Williamsburg Bridge Rehabilitation

From DOT:

The New York City Department of Transportation is conducting major long-term maintenance and repair work on the Williamsburg Bridge. The following is a travel advisory detailing lane closures relating to upcoming construction activity…

In order to stage equipment and deliver material for the intermediate tower bearing replacement, temporary lane closures are required on:

Saturday May 30, 2009 from 4:00 a.m. to 11:59 p.m.
Saturday June 6, 2009 from 4:00 a.m. to 11:59 p.m.

Three lanes will be closed to facilitate the construction activity. Two Manhattan-bound lanes and two Brooklyn-bound lanes will be maintained at all times by reversing the north inner roadway.

(When has the Williamsburg Bridge not been undergoing major rehabilitation?)

Williamsburg’s Black Betty to Close

Probably not “the first of a new breed of Williamsburg bars and performance places”, but definitely a big part of the first wave.Back when every new bar or restaurant opening was big news.

NYC Bars and Restaurants on Twitter

From a presumably serious effort at cataloguing the tweet quality of local bars & restaurants:

Gowanus Lounge: @gowanuslounge
Lots of tweets about a Robert Guskind memorial. Not much else.

Short Takes – Gerry Esposito

Really hard to figure out what the hell the Mayor’s people were thinking.

<sarcasm>

Then again Gerry has always been a loose cannon, a hot head and trouble maker.

</sarcasm>

Broadway Triangle Certified; Domino Not

Via WG, the Observer reports that the Broadway Triangle rezoning has been certified by the City Planning Commission. Expect the application to be before CB1 at the June public hearing, with a vote by the Board in July (also expect CB1’s July vacation to be cancelled – maybe we’ll get August off).

The Domino Sugar rezoning was not certified in Monday’s round of mass certification (theoretically, Monday was the last certification date to guarantee that a project would be reviewed by the current administration and council). WG says it has a line on another possible hold up for CPCR, Domino’s developer, but we’ll have to wait for the new issue to hit the newsstands (and the interweb) to find out what this delay is.

For opponents and proponents alike, Domino and Broadway Triangle have some parallels. Domino seeks to supersize the allowed height and density of recent rezonings in exchange for more affordable housing; many community activists would like to see Broadway Triangle do the same, while the proposal that was certified is more in keeping with heights and densities approved in recent rezonings.