• Building Heats Up Down By The East River

    Crain’s looks at development on the East River and finds things are booming up and down the Brooklyn waterfront. From the next tower at Northside Piers, to a hotel at Brooklyn Bridge Park, to industrial redevelopment at Bush Terminal, a lot is happening. But no news on the Greenpoint waterfront, and nothing new at Domino, which “hopes to set a start date soon” (they originally had a start date in 2011).

  • Domsey Site Hits Market at $52.5 Million

    The former Domsey site (which went to foreclosure auction last month) is now on the market. (Don’t be fooled by the picture showing North 3rd Street; the site is at South 8th and Kent.)

  • Is This the End of Williamsburg Nightlife?

    Short answer: no.

    Metropolitan’s liquor license is resting on tenuously safe ground. The community board can only make recommendations to the State Liquor Authority — they don’t have the actual power to take away a bar’s booze.

    Somewhat longer answer: Metropolitan’s liquor license is very safe (despite the fact that most of the patrons quoted in the article pretty much admit the place is a bad neighbor) – SLA has stated categorically that a liquor license is just like a driver’s license, perpetually renewable unless the license holder engages in some act of malfeasance (criminal activity, not paying (enough) excise taxes).

  • Old Bar, The Ship’s Mast, Discovered Decaying In Williamsburg

    Gothamist (and Scouting NY) discover the remnants of the Ship’s Mast, once upon a time one of the only bars in Williamsburg (seriously, I think there were 4, maybe 5 bars between South 9th and North 12th).

    Scouting NY posted about (and I commented on) this storefront a few years back, and (of course) got into the place to put together this follow up.

  • East River Ferry: Perks on the Horizon

    Metro Focus interviews the CEO of the East River Ferry:

    Ridership last week saw 1,500 riders per day. You use the word drop only in comparison to a robust level of ridership over the summer. It’s interesting how people choose to characterize the numbers. We are very impressed with how commuter ridership has grown through the winter.

    Ridership is certainly down from the summer (duh), but it would be interesting to know how it compares with projections before the winter. Anecdotally, there are a lot more people riding the East River Ferry in the winter than ever rode the Water Taxi (which had fewer stops and much more limited schedule). But the East River Ferry is also caught in a bit of a catch-22 – they have reduced the number of boats in the winter months, so service is only hourly during the day, and half-hourly during parts of the morning and evening rush. That makes it much harder to just “jump on the ferry” to get somewhere.

    As to the perks on the horizon – beer. You heard it here first:

    beer-please.png


  • New Public School at Roberto Clemente

    arbor.jpg

    A Child Grows in Brooklyn has details on the new public school that is opening in place of the former PS 19 Roberto Clemente school on South 3rd between Keap and Rodney. The new school will be the Brooklyn Arbor School (I think DOE was calling it PS 114) at the Roberto Clemente Campus (hopefully this means the Clemente is staying, not being phased out).

    According to ACGiB, the Arbor school will be a magnet school, open to students citywide, but with a preference for students from District 14 (PS 84 is a magnet school too). Enrollment has been extended through 16 March.

  • City Cuts Out East W’burg, G’point From Bike Share

    The Brooklyn Paper reports that the city’s proposed bike share program omits “bike kiosks east of Bushwick Avenue and McGuinness Boulevard, where an estimated 30,000 of transit-starved residents live”. Despite the typically breathless Brooklyn Paper headline, this is not news. In fact, the plan all along (as shown in the map at right) has been to limit the pilot program to lower Manhattan, downtown Brooklyn and parts of North Brooklyn.

    Nycbike map thumb
    October 2011 map of bike-sharing phase in
    Source: The Atlantic Cities

    So yes, transit-starved residents of East Williamsburg and the eastern reaches of Greenpoint will not have access to bike sharing on their block until phase 2 of the program. Nor will residents of the Upper East Side, the Upper West Side, Harlem, Washington Heights, Inwood, the Bronx, Queens, Red Hook, Sunset Park, Crown Heights, Flatbush, the South Slope, Bushwick, East New York and one or two other neighborhoods.

    It’s not clear if the phasing is driven by the vendor (Alta) or the city, but it does seem to be a factor of the initial number of bikes in the program – 10,000 bikes – and a 2009 City Planning study that determined the optimal number of bike slots per station – 24. With 10,000 bikes, there is only capacity for 600 stations.

  • Where’s Here’s Williamsburg?

    What happened to Here’s Williamsburg? It was going great guns for a few months, but I just noticed that nothing has been posted for almost a month. (Here at Brooklyn11211, month-long gaps are not unheard of, but we don’t make any pretenses of professionalism!)

  • How Long Have You Lived Here?

    Greg Hanlon has a lengthy and thoughtful piece on the controversy over co-locating a Success charter school in JHS 50, and last week’s hearing on the same subject. As I said a few days ago, there are strong and passionate arguments on both sides of the debate, and they deserve to be well-reported. Hanlon (as usual) does that – delving into the issues and motivations on both sides of the issue.

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