Weekend Edition

It looks as though the skies are going to clear in time for a nice weekend. Here are some weekend events to get you out of the house.

Williamsburg Walks

Tomorrow is the season opening for Williamsburg Walks, which this year runs every Saturday through June and July. Bedford Avenue will be closed to traffic between Metropolitan Avenue and North 9th Street. This year, civic and cultural groups will be programming certain blocks. This Saturday’s “host” will be the Williamsburg Gallery Association, which will provide creative programming, such as live music, performance art, installations, gallery booths, public art projects, activities for kids, and more. The WGA block of Williamsburg Walks will be a vibrant display of the diverse arts of the Williamsburg community.

Slate Gallery will have a table featuring the work of Mr. Imagination, a charismatic and flamboyant outsider artist who creates sculptures in the vein of traditional African Art using found materials of all varieties. Works are available at many price levels.

Other highlights include wheel-throwing pottery demonstrations and instruction by local design showroom and ceramic studio Choplet (all afternoon); an acoustic post-afrobeat band featuring members of the Superpowers afrobeat ensemble (2pm) and local artist Marc Breslin be making a long continuous drawing over the course of a few hours as a commentary on histories of violence (starting at 2pm).

Where: Bedford Avenue
When: Saturday, noon to 8 pm
Price: Free

Rooftop Films

Stingray Sam – A dazzling six-episode musical-western comedy that takes place in outer space, written, directed by and starring Cory McAbee, the creator of The American Astronaut. The filmmakers will be in attendance. Watch the trailer here.

Where: on the roof of the Brooklyn Tech, 29 Fort Greene Place (Fort Greene, Brooklyn) MAP
When: Saturday, June 6th. Doors open at 8; Sound Fix will have a live music show at 8:30, and the movie starts at 9.
Price: $9 – order tickets here

Checking in on the BRT Demo

Contrary to Brownstoner, I’m not so sure that the slow pace of demolition at the former BRT power plant (500 Kent Avenue) is the result of environmental concerns. Remember that Con Ed’s assessment of the site found very little in the way of environmental issues (contrary to the story they were passing off to the community last year). Watching this from the water side, the issue might be how to dismantle the huge iron coal pockets. They have been taking that down in large sections and then doing the dismantling on the ground.

Gehry Out at Nets Arena

Gee, I didn’t see this coming.

As expected, Ratner has dropped the Frank Gehry design for a new Nets Arena in favor of a new design by Ellerbe Becket. The new design is charitably described as bearing a “likeness to an ‘airplane hanger'”. Hardly the lofty civic gesture Brooklyn was promised. (Williamsburg has seen its own bait and switch, on a lesser scale – as soon as the 2005 rezoning was approved, Enrique Norten was dumped as the architect for the Edge; the result has not been pretty.)

In related news, Nicolai Ourousoff has a review of Thom Mayne’s new building for Cooper Union, praising the “civic value of a bold statement”. Perhaps civic value and bold statements are just for Manhattan.

239 Banker Street

239 Banker Street is a former sweater factory located in the manufacturing zone in the Bushwick Inlet area. Residential use is, therefore, not allowed as of right. Transient hotel use is allowed as of right (and the owners have permits to convert this building to such), but as Heather documents, the owner is marketing this is as apartments (“each apartment is unique within itself” – wtf?), not even going through the pretense of calling it a hotel. From the owner’s website:

you can carve out your own space with an original style. All apartments have new kitchen appliances and bathroom fixtures for your maximum comfort.

There are even floor layouts on the website, complete with kitchens (not a usual hotel amenity), but lacking beds (a more common hotel amenity).

(The fact that people are moving in when the project doesn’t have a CO for either transient hotel use or residential use is a separate, probably more enforceable, issue.)

The City’s IBZ program was supposed to stop this kind of stuff and help maintain industry in our manufacturing zones. It was one of the promises of the 2005 zoning. Who would have though that leaving a small island of manufacturing at the Bushwick Inlet would lead to hotels, bowling alleys, night clubs and other non-industrial, non-job-generating uses. Hard to fathom.

Newtown Pentacle

Via Heather, a new blog devoted to both sides of the creek. Gorgeous photography, history, infrastructure and industry – what’s not to love?

Bloomberg Slashes North Brooklyn Parks Budget

About those parks we promised you…

The City seems to be saying that it will still fund the acquisition of sites (such as Bayside Oil and 65 Commercial), but won’t have the money to build anything there. Since acquisition itself is taking years, the construction money was just being carried on the books, and probably wouldn’t have spent for a few years yet anyhow. Which doesn’t change the fact that four years ago we were promised parks and affordable in exchange for thousands of new market-rate units. So far, all we have is thousands of market-rate units.

RoTD: Kellogg’s Diner

Kellogg’s is Brownstoner’s Restaurant of the Day. By all accounts, it still sucks.

Probably the worst restaurant I’ve ever been to. And I was drunk. And starving.

Charno Way

The intersection of Greenpoint Avenue & Manhattan Avenue is being renamed in honor of Edmund and Larry Charno, the longtime proprietors of Harrico Pharmacy.

Partial Collapse: 223 Kent Avenue

48N1.jpg
223 Kent Avenue
Collapse was at the far left in photo
Photo: Property Shark


As reported on Curbed, there was a partial wall collapse at 223 Kent Avenue (48 North 1st Street) this afternoon. I went by after work, and it was a pretty amazing sight.

As Curbed alluded to, the new building under construction next door was pouring concrete for a side wall. This side wall was supposed to abut against 48 North 1st, but when the concrete started pouring, the end wall of the old building did not hold. As a result, the end wall at the third floor collapsed, dumping all of the concrete into the building. Most important, no one was hurt (and there were people in the building when this happened). By the time I got there (around 7:00), DOB had things remarkably under control. I could see shoring being installed inside the building, and DOB’s forensic engineer was running the stabilization effort. It is possible that wall itself will be fixed by this time tomorrow, although how soon the residents will be able to move back in is not clear.



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Finger Building Owner Agrees to Height Cap

From Phil DePaulo, confirmation of a rumor I had been hearing – the Finger Building (now the Albero) will not grow any taller than its current 110′. Still big, but a finished building is better that a rusting colossus.