NAG Town Hall Organizing Meeting

Last night, NAG had a packed house at its town hall organizing meeting. The meeting drew about 150 area residents to hear about and discuss the critical issues facing Williamsburg and Greenpoint. In the latter part of the meeting, the crowd was broken up into groups to brainstorm about the issues they would like to NAG tackle in the coming year and beyond. Interestingly, the big ticket issues – affordable housing, parks and open space, industrial retention and development – took a back seat to issues that have a more direct impact on people’s day-to-day lives. Which is not to say that these larger issues weren’t issues – housing, construction, and open space all came up – they just manifested themselves in different ways. The most commonly cited issues were related to community preservation, infrastructure and quality of life.
As promised, we all got to leave in time to watch Frances McDormond reprise her Academy award winning role in last night’s vice presidential debate. You betcha.



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Williamsburg, NJ

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Via commenter #4 on this Curbed post, here is a screen shot from the Northside Piers website. This is the purported “West View” from your luxury waterfront condominium (rental?) in hip-hip-hip Williamsburg.
And what a view it is – the Empire State Building to the right, the Chrysler Building to the left. Which is pretty funny, because when most Brooklynites look to Manhattan, they see the Empire State on the left (south) and Chrysler on the right (north). We also don’t look out over the Hudson River.
This Northside Piers must be a magical and wonderful place. They should rename it – somehow Weehawken sounds appropriate.



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Tomorrow: NAG Town Hall

NAG (Neighbors Allied for Good Growth) is having a Town Hall Meeting on 10/2 to mobilize the community on issues facing Greenpoint & Williamsburg. In the past, NAG fought against waste transfer stations on the waterfront, against Radiac, and for intelligent rezoning that protects jobs and housing. Looking to the future, NAG has organized this meeting to take the pulse of the community and to identify the issues the community needs to organize around in the coming years.

The Town Hall will take place at the Holy Ghost Hall, 159 North 5th St (between Bedford and Driggs) on Thursday, 2 October at 7:00. The meeting will be over before 9:00, so you can get home to see the Palin-Biden debate (or head over to Teddy’s – they’ll be showing the debate, with sound).

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Bloomberg Called Ready to Announce Third-Term Bid

Again, I think term limits are good in theory, bad in practice (and particularly bad in practice here in NYC). I also think that Bloomberg has been a very good mayor (which isn’t to say Thompson, Wiener, et al wouldn’t also be).
But I don’t think this is the way to undo term limits. The people have spoken (twice) – they (we) may be horribly misguided, but the people have have spoken.

Tear Down These Walls

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Manhattan skyline, circa 1940s.
Photo: via New York Architecture Images


In the process of continuing to hate the Museum of Art & Design, Nicolai Ourousoff puts forth his list of the 10 worst buildings in New York City. Not just plain old ugly, but ugly on a urban scale – truly ruining-the-city ugly:

To be included, buildings must either exhibit a total disregard for their surrounding context or destroy a beloved vista. Removing them would make room for the spirit to breathe again and open up new imaginative possibilities.

I have to say its to hard to argue with any of the buildings on his list, but applying his criteria I think he misses a major blight on the city – lower Manhattan. Compare the before, above, with the after, below. What was once a skyline of narrow skyscrapers, permeable from within and without, is now obscured by a wall of banality.

(The tallest building in the 1940s photo is the former City Services Building, for about a week or two the tallest building in the world (and at least for the moment, the AIG building. In the contemporary photo, you can barely see the gorgeous spire of City Services peeking out over the glass trapezoid at the foot of Pine Street.)

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Manhattan skyline, circa 2008.
Photo: Virtual Tourist

Mission Accomplished

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A funny thing happened on the way to the aircraft carrier…
This morning, John McCain was claiming credit for getting the bailout bill passed. By his own account, McCain was a man of action, “in the arena” and not just “phoning it in” (even though he was, in reality, just phoning it in).
Oh, and later this morning the Republican caucus voted two to one against the bailout package and the stock market dropped over 7% of its value on the day.
John McCain’s “Mission Accomplished” moment?

BusinessWeek Says Bushwick is Cool

10 or 12 years ago, Utne Reader outed Williamsburg as the next hip neighborhood (we laughed). Now BusinessWeek is claiming Bushwick as an a up and comer (we cry?).

Brennan Out of Comptroller Race

And then there were four.
With just under a year until the Democratic primaries, Assemblyman James Brennan has announced that he is withdrawing from the race to succeed Bill Thompson. That leave Yassky, Katz, Carrión and Weprin still in the running.
All this assuming, of course, that term limits remain in effect…