase virtually every element of Coney Island’s past and to rebuild it from scratch.

There’s more to it than that, however. With the sale of Astroland to Thor Equities, the massive Coney project is starting to look like the new Atlantic Yards and, inevitably, developer Joe Sitt is looking like Nouveau Ratner. The only thing missing is the Empire State Development Corp., but the Coney Island Development Corp. may yet prove itself to be a spiritual equal.

So, what’s wrong here? Let’s start with a project driven by a single developer and firm and move on from there. Projects of this magnitude that would literally place the fate of a huge part of an entire neighborhood in the hands of one firm or entity are a bad idea. It’s led to a mega-project of massive density in Atlantic Yards and it will likely yield something unsettling in Coney Island. If Thor’s model is something of a Times Square by the Sea (with rides looping in an out of buildings), it neglects one fact: The Times Square redevelopment never went anywhere until it was an organic process in the hands of multiple interests. Generations of top-down schemes crashed and burned.

Yes, Coney Island needs to be redeveloped and needs to regain some of its former glory after so many years of neglect and decline. However, destroying every remnant of its history and stripping away yet another bit of the Brooklyn we love–and one of our earliest life memories is going to Coney Island, where a good part of the family lived–is not the way to do it.

To recap a story that has been broadcast all over the country in the last 16 hours: Thor Equities bought Astroland for $30 million from its owners, the Albert family, yesterday. The 3.1 acre amusement park will close at the end of the 2007 season. The Cyclone will remain (it’s a landmark) under the current agreement with the city. Oddly, the family said that “the cost of converting Astroland to a year-round operation was too steep.”

Even more oddly, they’re retaining ownership of some of the rides in the hope of “adding some new rides and relocating to another section of the neighborhood.” The family is “hopeful that city and Brooklyn officials could help with relocation costs.”

Killing one of the last two Coney Island amusement parks–no matter how unspectacular Astroland might be–is like ripping out part of Coney’s soul. It verges on being an act of cultural violence. This is the point at which a mayor with a sense of history and a borough president who utters more than empty cheers would step in to say, ‘enough’ and work to ensure that Astroland stays a genuine amusement park and that the amusement zone–which is Coney Island’s historic heart–is protected by zoning.

We would love to know exactly what Mr. Sitt has in mind for Coney Island, especially in purchasing Astroland. Thor’s press release is titled “Future of Coney Island to Include Expanded Amusements on Astroland Site.” It goes on to say that Thor:

envisions a unified plan for its properties with Astroland becoming a 12-months-per-year amusement destination. In the future, Astroland will house a mix of amusements and attractions. Thor’s vision includes the introduction of enclosed amusements for the 21st century that can operate throughout the year, as well as a new hotel that will be needed to accommodate the expected influx of visitors to the area.

(You can find the full Thor press release over at the Coney Island Message Board where it was posted by Dick Zigun.)

It’s not the amusements that scare us so much as the “attractions.” Are we talking about Legal Sea Foods and Starbucks? Meanwhile, the Times, in a very short article, reports that Thor is planning to build a hotel on the property with some amusments on the ground floor. And, even if Thor plans a “21st Century amusement park,” do people really want an indoor park in summer at the beach? (Note to Thor: Retractable roof, please.)

The interesting thing is that Deno’s Wonder Wheel Park sits between Sitt’s other properties and Astroland. Is that the next shoe to drop? Will Deno’s end up hemmed in by Sitt projects like the proverbial building whose owner refused to sell surround by highrises? Will the only things left of the past in Coney Island be the Cyclone, Wonder Wheel and Parachute Jump, the equivalent of those big, old signs that are preserved when the factories to which they were attached are torn down? Will Thor use preserving Astroland as an amusement park as the bargaining chip to get the zoning changes to allow boardwalk condo towers? Is the grand plan–as cynics have suggest–to turn Coney Island into an absolutely desolate ghost town by the end of next year to pressure quick action on their plans?

We are fairly certain that Mr. Sitt does not intend to build a bigger, better amusement park where Astroland is. Amusement parks–unless you plan to do a Mall of America indoor thing–are not “year-round attractions” in the Northeast. At least, not until another 75 years or so of global warming occur. At which point, they might want to plan for a lot of water rides.

The sale of Astroland is not something to be automatically cheered, and it is probably not the last sale or purchase about which we will be writing.

Coney Island Deathwatch: Reactions to Astroland Demise

November 29, 2006

AstrolandIt didn’t take long for the community at the Coney Island Message Board to react to news of the sale of Astroland to Thor Equities. Here’s a sampling of opinion:

1) This sounds like another project that will ram a development, like it or not, down the community’s throat – similar to Bruce Ratner’s Atlantic Yards…It is going to be interesting to see how south Brooklyn reacts to this. They have offered overwhelming supported Ratner’s mega-development, sweetheart deal in northern Brooklyn – much to the dismay of people who will actually have to live in that project’s shadow. Now, we will see how they react to this similar “single developer” giveaway in their own backyard. It won’t be so exciting having a huge development increasing traffic beyond road and infrastructure capacity when its in their own yard. (Maybe it’s Karma).

Anyway, Thor now owns C.I. I think the CIDC has done a great disservice to C.I. and this city by not demanding a diversity of development. Coming soon: million dollar condos to the C.I. boardwalk and SEASONAL rich folks complaining about the noise. SEASONAL rich folks complaining about the poor people hanging on the boardwalk at night. Seaside condos sold to SEASONAL buyers, who will offer NOTHING to the economy of C.I. in the off season.

Watch for the glitzy grand-opening of Sitt’s follie. Coney Island will never attain a “year round” economy. I think the CIDC has really screwed the residents of this city and Brooklyn. –BrooklynRider

2) I am wondering if Thor will buy Deno’s too. Excuse me while I jump for joy!!! I wouldn’t be surprised if this project goes over $2 Billion now. To hell with Great Adventure and Disneyland, CONEY MAY END UP BIGGER THAN BOTH PUT TOGETHER!!!!…Bloggers may write all their negativity now…….. —Amuse1

3) I am just worried that the same thing that happened to the Steeplchase property after Trump bought it and was unable to get a zoning change could happen to all the Thor property. Only this time a giant sized vacant lot that will be there for decades to come. Even if Thor sells the land back to the city, will they sell the land to Disney or some other amusement developer, or will they fence it off and keep it vacant for decades? —Switchback

4) Look at Rockaways Playland! The developer bought the property, and couldnt get the neccesary rezoning, and the property DID sit vacant for 20 years or so! But, I dont think the zoning is a problem at all! Joe Sitt didnt spend all this money without already knowing he will get his way. Sitt bought the Washington Baths property for 13mil, and sold it to Taconic for 85mil! You think Taconic just spent that kind of money on sheer specualtion? Or did they know something none of us knew at the time? —Thor-Hater

In the blogs:

5) “No longer are amusements in areas prone to cold climates useless during the winter. But perhaps may prove claustrophobic in the summer when we invite our relationship with the outdoors.

Joe Sitt of Thor Equities plans to develop everything from the Aquarium to the Cyclone stadium. Most likely Deno’s Play Land will be the next acquisition. And perhaps the Wonder Wheel will most likely be resituated somewhere else in the area – probably next to wherever they place B&B Carousel.” —Kinetic Carnival

And, in the press:

6) “Say goodbye to Coney Island’s Astroland Amusement Park.” —Bloomberg

7) “It’s the last ride for Astroland as New Yorkers know it…The park purchase is the latest land grab by Thor for its plan to add residential, retail, entertainment and other all-weather amusement components to Coney Island. Brooklyn-born Sitt has reportedly laid out more than $100 million so far.” —NYDN

Brooklinks: Wednesday Special Astroland Edition

November 29, 2006

Astrotower
Brooklinks is a daily selection of Brooklyn-related news and images.

Broken Angel Update: Help Still Needed

November 29, 2006

Christopher Wood, the son of the creator of the Broken Angel landmark in Clinton Hill has sent out another update on its status. (If you recall, after a fire, the city issued a ton of building code violations, the owner was evicted and demolition was threatened.) The threat hasn’t gone away and the family is trying to raise money to prevent the destruction of a very unique Brooklyn structure. Here is the latest email, which is certain to get wide exposure in the blogosphere today:

The Wood family is very thankful for the support we have received in our attempt to rescue Broken Angel. However the building is far from saved and time is running out. Broken Angel is a legally built architectural sculpture, which my father would love to transform into a home for the arts. Broken Angel is viewed by thousands of people who come to see it every year. If this quirky and original structure disappears, Quincy and Downing streets will again become a forgotten corner of Brooklyn. My name is Christopher Wood; I am the son of the creators of Broken Angel. I have lived my entire life in Brooklyn. I have grown up and continue to be enmeshed in a world of art. I am a stone carver and photographer. I have restored many of New York’s cherished landmarks including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Cloisters, Grace Church, the Tweed Court house, and currently the main branch of the New York City Public Library. I call on Brooklyn to support and help us restore Broken Angel. Please email or write your local politicians to show your support and help us block the demolition of Broken Angel. If you are a legal professional, we desperately need help fighting the Department of Buildings in court. Additionally those who are willing and able can purchase paintings by my father or my photographs of Broken Angel at Artez’n at 444 Atlantic Ave. Works of art for sale can also be obtained online. I guarantee that a work of art bought this holiday season will retain its value better than a Play Station 3. Please help us and show the developers who want to turn Brooklyn into another skyline of giant buildings that we will not go gently into the shadows of greed and over development.

Yes, the “shadows of greed and over development.” If you want a Brooklyn holiday gift that’s cool and for a cause, buy a Wood painting or photo!