Speaking of Broadway Triangle, Kareem Fahim has been working on a piece for some weeks now, and its finally up at the Times. A very in-depth and well-researched summary of recent events and ancient history.
Old Feuds Resurface in a Brooklyn Rezoning Fight
Bowling in Williamsburg
Whether it’s a birthday party, with friends, or a professional league of out-of-style grandpas, bowling has always been fun for everybody. Williamsburg brings the spirit of bowling to visitors, tourists, locals, and students…
Oh, wrong Williamsburg. You can understand my confusion.
Music Sales
NYT infographic on music sales by format, 1973 to 2008. LP sales peaked in 1978, five years before the first CD sales. (8-track sales also peaked in 1978 – clearly a banner year for obsolete formats.)
[Via DF]
Life In the Triangle
It’s not just the “HPD” plan – under anyone’s plans for the Broadway Triangle, Shanghai Stainless Steel (and the other manufacturers) do not have a place. That’s why the industrial relocation money – and proximity requirements – that CB1 insisted on are so critical. Yassky and Lopez have gone on record supporting this money – now they need to deliver.
[UPDATE: Edited title to remove random Viking reference. Sorry about that.]
Citywide Ferry Line Considered
Existing subway lines can be crowded, especially in places such as Brooklyn where subway stops closest to Manhattan (near the water) are often very crowded with commuters.
Sounds familiar.
According to the Eagle, the sites under consideration are Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Sheepshead Bay, Floyd Bennett Field, Coney Island, Bay Ridge, Red Hook and Atlantic Avenue North. Of course if all our condo promises come true, we will have water taxi stops at Domino, Northside Piers, and Greenpoint. Not sure which is more likely to happen – a city-subsidized ferry or a developer-subsidized ferry.
Scaffold Collapse Predicted
WG News+Arts on the very unsurprising scaffold collapse at 5 Roebling.
Brooklyn Corner Renamed for Bias Attack Victim
[Henceforth,] the corner of Kossuth Place and Bushwick Avenue will be known as “Jose SucuzhaƱay Place.”
I’m not a big fan of street renamings, but I’ll make an exception on this one.
NYT Considers $5 Monthly Web-Acces Fee
Considering that I used to pay $300 to $400 a year to read the Times (picking it up most weekdays and most Sundays), $5 a month would be a bargain. But if they’re going to make it work, they’ll have to think through some very basic web-compatible concepts – like how people link to articles that aren’t free.
Someone needs to come up with the paradigm shifting model that reconciles two (currently) diametrically opposes ideas: 1) information wants to be free; and 2) news is worth paying for.
Williamsburg Market Receives $500K for Renovations
Reyna funds renovations at La Marqueta.
Council Passes Bike Bill
The bike to work bill is approved. The only “no” vote came from Bushwick’s Erik Dilan.