Brooklyn Eagle_20190117

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BROOKLYN EAGLE

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Scaling the Heights: Arts Patron Shen Brings Fashion Into Unique Perspective

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New Yorkers Bare Their Legs on No-Pants Subway Ride By Todd Maisel Brooklyn Daily Eagle

In the theater of the absurd, one shouldn’t be caught with one’s pants down — unless of course you are one of the many people who took part in the 18th annual No Pants Subway Ride. More than 100 participants gathered at the Old Stone House on Third Street in Park Slope to take the R train to Union Square in Manhattan on Sunday, Jan. 13 in the bitter cold — without pants. This was one of six locations throughout the city participating in this year’s oddball event. This was the eighth such meeting in Brooklyn for the No Pants event at the Old Stone House and one of two meeting locations in Brooklyn. The other was in Williamsburg. Queens straphangers who participated in the pants-less ride met up at the borough’s Hoyt Playground, located along 31st Street in Astoria. From there, the nearly naked passengers boarded a Manhattan-bound N train at the Astoria Boulevard station. Participants were instructed to go about their business without their pants on the subway, as though wearing no pants was normal. Curious straphangers looked on and some of them took cellphone pictures of the unusual sight, not understanding why anyone would go without pants in the dead of winter.

Hannah Fenton and Hannah Colonnese (left-right) and an unidentified third female sit on the R train as though nothing is unusual. Eagle photos by Todd Maisel

Gemini is dressed as the Incredible Hulk while baring his legs on the R train.

“I found out about this a couple years ago – it’s a fun thing and it’s a growing tradition,” said Julianne Boucher, who was taking part with her husband Christopher. “It’s a sense of community – it’s fun to engage with other people. Zach Linder, one of 10 No Pants Subway Ride “generals,” said it was important to act normal other than to take your pants off. The joke is funnier if “there are no other distractions other than the missing pants,” he said. “This was founded by the Upright Citizens Theater Brigade, an improv class and what makes improv so funny is the there is one unusual thing going on — the lack of pants. Otherwise act completely normal,” Linder said. “Other funny things tend to distract from the original premise. Some people might ask why you are wearing no pants, and you might reply, ‘I forgot to wear them.” Linder said the event was being held in dozens of cities around the

world, as far away as Australia. “If you are not here to take your pants off, you are in the wrong place,” Linder told the crowd at the Old Stone House. “It really is a fun and communal experience.” “I’m doing it because she’s doing it,” said Hannah Colonnese, referring to her friend Hannah Fenton of Park Slope. “She does it religiously.” Fenton replied, “I take the subway every day to work. Today, I’m going to do something fun on the subway.” One man showed up dressed as the Incredible Hulk. He identified himself only as Gemini of Sunset Park. “Why am I doing this? It just reminds ourselves not to take life too seriously — it’s something kind of fun, different,” he said., Being out here on a cold, brisk day — it makes you feel alive.”

Why Brooklyn’s First Marijuana Dispensary Looks Like a Spa By Michael Stahl The Bridge

Your newest weed dealer just set up shop in the shadow of the Barclays Center. But passers-by could be forgiven for assuming that the new store at 202 Flatbush Ave. is an upscale spa. Inside the sleek, ground-floor retail space, among the nostalgia-stirring photos of old New York and vintage bottles, you’ll find weathered paperbacks on shelves next to white candles and succulent plants. Natural surfaces abound, including wood-clad walls and a handmade glass mosaic by a Bushwick artist. With the feel of a modern-day apothecary — and the perpetual presence of a licensed pharmacist — the store is now the home of Brooklyn’s first medical-marijuana dispensary. Citiva, a New York Citybased cannabinoid medicine company, opened the store on Dec. 30 — a holiday-season gift for Brooklyn’s marijuana enthusiasts that also put a bow on what was another banner year for local and national cannabis liberalization. The store will sell marijuana-based capsules, liquids and oils to people who’ve opted into the state’s

medical-marijuana program after receiving a prescription from a doctor. The spa-like feel is intentional. “The store is designed to provide the most patient-friendly experience possible,” stated Carlos Perea, chief operating officer of iAnthus, the parent company. “It serves as a welcoming and educational space for people to come in and learn about cannabis as medicine.” But the front-lobby space is open to the public, who can learn how to enroll in the program and find a physician approved for writing prescriptions. Unlike the states from Alaska to Massachusetts that have legalized recreational marijuana, New York state’s law is still restrictive. Medical-pot dispensaries aren’t allowed to sell smokable weed or edibles, only extracts that can be ingested via a vaporizer or inhaler. Citiva’s store will sell offerings from established providers including PharmaCan and Etain Health, as well as their own brand of vapes, capsules and tinctures, blended for use in daytime or evening hours and with their exclusive “ratios” of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and

2 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, January 17, 2019

“The store is designed to provide the most patient-friendly experience possible,” stated Carlos Perea, chief operating officer of iAnthus, the parent company. “It serves as a welcoming and educational space for people to come in and learn about cannabis as medicine.” Photo courtesy of Citiva other ingredients. Because the state’s Department of Health dictates what lines of cannabis can be distributed to the program participants, according to Amy Holdener, vice president of Citiva’s operations in New York, the selection in Brooklyn won’t vary much from what other dispensaries in New York City have on hand — at places like Vireo Health, in Queens, and Columbia Care and Etain’s own store, both in Manhattan. Howev-

er, Holdener believes Citiva’s customers will appreciate that their products are “100% pure,” with no additives. “We’re just hoping you will be able to benefit from the quality of the products we’re bringing to market,” she said. While Brooklyn is an obvious market for Citiva’s products, finding the precise spot for the store wasn’t easy. “We’re pretty excited,” Holdener told The Bridge. “We would’ve loved to have been open even sooner,” she con-

tinued, “but it just really takes a lot of time to find the right location under the current regulations that we have.” By law, New York’s registered medical-marijuana businesses — of which currently there are 10 — shall not “locate a dispensing facility on the same street or avenue and within one thousand feet of a building occupied exclusively as a school, church, synagogue or other place of worship,” according to the Department of Health’s website. Citiva had to work within those parameters, while trying to optimize patient accessibility, Holdener said. Given that the Atlantic Avenue transit hub is just steps away, the storefront on Flatbush Avenue made sense as a central location, as did the busy commercial character of the immediate area. “We want the support of the community and support of the town leaders,” she said. “We’ve incorporated work by artists from Brooklyn within the space [and] we’re hiring staff from the area as well.” At the October meeting of Community Board 8, whose jurisdiction includes the new dispensary’s storefront, Citiva’s Director of Medical Out-

reach Marc Kassman spoke about its opening. Judging by the minutes, he seemed to have been met with little opposition, fielding just two questions. Kassman was asked about marketing to children, which Kassman assured Citiva won’t ever do, and the presence of a “doctor” onsite. (Holdener clarified the minutes’ language by saying a pharmacist will be in the store assisting customers, while the company has also employed a physician who, behind the scenes, consults with other doctors about patients seeking medical marijuana.) Citiva’s opening also garnered the approval of Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams. “I’m excited that Citiva has opened Brooklyn’s first regulated medical marijuana dispensary, providing valuable palliative care to certified patients in our borough,” Adams said in a press release. “My administration advocated hard for our borough to be part of the state’s medical marijuana program, and the long-awaited opening of this dispensary translates to quality local jobs and quality local access to critical health care.” See the full story at brooklyneagle.com.


I was thinking about my son going to pre-school and was trying to figure out where the next freelance job was coming from. Right at that time, I got the call from Industry City’s Innovation Lab: I got the job. DARRYLE HAWES Bed-Stuy Resident Machine Expert, Modo

Opportunity in the neighborhood Bus and train or friends and family? Half the people who work here at Industry City live nearby, and they’re looking for neighbors. Industry City boasts three times more jobs than in 2013. Your prospects for work / life balance just went up. Industry City: Develop your story here. Visit IndustryCity.com for job opportunities, business development services, and community events.

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NEIGHBORHOOD NEWSBEAT Gay Publication Accuses B’klyn Democrat Of Working Against Gay Rights MIDWOOD — Councilmember Chaim Deutsch, a Democrat who represents a district stretching from Manhattan Beach to Midwood, has been accused of actively working against gay rights. Deutsch, according to Gay City News, attacked primary opponent Theresa Scavo in 2013 because she was endorsed by the National Organization for Women, which he said “have an agenda with gays and lesbians.” In April 2017, he voted against a resolution calling on the Department of Education to provide support to protect LGBTQ students. The same year, Gay City News said, he was the only coun-

cilmember to vote against Int. 1638, which required to Department of Education to report on whether teachers and administrators have received training related to supporting LGBTQ students. Two months later, Deutsch was the only councilmember to vote against Int. 1638, a law requiring the Department of Education to report on whether schools have gay-straight alliances and whether teachers and administrators have received trainings related to supporting LGBTQ students. Deutsch has traditionally refused to comment on his stance toward gay issues, Gay City News said.

Gentrification Gives Rise to Spike in 311 Quality-of-Life Calls BOROUGHWIDE — While anyone can make complaint calls to the city’s 311 system, the great majority are made from communities that are in the process of gentrification, according to the Community Service Society. The society’s analysis found that arrests resulting from such calls are rare, but the complaints are often frivolous in nature, according to Patch. One woman called because a child’s backpack brushed against her in a bodega; another called that someone was seeking shelter from the rain in her doorway; and yet another complained that a politician was passing out campaign literature in public. The team compiling the report compared census tracts to the 108,000 311 complaints referred to the NYPD in 2017 to identify the areas where police are most often summoned on quality-of-life concerns, Patch reported. Among these areas were Crown Heights, Bedford-Stuyvesant and Bushwick. “Meaningful reform needs to put the concerns and well-being of long-standing residents in historically marginalized communities on equal footing with the concerns, of newer, more affluent residents,” the report said.

NAME CHANGE STEFANSKY NOTICE is hereby given that an Order entered by the Supreme Court, County of Kings, on the 20th day of December, 2018 bearing Index Number 2691/18, a copy of which may be examined at the ofce of the Clerk, located at 360 Adams Street, Brooklyn, New York 11201, in Room 189, grants me the right, effective on the 20 day of December, to assume the name of ASAF DAVID STEFANSKY. My present address is 171 LAKE ST, 2ND FL, BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11223. the date of my birth is September 18, 1995. The place of my birth is MANHATTAN, NY. My present name is ASAF DAVID SIVAN. #166521

The Brooklyn Eagle (USPS Number 019555) is published every week on Thursday except the last week in December and the last week of August for $50 per year by EBrooklyn Media, 16 Court St., 30th Fl., Brooklyn NY 11241. Telephone: (718) 643-9099, ext: 103. Periodicals postage paid in Brooklyn, NY. Postmaster: Send address changes to Brooklyn Eagle, 16 Court St. 30th Fl., Brooklyn, NY 11241. Publisher: EBrooklyn Media, LLC (jdh@brooklyneagle.com) Managing Editor: Stephanie Kotsikonas Legal Editor: Rob Abbruzzese Digital Editor: Scott Enman Sports Editor: John Torenli Religion Editor: Francesca Tate Community Editor: Mary Frost

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New Korean Restaurant In Park Slope Gets Thumbs-Up PARK SLOPE — Korean restaurants have been moving out of Manhattan’s Koreatown and into the city’s neighborhoods for several decades now, and one of the latest in Brooklyn, Haenyeo at 239 Fifth Ave. in Park Slope, has been getting rave reviews. Haenyeo is named after the legendary female divers of Jeju island in Korea, who have harvested shellfish and seaweed. The name might signify that Haenyeo is the creation of two women—chef Jenny Kwak and her mother, Myung Ja Kwak, who is semi-retired but who still makes the kimchi. The restaurant features several black-and-white pho-

tos of the divers as other nautical-themed decorations. In a recent review, Gothamist praised the dishes, many of which tend to be toward the spicy side. Among them are Chigae, “a soupy, spicy kimchi stew thick with the fermented cabbage, tofu squares and slices of pleasantly gamey pork belly”; the spicy squid and mackerel versions of Bibimbap, a Korean rice dish; Rice Cake Fundido, which contains lots of cheese and chorizo; and the Grilled Oysters. All in all, said Gothamist, “Park Slope got a real gift this holiday season with Haenyeo. Jenny Kwak is an excellent cook.”

Canarsie Residents Contest Exclusion of Local Pier from NYC Ferry Expansion, Again

NAME CHANGE

Founded in 1841 by Isaac Van Anden

The Islanders beat the Blues 2-1 in overtime at Barclays Center on Tuesday night as goaltender Robin Lehner continued to turn his career, and his life, around here in Downtown Brooklyn. AP photo by Kevin Hagen

CANARISIE — Rresidents are speaking out since Mayor Bill de Blasio announced last week that the city will create a ferry stop in Coney Island, but not at the Canarsie Pier. According to the Brooklyn Paper, residents of the neighborhood who rallied alongside dwellers of the People’s Playground for its fair share of the city’s NYC Ferry service since it first debuted in May of 2017 are peeved that the coming expansion of the service in 2021 will once again exclude Canarsie. “It’s terrible, basically Canarsie is being neglected again,” Marc Want, the head of civic group the Canarsie Improvement Association, who in 2017 collected more than 6,000 signatures on a petition demanding a ferry stop at the Canarsie Pier, told the Brooklyn Paper. Want even went as far as to claim that Coney Island “piggybacked” on Canarsie’s push for inclusion. “Every meeting that we were at with the city, Coney Island was trying to join in. Coney Island was trying to piggyback on us, and now they got it,” he told the outlet. Besides the new Coney Island to Wall Street route (which will include a new express stop from Bay Ridge to Pier 11), the city will expand service from Staten Island to Lower Manhattan and the West Side. It will also add a new stop at the Brooklyn Navy Yard and a new landing at Ferry Point in the Bronx, where access to the Ferry Point Park landing within the park will be enhanced, and the parking lot improved. Citywide ferry service was announced in 2016 and is run by the New York City Economic Development Corporation. The mayor announced the new additions to NYC Ferry service as part of his State of the City address, delivered at Manhattan’s Symphony Space on Jan. 10.

Big Winners in L-Train About-Face: Local Tenants NORTH BROOKLYN — While Gov. Andrew Cuomo has announced plans to call off the full shutdown of the L train’s East River tunnel, which was scheduled to begin of April, the original plans already had their impact on the real estate market. In particular, said Curbed, rents in north Brooklyn have decreased 1.5 percent since April 2016, since without the convenience of the L train the neighborhood would have been a less desirable place to live. Curbed quoted an analysis by Street Easy estimating that renters who signed new leases on apartments in Williamsburg, Greenpoint and Bushwick cumulatively saved a minimum of $6.4 million compared to what they would have paid if plans for a shutdown were not in the works. Now that the shutdown is off, these tenants will have the benefit of both mass transit to Manhattan and lower rents. However, Curbed said, you can expect landlords to take advantage of the new situation and raise rents again.

Manhattan Shoemaker to Make the Move to Industry City SUNSET PARK — A major shoemaker will soon move from Midtown Manhattan to Industry City in Sunset Park. Commercial Observer reported Monday that Estas Brands has signed a seven-year lease in the growing Brooklyn business hub. Its new 15,000 square-foot space will be at home in Industry City’s Building 3, located at 219 36th St. — a massive upgrade from the company’s current 6,000-square-foot office at 156 W. 56th St. It will

include the brand’s offices, a sample-making room for shoes and an educational facility for both potential employees and the public. “I couldn’t be more excited about this project and our move to Industry City Brooklyn,” Steve Reynolds, CEO of Estas Brands, said in a statement. “This relocation gives us the ability to build the first-ever New York-based footwear sample making facility that will be open to the industry.”

Indochino to Open in Place of Beloved Cobble Hill Bookstore COBBLE HILL — Men’s clothing purveyor Indochino is slated to open its first location in Brooklyn this week, Brownstoner reported. The company — which prides itself on “custom clothing for the modern man,” according to its website — will take up residence in the former BookCourt space at 161 Court St. The former wooden storefront has since been replaced by a new modern 2,500-square-foot one. The beloved Cobble Hill independent bookstore closed its doors after 35 years at the end of 2016. It sold for $13.6 million, in comparison to the $499,000 that the original BookCourt owners originally put down for the space in 1996, according to Finance Department records. The Court Street Indochino will be the business’ 39th location but only its fourth in New York. Opening day is set for Friday, according to Brownstoner.


INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan

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INSIDE: 2 CALENDAR 8 DINING 9 PETS 10 REAL ESTATE Week of January 17-23, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 1INB


January Calendar of Events Week of the 17th to 23rd

Art WINTER SALON: WRITERS ON HOME

Meditate on the many meanings and experiences of home in conjunction with our special exhibition One: Do Ho Suh. Begin the evening with a behindthe-scenes walkthrough of the immersive installation with Eugenie Tsai, John and Barbara Vogelstein Senior Curator of Contemporary Art. Then, enter the American Art galleries, where writers Jason Koo, T Kira Madden, and Alice Sola Kim read from Go Home!, an anthology of fiction, memoir, and poetry by Asian American writers exploring themes of belonging, identity, and heritage beyond the model-minority myth. The readings culminate with a conversation among the writers, moderated by editor Rowan Hisayo Buchanan.

Presented in partnership with the Feminist Press. When: Thursday, January 17th, 6; 30 – 8 p.m. Where: Crown Heights/ Brooklyn Museum (200 Eastern Parkway)

FRIDA KAT: A TRIBUTE TO FRIDA KAHLO

A visual tribute to Frida Kahlo, the most revolutionary female artist who rebuilt herself from physical despair. This performance is about hope, positivity, and rebirth. Jadda Cat acts out moments of Frida’s life through the use of paints, props, and masks. She changes her form and creates art while rebuilding her healing body. There are some magical moments with Michael Alan as Dalí creating surreal artistic illusions! A reincarnation fairytale, warm, friendly, and heartfelt! Take a look into a world manifested by endless creativity, body changes by Bushwick’s art couple Jadda x Michael in their studio turned pseudo theater!

When: Saturday, January 19th, 2019 8 p.m.- 12 a.m. Where: Bushwick/The Active Space (566 Johnson Avenue)

TOWARDS A NEW ARCHEOLOGY

Food Photographs by Martin Parr brings together the best of Parr's food observations. Since 1995, when this “British Food” series originated, Parr has been capturing the delectable, the gross, the ridiculous, and the adorable in food and food consumption throughout the world. When: Tuesdays-Saturdays through January 19th, 11 a.m. -5 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Janet Borden, Inc (91 Water Street)

This group show brings together artists who reevaluate the history of material culture — presenting installation and sculptural works that speak to a mystical, transcendent, and visionary future. Towards a New Archaeology features work by Amy Brener, Leeza Meksin, Sheila Pepe, Ioanna Pantazopoulou, Ester Partegàs, Jean Shin, and Rachel Eulena Williams. When: Daily through January 2019, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: Fort Greene/BAM Peter Jay Sharp Building (30 Lafayette Street)

JOHANNAH HERR: YOUR COMFORT IS ATTENDED BY PERMANENT VIOLENCE

AUNTY AFRICAN WOMAN IN THE FRAME, 1980 TO THE PRESENT

HOLIDAY PARR-TY

Using reflective colored tape, Johannah Herr’s monumental text-based murals simultaneously create a dazzling surface of metallic and glitter elements that seduces viewers into engaging in the polarizing discussions of these urgent issues, from women’s rights to climate justice and the value of Black lives When: Tuesdays-Saturdays through January 27th, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m., Sun: 12 – 6 p.m. Where: Fort Greene/ BRIC House Hallway (647 Fulton Street)

Features a trove of original archival, vintage, and contemporary images from the The McKinley Collection, a repository of rare, original images ranging from portraiture to cartes de visite, spanning the African continent from Morocco to South Africa, Guinea to Kenya, Madagascar to Benin, from the 1890s to now. When: Tuesdays-Saturday through January 30th, 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/United Photo Industries (16 Main St # B)

THE WAY IT IS:

Image courtesy of the artist and Brooklyn Museum

Winter Salon: Writers on Home will be on exhibit through January 17th at Brooklyn Museum. ZHIYUAN YANG AND SANDRA HARVEY

An exhibition of collaborative projects by Fellowship Artist Zhiyuan Yang and Sandra Harvey, an artist based in Adams, Massachusetts. This is Yang’s first solo show in New York City, extended to a twoperson exhibition. When; Wednesdays-Sundays through February 3rd, 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/A.I.R. Gallery (155 Plymouth Street)

ROUGH EDGES: ELISE SIEGEL

A solo show of ceramic sculpture by Elise Siegel. In this exhibition, a large gathering of Siegel’s idiosyncratic and psychologically expressive portrait busts inhabit the gallery. Although each bust is a distinct individual, they

are not portraits of specific persons. Rather, they are embodiments of familiar emotional states — fleeting moments of inner conflict, disquiet, ambivalence and unease. As such, they exude an uncanny sense of vulnerability and project an interiority that creates a psychological tension. When: Thursdays-Sundays through February 10th, 1 – 6 p.m. Where: Bushwick/STUDIO10 (56 Bogart Street)

POP PORN

Curated by Matt Myers, aka Eronin, Pop-Porn spotlights five artists working with modern concepts of eroticism and desire, and how it is essential to us right now. When: By appointment only through February 17th Where: Boerum Hill/MF

U.S. PREMIERE First visit to the United States of America

January 31, 2019 at 7:30 pm

www.kingstheatre.com

Kings Theatre 1027 Flatbush Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11226

Tickets at Ticketmaster.com by phone at 800-745-3000 Box Office at 718-856-KING (5464)

2INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


TOM BENNETT: PAINTINGS AND MASTER PRINTS

Gallery (213 Bond Street)

BONNIE COLLURA PRINCE

Bonnie Collura’s sculptural installation Prince critiques our culture’s pattern of repeating iconic characters, gestures, and polarizing traits to create heroes. In her ongoing project, Collura interprets the Prince figure as an amalgamation of four archetypal male characters from history, religion, and popular culture: Jesus, St. Sebastian, C-3PO (the droid from Star Wars), and Abraham Lincoln. When: Wednesdays-Sundays through February 24th, 12 – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Smack Mellon (92 Plymouth Street)

TOWARDS A NEW ARCHEOLOGY

This group show brings together artists who reevaluate the history of material culture — presenting installation and sculptural works that speak to a mystical, transcendent, and visionary future. Towards a New Archaeology features work by Amy Brener, Leeza Meksin, Sheila Pepe, Ioanna Pantazopoulou, Ester Partegàs, Jean Shin, and Rachel Eulena Williams. When: Daily through January 2019, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: Fort Greene/BAM Peter Jay Sharp Building (30 Lafayette Street)

A solo exhibition and sale of Tom Bennett’s artwork. Tom Bennett’s artwork is recognizable for its impassioned brushwork, bold compositions, and rich subject matter. His work embraces art history, abundant with homages to heroic works, bucking horses and classical nudes. In addition to his dynamic paintings, Tabla Rasa will feature a series of unframed mono-types for acquisition by both the seasoned and novice collector. Among them are images of figures that seem to breathe with life force, and storms that roil on the horizon. Mono-types, a form of print in which an image is created on a plate and then transferred to paper, is an ideal vehicle for the spontaneity of Mr. Bennett’s drawing talents. The inked plate yields only one “unique” image, not an edition of multiples as in other printmaking techniques. When: Thursdays-Saturdays through February 9th, 1 – 5 p.m. Where: Sunset Park/Tabla Rasa Gallery (224 48th Street)

PROCESSING: A GOWANUS SWIM SOCIETY EXHIBITION

An exhibition of current

work by the eight members of the artist collective Gowanus Swim Society. Participating Artists: Jessica Dalrymple, John Fisk, Natalie Fisk, Abigail Groff Hernandez, Kristen Haskell, Melissa Johnson, Suzy Kopf, Mary Negro. Katherine Gressel, Curator. When: Fridays through February, 3 – 6 p.m. Where: Park Slope/Old Stone House (336 3rd Street)

UNDERGROUND HEROES: NEW YORK TRANSIT IN COMICS

New York’s transportation system plays a starring role in comics and graphic novels. Drawing on satirical cartoons, comic strips and comic books from the 19th through the 21st centuries, Underground Heroes: New York Transit in Comics is a raucous ride through New York’s transit system from a range of visual storytellers. The exhibit includes such luminaries as Winsor McCay, Will Eisner, Bill Griffith, Roz Chast, Ronald Wimberly and Julia Wertz whose work demonstrates the influence that mass transit has on the stories that are irrevocably woven into the cultural fabric of New York City. When: Tuesdays – Sundays through March 17th, TuesdayFriday: 10am – 4pm

Saturday & Sunday: 11am – 5pm Where: Downtown Brooklyn/ New York Transit Museum (99 Schermerhorn Street)

DONALD ZUCKER AND BARBARA HRBEK ZUCKER OCEAN WONDERS: SHARKS

Explore the coral reef, wander through a shipwreck, and peer over the Hudson Canyon. More than 115 species including sand tiger sharks, sandbar sharks, and loggerhead sea turtles live in this state-of-the-art exhibit. When: Daily through June 30th, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: Coney Island/New York Aquarium (Surf Avenue & West 8th Street)

SOMETHING TO SAY: BROOKLYN HI-ART! MACHINE

The Brooklyn Museum highlights the work of four Brooklyn artists with Something to Say, a yearlong activation of the Museum’s public spaces emphasizing the institution’s important role as a place for civic discourse. Bringing together existing works and new, site-specific commissions by Brooklyn Hi-Art! Machine, Deborah Kass, Kameelah Janan Rasheed, and Hank Willis Thomas, Something to Say explores the intersection

between language and art through a series of text-based installations that activate the Museum’s plaza green, steps, and promenade outside and the lobby within. Through the use of language in their work, the artists engage us in topics ranging from national debates to local community issues, sparking dialogue around some of the most pressing questions of our time and inspiring us to listen, share with one another, and connect through art. When: Wednesdays-Sundays through June 30th, 11 a.m. 6 p.m., Thursdays: 11 a.m. – 10 p.m. Where: Crown Heights/ Brooklyn Museum (200 Eastern Parkway)

WATERFRONT

Waterfront is an exhibition and multimedia experience for all ages that brings to life the vibrant history of Brooklyn’s coastline through stories of workers, artists, industries, activists, families, neighborhoods, and ecosystems. Waterfront traces a personal, local history of the borough’s waterfront while also revealing the coastline›s global significance. The exhibition engages with important debates about the shoreline’s future by taking on the waterfront’s

most pressing contemporary topics including sea level rise and gentrification. When: Wednesdays-Sundays through Winter 2019, 12 – 5 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Brooklyn Historical Society (55 Water Street)

Books & Readings

JOHN KENNEY: TALK TO ME W/ COURTNEY MAUM

It’s a story that Ted Grayson has reported time and time again in his job as a network TV anchor: the public downfall of those at the top. He just never imagined that it would happen to him. After his profanity-laced tirade is caught on camera, his reputation and career are destroyed, leaving him without a script for the first time in years. While American viewers may have loved and trusted Ted for decades, his family certainly didn’t: His years of constant travel and his big-screen persona have frayed all of his important relationships. At the time of his meltdown, Ted is estranged from his wife, Claire, and his adult daughter, Franny, a writer for a popular website. Franny views her father’s disgrace with curiosity and perhaps

Week of January 17 - 23, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 3INB


January Calendar of Events Week of the 17th to 23rd continued from previous page

a bit of smug satisfaction, but when her boss suggests that she confront Ted in an interview, she has to decide whether to use his loss as her career gain. And for Ted, this may be a chance to take a hard look at what got him to this place, and to try to find his way back before it’s too late. When; Thursday, January 17th, 7:30 – 8:30 p.m. Where: Cobble Hill/Books are Magic (225 Smith Street)

Educational MORTGAGE AND FORECLOSURE HELP

Don’t pay for help, don’t get scammed, and don’t lose your home. When: Thursday, January 17th, 5 – 7 p.m. Where: Canarsie/NHS Brooklyn (9701 Avenue L)

DECEPTIVE ADVERTISING

Do you know what makes

an ad deceptive when advertising your business? Join Department of Consumer Affairs (DCA) Commissioner Salas and DCA lawyers for a free, interactive workshop about the City’s Consumer Protection Law to learn more about how to legally advertise in print, online, or when using out-of-home media such as subway ads. Chief Executive Officers, Chief Marketing Officers, and in-house counsel are encouraged to attend. When: Thursday, January 17th, 6:30 – 8p.m. Where: MetroTech/New York University Tandoon School of Engineering (6 Metrotech Center)

ECOBOOKS: BINDING BOOKS, BINDING SPELLS, & PRINTING ON PAPER WITH PLANTS

Explore simple folding techniques to create your

own pocket-sized books using freshly printed paper. They will be extracting texture and color from plants through several eco printing techniques. Eco printing involves heating water and plants in conjunction with natural fibers, resulting in whimsical patterns. There is no right way to go about it and everyone will have their own technique that works for them. Experimentation is at the heart of the practice. No experience is needed in order to attend. When: Saturday, January 19th, 2 – 5 p.m. Where: Carroll Gardens/The Fiberhouse (72 Nelson Street)

NEW YORK DRIVES

A free 5-week career training program that combines driving lessons with professional development workshops to help you qualify for Brooklyn Workforce Innovations’ (BWI) Made in NY (TV/film production assistant training). Participants receive up to 15 hours of driving lessons, road test and professional development workshops. When: Monday, January 21st, 1 – 5 p.m. Where: Brooklyn Navy Yard/ Bldg 92

EDIT PHOTOS ON YOUR PHONE

Oh no! You’ve taken the most almost absolutely perfect

OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY ANNA C. PAVLIDES, M.D., F.A.C.O.G. MICHAEL A. BENSON, M.D., F.A.C.O.G. RITA SHATS, M.D., F.A.C.O.G. CATHERINE S. MELEKA, M.D. LYNDA SURCK, PA-C COLEEN K. ABRAMS, PA-C • • • •

Routine & High Risk OB Pelvic Pain/Endometriosis Laparoscopic and Robotic Surgery Bioidentical Hormones and Menopause Issues 2 TELEPORT DR, Suite 207 STATEN ISLAND, NY 10311 9920 4TH AVE, Suite 203 BROOKLYN, NY 11209

Tel: 718.273.5500 Fax: 718.273.3232 WE SPEAK: SPANISH, RUSSIAN, GREEK & ARABIC

photo of your favorite thing but the colors are slightly off and it’s a bit dark. This “Edit Your Photos on Your Phone” class will teach you how to edit photos professionally, straight from your phone, without having to spend money on expensive software programs. When: Tuesday, January 22nd, 11 a.m. – 1p.m. Where: Grand Army Plaza/ Brooklyn Public Library (10 Grand Army Plaza)

BROOKLYN M/WBE BOROUGH FORUM

Every year, government agencies and large corporations spend billions on goods and services from small businesses like yours. Join us for an opportunity to make connections, learn how to do business with City agencies, and become certified with NYC as a Minority or Women Owned Business Enterprise. When: Wednesday, January 23rd, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Where: Prospect/Lefferts Gardens/Medger Evers College (1638 Bedford Avenue)

BANK OF AMERICA PRESENTS HISTORY MAKERS: JOURNALIST, ACTIVIST AND ANTILYNCHING CRUSADER, IDA B. WELLS

Ida B. Wells, born into slavery in 1862 and freed by the Emancipation Proclamation, devoted her life to the fight against racism, sexism, and anti-black violence. Hear her story as told by Paula J. Giddings, Smith College professor and author of the award-winning biography, Ida, A Sword Among Lions: Ida B. Wells and the Campaign Against Lynching. When: Wednesday, January 23rd, 6:30 – 8 p.m. Where: Brooklyn Heights/ Brooklyn Historical Society (128 Pierrepont Street)

GENERAL BOARD MEETING

Community Board 5 When: Wednesday, January 23rd, 6:30 p.m. Where: Starrett City/PS 346 Abe Stark (1400 Pennsylvania Avenue)

FOCUS CAMERA PRESENTS: DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY 101

This series provides a comprehensive and approachable introduction to digital photography for enthusiasts of any skill level. You’ll come away from this course equipped with the knowledge and skills required to take your photography to the next level or make an educated decision when buying and upgrading gear. Expect plenty of hands-on experience in a fun and inclusive environment. Week 1: Cameraology Week 2: Basics Week 3: In-Camera

Adjustments Week 4: Lenses Week 5: Camera Accessories Week 6: Video When: Wednesdays through February 20th, 7 – 9 p.m. Where: Kensington/ Focus Camera (895 McDonald Avenue)

Family Fun MUSIC & MOVEMENT STORYTIME

Storytime packed with live music and early literacy skill-building movement activities. Recommended ages 1-5 and caregivers. When: Thursday, January 17th, 11 a.m. – 12 p.m. Where: Flatbush/Clarendon Library (2035 Nostrand Avenue)

MUSIC WELCOMES IN SHABBAT

The Bay Ridge Jewish Center’s band will welcome Shabbat with new songs and melodies. Get ready to sing and clap to the beat of the music and prayers of our heart. All ages welcome. When: Friday, January 18th, 6:30 p.m. Where: Bay Ridge/Bay Ridge Jewish Center (405 81st Street)

THE 2019 ZLATNE USTE GOLDEN FESTIVAL

Golden Festival has been called a once-in-a-lifetime experience that happens every year. Anchored in Balkan traditions (roughly Romania to Greece, Croatia to Turkey), and venturing generously beyond, the programming spans the ancient and the experimental, the oud and the synthesizer. Crowds join hands and dance, shop for folk arts, nibble feta, sausage, and desserts, and share midwinter cheer. It’s a pop-up community where young and old, the folklorist, music professional, and party animal come together in two nights of joy. When: Fri. Jan 18, 7:30 pm – 12:30 a.m., Saturday Jan 19, 6:00 pm – 2:00 a.m. Where: Park Slope/Grand Prospect Hall (263 Prospect Avenue)

FAMILIES CELEBRATE AFRICA–A MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY EVENT

The Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture offers a fun-filled family event to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr with African music, drumming and dance, face painting, African drawing, crafts and activities, stories and costumes. Moses Onguleye will teach the children African drawing, DuPree and Barry Kornhauser (and guests) will perform songs about MLK’s life and Simba Yangala and the dancers from JungleDom will guide children through

a relaxed African dance lesson, followed by a performance that welcomes the participation from both, children and adults. Proceeds from this event will help provide scholarships for BSEC’s Ethics for Children Classes as well as help with our campaign for an accessibility ramp. When: Monday, January 21st, 3 – 5 p.m. Where: Prospect Park/ Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture (53 Prospect Park West)

Film BAM SENIOR CINEMA 2019

A full season of monthly films for moviegoers 65 years and older continues at BAM this January with an eclectic mix of films. This week: Dolores (2017), a documentary about the remarkable Chicana activist Dolores Huerta. Reservations are required and can be made up to three weeks in advance. Seating is limited and available on a firstcome, first-seated basis. Complimentary popcorn and soda are available. All cinemas are wheelchair accessible and offer infrared systems for people who are hard of hearing (upon request). For reservations, call 718.636.4122. When: Friday, January 18th, 10 a.m. Where: Fort Greene/BAM Rose Cinemas (30 Lafayette Avenue)

FILM SCREENING: PHOTOGENIA

Told in three asymmetrical chapters, Photogenia is a multi-character mosaic of intertwined lives, centering around three people who find themselves inside of a photo studio on the same day while they wrestle with the events that brought them there. What emerges is a truly bold meditation on fate and consequence, one that points a flood light into the darkest corners of the human experience. When: Saturday, January 19th, 8 p.m. Where: Greenpoint/Stuart Cinema & Café (79 West Street)

CARTOON CARNIVAL: 75 ALL STARS

Animated historian Tommy Jose Stathes screens some of the most popular cartoon characters in screen history. Presented in 16mm film with musical accompaniment by Charlie Judkins. When: Saturday, January 19th, 7 – 9 p.m. Where: Bushwick/389 Melrose Street

NEW YEAR’S CHUCKLES–MOVIES FOR ADULTS

4INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


awyers Remember oseph Giamboi Police Academy When: Friday, January 18th, 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. Where: Bensonhurst/Ulmer Park Library (2602 Bath Avenue)

Food & Drink GREENMARKET AT GRAND ARMY PLAZA At what other market can you do all your food shopping, sample local wine and explore Brooklyn’s favorite park? Established in 1989, the Grand Army Plaza greenmarket is the flagship Brooklyn market. EBT/Food Stamps and WIC & Senior FMNP coupons accepted year-round. When: Saturday, January 19th, 8 a.m. – 4 p.m. Where: Grand Army Plaza (by the fountain)

FIRE & ICE: SUICIDE ft) joined the PREVENTION firm Sullivan Papain Block McGrath and h in 2004. FUNDRAISER Brooklyn Eagle file photo by Rob Abruzzese

ation iz

Brunch buffet and amazing one-of-a-kind fundraiser. Raffle prizes and art for auction. AND live performances and DJ and had a private practice for 40 years prior Proceeds tosets. joining the bench. benefit the American Foundation forgreatest “Truly we lost another of the generation,” Cannavo said. “He lived Suicide Prevention PLUS through the depression, World War [II], he celebrate SintoDee’s birthday. worked very hard get where he was. He When:usSaturday, showed what true gritJanuary and determination was really a great American 19th, 10about. a.m.He’s – 4truly p.m. and I’m going to miss him.” Where: Park Slope/Smith’s Cannavo’s eulogy came at a Columbian Tavernmeeting (440 5th Avenue) against Lawyers on discrimination Italian-Americans, which seemed appropriate as he recalled the judge’s efforts to build DANA JACOBI– up the association. HEALTHY COOKING “He was one of the founding members of FOR NEW YEAR what the THE Columbian Lawyers [Association] was,” Cannavo said. “He with was always Spend the weekend involved because he liked to be the tremenDana and learn how to mixsupdous force that he was. He was a great and for match eight great menu porter everyone. He understood what this organization was about and hownew important it options for a healthy was for professionals of Italian-American year. to have a forum where they could descent When: Saturday Sunday, feel welcome and get the&support they needed to continue in this&profession. Mostly, he January 19th 20th, 2 p.m. was a guy who stood for the dignity and Where:of Sunset Park/Beyond integrity Italian Americans in any walkatof Liberty Viewbe(850 Avenue) life. We should proud3rd of what he stood for. “When he ran for Assembly his slogan was ‘Atta-boy Giamboi,’” Cannavo continued. “Judge, I just want to say to you, from all of us, that you did good. Thanks for sharing such a DANCE good life with us. Atta boy, LATIN CLASS Giamboi.” Come join this Latin

Health

Dance Class where you will learn Salsa, Merengue, Bachata, Cha Cha, Cumbia and Tango and the cultural history that is embedded in each dance. When: Friday, January 18th, 1:30 – 3 p.m. Where: Bensonhurst/New Utrecht Library (1743 86th Street)

MORNING MEDITATIONS

Introduction to simple mindfulness techniques, exercises, and digital apps. When: Saturday, January 19th, 11a.m. – 12p.m. Where: Brownsville/ Brownsville Library (61 Glenmore Avenue)

NYRR OPEN RUN: CANARSIE PARK

Open Run is a communitybased, volunteer-led running initiative bringing free weekly runs and walks to local neighborhood parks, across all five boroughs of NYC. All runs are directed by volunteers and are free to all participants. The finish line is open until the last person is done. The courses vary based on the park, but the courses are between 2.5 and three miles long. Participants are encouraged to arrive 15 minutes before the start of the run and to leave their valuables at home—bag check is not provided. No

need to do anything before the run, just show up. Open to all ages, experience levels, walkers, strollers, dogs: All are welcome. When: Saturday, January 19th, 9 – 10 a.m. Where: Canarsie/Canarsie Park (Seaview Avenue & East 88th Street)

CROSSWORD

MORNING YOGA Reduce stress and gain flexibility in a safe and fun environment. Beginners are welcome. Bring a yoga mat, towel or blanket to practice on. Wear comfortable clothing that will be easy to move in. Yoga is best practiced on an empty stomach. Avoid a heavy meal an hour or two before class. When: Saturday, January 19th, 10:15 – 11:45 a.m. Where: Bay Ridge/Fort Hamilton Library (9424 4th Avenue)

SHAPE UP CARDIO SCULPT Come exercise with the Library’s popular local volunteer! No registration is needed. When: Saturday, January 19th, 10 – 11 a.m. Where: Bensonhurst/ Highlawn Library (1664 West 13th Street)

SOLUTIONS TO PUZZLES

anette Ruiz, e Month celiz and Hon.

ario Belluomo

Week of January 17 - 23, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 5INB


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6INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


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TAMBOUR

Italian Restaurant and Wine Bar 652 5th Ave. at 19th St.347-916-1747

Dinner Tuesday-Sunday Brunch Saturday and Sunday

LIVE MUSIC!

Thursday Friday Saturday

@TambourWineBar

Damascus Bakeries 56 Gold St. Brooklyn, NY 11201 (718) 855-1456

Grand Canyon Restaurant 143 Montague Street Brooklyn, New York (718) 499-3660

Everyone knows that Damascus Bakeries have some of the tastiest “bred” products in the borough. And owner Ed Mafoud wants Faces to know that one of the most requested recipes is for the Buffalo Chicken Pizza. Just start with Bred in Brooklyn Traditional or Ancient Grain Pizza Crust, add the ingredients listed on the website and enjoy. It has all the flavors of a delicious chicken sandwich on a flatbread! www.Damascusbakery.com

Grand Canyon Restaurant in Brooklyn Heights is known for serving the best brunch in the borough, fine dining and scenic views. Customers call it an amazing place to dine with excellent food. The breakfast menu features a mouth-watering assortment of scrambled eggs, omelets and even Eggs Benedict served on an English muffin with avocado and home fries!

Tambour Italian Restaurant and Wine Bar 652 5th Ave. at 19th Street Brooklyn, NY 11215 (347) 917-1747

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Tambour Italian Restaurant and Wine Bar is known as the perfect place to wine and dine in Brooklyn. Its wine bar is world-class and the food is out of this world! Chef Thomas Perone is especially proud of his restaurant’s ability to pair the perfect wine with the perfect starters and entrees. He suggests the Half Dozen Oysters appetizer paired with Chateau Coulton Rose from Corbieres, France. And there’s also some great live music from Thursday to Saturday after 9:30! www.tambourbar.com

Clark’s Restaurant 80 Clark Street Brooklyn, NY 11201 (718) 855-5484 Mark at Clark’s Diner wants Faces to know about his incredible menu featuring all kinds of options for breakfast, lunch or dinner. And he says you don’t have to be Italian to enjoy the Italian Omelet made with eggs, sausage, mozzarella and onions, and served with a heaping portion of home fries. It also comes with the bread of your choice! Clarkdiner@gmail.com

Savarese Italian Pastry Shoppe 5924 New Utrecht Ave cor. of 60th St and New Utrecht Ave Brooklyn, NY 11219 (718) 438-7770 savaresepastry.com

Cakes | Pastries | Cookies Weddings

Soigne Restaurant 486 Sixth Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11215 (718) 369-4814 Soigne, pronounced swanyah, is French for carefully or elegantly done. Soigne Restaurant is all of that and more. It’s sophisticated, stylish and refined, and serves the finest French cuisine using only local and artisan ingredients. Soigne’s menu is market-inspired and the Soigne Salad is a customer favorite according to owner Chef Gregg Berk. That would be Arugula, Radicchio, Endives, Tomatoes and Pignoli Nuts tossed in a Balsamic Vinaigrette! www.Soignebrooklyn.com

WE SHIP ANYWHERE IN THE U.S. ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

8INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


FACES BEHIND

THE BIZ By John Alexander

Turkish Airlines If you’re looking to visit one of the world’s most romantic cities, let Turkish Airlines fly you to the enchanting city of Dubrovnik, Croatia. It’s like a fairy tale come true exploring one of the oldest Balkan cities. It has become a couple’s tourist destination. The combination of the old and the new makes this historical city both a romantic and fascinating place to visit. Turkish Airlines flies from everywhere to anywhere! www.turkishairlines.com

Darla, a shelter rescue, is 18 months old.

Three Guys from Brooklyn 6502 Fort Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn, NY (718) 748-8340 Now that we’re already into 2019, Phil at Three Guys from Brooklyn told Faces how proud he is that last year the legendary market celebrated its 20th anniversary serving the freshest produce in the borough. And Phil always prides himself on giving back to the community, having raised almost $65,000 toward the fight against Multiple Sclerosis, in honor of Phil Penta, Sr. who lost his hard-fought battle with the disease last year. www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com

Savarese Italian Pastry Shoppe 5924 New Utrecht Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11219 (718) 438-7770 Savarese Italian Pastry Shoppe is known for its incredible Italian pastries. Owner and pastry chef Mario Giura is known for his mouth-watering variety of cakes. All are artistically decorated and filled with a choice of rich ricotta, dreamy custards, mousse, butter creams, fresh fruits and more. Savarese has been creating the perfect desserts for generations! www.savaresepastry.com

Photo courtesy of Maria Devito

Pet Adoption Corner

Sean Casey Animal Rescue has shared these photos of pets up for adoption with us. Cane is an eight-year-old Domestic Shorthair. He is one of the sweetest cats the folks at Sean Casey have seen. He is curious of new toys and also enjoys being brushed. Tina is a five-year-old Pit bull mix. Tina

is a bit nervous of new things but warms up pretty quickly. Tina is a sweet girl that loves hanging out with her favorite volunteers. Sean Casey Animal Rescue (718-4365163) is located at 153 East Third St. Sean Casey Animal Rescue (718-4365163) is located at 153 East Third St.

Cane

Lauren

Photos courtesy of Sean Casey Animal Rescue

Week of January 17 - 23, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 9INB


Eye on SHEEPSHEAD BAY

Seen in Sheepshead Bay: Birds of a feather flock together. INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan

Come See Birdland, AKA Sheepshead Bay By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

Hail to thee, blithe Spirit! Bird thou never wert. — Percy Bysshe Shelley

Emmons Avenue is one of the best places in town for our fine feathered friends to find a good snack. Folks love the birds that flock to the Sheepshead Bay shoreline — and feed them well.

The other day, when we were strolling along the avenue, especially animated swans and seagulls were bickering over a bagel. We were going to refer to them as a bevy of swans and a colony of gulls. We found these expressions on a list of collective nouns for animal and bird groups. But whenever we see lists like this, we're never sure if they're real, or a piece of satire produced by the Onion. For instance, can you say “a shiver of sharks” with a straight face? How about “an intrusion of cockroaches” — doesn't that sound like a made-up expression? But back to Emmons Avenue. Sometimes, when people get especially enthusiastic about casting their bread upon the waters, the avid gulls look a little bit like they're rehearsing a scene from “The Birds.” The rest of the time, the gulls are nonthreatening. They line up single-file on a railing at the water's edge as though they're posing for photos.

A FAVORITE FOOTBRIDGE Another picturesque spot for the birds to perch is the Ocean Avenue Footbridge. As of course you know, the wooden walkway connects Emmons Avenue and neighboring Manhattan Beach's Shore Boulevard. The footbridge is a deep shade of blue like a crayon. It opened in 1880. The railroad executive and developer who commissioned the footbridge, Austin Corbin, was a vile man who's remembered for his anti-Semitism. According to the Hidden Waters blog, Corbin tried to have the bridge torn down to keep Jews and other minorities away from Manhattan Beach, where he'd built a snobby hotel. Opponents stood up to him and saved the bridge.

THE RHEINGOLD BREWERS' SUMMER HOUSE Besides being Birdland, Emmons Avenue is Boatland, too. Some of Sheepshead Bay's prettiest sailing vessels are tied up right by the sidewalk. You can pose for selfies with birds and boats in a single backdrop.

Other boats are tucked away behind the walls of private clubs. One has a clubhouse that's particularly picturesque even if you see it only from the sidewalk. The family that brewed Rheingold Beer back in the day had a summer house at 3076 Emmons Ave. It's now the gathering place for members of the Sheepshead Bay Yacht Club, which was founded in 1908, the club's website says.

— Continued on page 11INB —

SHEEPSHEAD BAY: HISTORY Sheepshead Bay remained undiscovered by European settlers during much of Brooklyn’s early development. The Canarsee Indians inhabited the land for almost 150 years after nearby Gravesend was settled in 1643. In the 18th century, the Wyckoff and Lotts families held land grants and built farms in the area, eventually drawing settlers to the shore. The neighborhood’s popularity began to increase during the early 19th century when wooden cottages were built along the rim of Sheepshead Bay inlet and a sheltered anchorage for small local boats was built. Local restaurants helped attract visitors with fresh seafood and two hotels were built to accommodate the incoming tourists. Development quickened during the 1870s when New York railroad lines were extended into Sheepshead Bay and during the 1920s and 1930s, new residential and commercial development transformed the neighborhood. Piers were built as a Works Progress Administration project, housing was constructed and modernized and Emmons Avenue was widened and paved. New cars in Brooklyn during this period and the Belt Parkway reaching the area in 1941 brought even more traffic, turning the bay into the fastest growing community in Brooklyn by the 1960s. —Norm Goldstein

10INB •• INBROOKLYN Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of JanuaryGazette 17-23, 2019 10INB INBROOKLYN— —AASpecial SpecialSection SectionofofBrooklyn BrooklynEagle/Heights Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


Eye on SHEEPSHEAD BAY

Birds bob serenely in the waters of Sheepshead Bay. In the middle distance, old-fashioned rowhouses line Emmons Avenue.

SHEEPSHEAD BAY What is this sheepshead that gave its name to this neighborhood? You might well ask. No, it is not the head of a sheep. And no, it is not a card game. This sheepshead is a fish, an edible fish generally considered a southern species, its usual habitat running from the mid-Atlantic to Texas. It’s not found here much anymore, but was probably around in greater numbers when the Canarsies lived and fished here before the arrival of Europeans more than 400 years ago. Separated from the eastern part of Coney Island by the bay that bears the name, the area was settled as part of the English town of Gravesend in 1643. It remained primarily a rural area — the Wycoff and Lotts families built farms in the area— until the beginning of the 19th century. Summer tourists came for the fishing and boating after Sam Leonard’s Hotel was built in 1843 and, two years later, Tappen’s Hotel went up. In the late 1870s and 1880s, the Manhattan Beach branch of the Long Island Rail Road, along with the Brooklyn, Flatbush and Coney Island Railroad (today’s BMT Brighton Line), the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge and Ocean Parkway, all helped make the neighborhood more accessible. The Sheepshead Bay Race Track was opened by the Coney Island Jockey Club in Sheepshead Bay and gambling flourished. In 1915, horses gave way to cars with the building of the Sheepshead Speedway on the same site. (In 1919, it became a housing development.)

INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan

Come See Birdland, AKA Sheepshead Bay — Continued from page 10INB — Beer drinkers and nostalgia buffs know that Rheingold's brewery was in Bushwick. The property is the site of a residential mega-development. As for the Emmons Avenue clubhouse, it has two porches.

WATERFRONT LUNCHES, 12 MONTHS A YEAR If you don't have a waterfront home or a yacht-club membership, another way to get an up-close look at Emmons Avenue's shoreline scenery is by eating lunch in the neighborhood. There are eateries with glassed-in back porches so you can sightsee 12 months a year. A Turkish restaurant called Liman has water views, and so does Italian restaurant Il Fornetto. The other day we got a seat right by the waterside windows at Rocca Cafe. Even on a sunless, freezing afternoon, the boats docked right outside were beautiful.

The Belt Parkway, on the southern edge, reached the area in 1941. In the northern sections of Sheepshead Bay are the subdivisions of Homecrest and Madison. Sheepshead Bay also encompasses Plumb Beach (named for its beach plums), now part of the Gateway National Recreation Area. —Norm Goldstein

Week of January 17-23, • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/HeightsPress/Home Press/HomeReporter/Brooklyn Reporter/BrooklynSpectator/Brooklyn Spectator/BrooklynRecord/Greenpoint Record/Greenpoint Gazette Gazette • 11INB Week of January 17 - 23, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A2019 Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights


For Laughing Out Loud • What’s better than Ted Danson? Ted singing and Danson!

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Robert Romano and a contingency of many of Joe’s past and present swimmers. Joseph was laid to rest at the Green-Wood Cemetery to be reunited with his cherished wife Rose, who passed 24 years ago.

+++

VERPONI, Joseph -- 91, on Jan. 10. Past president of St. Anselm Youth Activities. Father of three daughters, all Fontbonne Hall graduates, class of 1971, 1975 and 1977. Joseph was the founder of the Fontbonne Hall Academy Swimming team in 1973. He was the devoted swimming coach at Fontbonne Hall Academy for 49 years. He coached the team to many division and city championships. In later years, he was well known for cheering his swimmers on by hitting his cane on the ground along with his enthusiastic screams. He was voted Girls Catholic High School Coach of the Year 19811982 and 2004-2005. He was elected to the CCHSAA Hall of Fame Brooklyn Diocese in 1993. In 1998, Joseph received a New York City Proclamation for his distinguished service to Fontbonne Hall and the Bay Ridge community signed by then-Councilmember Marty Golden. In 2005, Joe received the CCHSA Lifetime Achievement Award for coaching. Beloved husband of the late Rose. Loving father of Jeanmarie and Edward Amato, Lisa and Robert Martire, and the late JoAnn, and son-in-law Biagio Madaio. Devoted grandfather of Gina Natale; Anthony Madaio; Nicole, Michael and Victoria Cama; and Joseph and Jacqueline Martire. Cherished great grandfather of five. A Mass of Christian burial was celebrated at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, officiated by the chaplain of Fontbonne Hall Msgr.

to cover every day, starting with the crime blotter and the coupon section), and dexterous sewer. Her long life is attributed to her steady diet of babka and kielbasa. She was a supporter of the Pulaski Association, the St. Stan’s Golden Age Club and the Greenpoint YMCA. In lieu of flowers, consider a contribution to the Greenpoint YMCA in her memory. All arrangements handled by Evergreen Funeral Home. Funeral St. Stanislaus Kostka Church. Burial Calvary Cemetery.

+++

SIECZKOWSKI, Helen -- Greenpoint centenarian “Big Helen” Sieczkowski passed away Jan. 2, 2019. She was the oldest living person on Jewel Street. Widow to Stanley “Chick” Sieczkowski, sister of the late Regina Klembicki, she is survived by her little sister Irene Grecula (age 99); daughter Alicia Kawochka; son Thomas; grandchildren Michael Kawochka and Natasha Phair; step-granddaughters Karen McCabe Nieves and Dawn McCabe Kuzma; four great-granddaughters: Ava, Estee and Macie Phair, and namesake “Little Helen” Kawochka; and beloved nieces, nephews and cousins. She passed away one day and 10 minutes shy of her 101st birthday. Born on Bayard Street in 1918, 10 months before the conclusion of WWI, Big Helen earned the honorific when her great granddaughter Little Helen was born in 2016. While she did not wander far, this Greenpoint native put down deep roots instead. She is an alumna and parishioner of St. Stan’s, where she was baptized, educated and married. She was a lifelong polka music and dance enthusiast, and devotee of the Jimmy Sturr Band, voracious reader (Daily News, cover

FLYNN, Annabel Midtbo -- (Mar. 2, 1918-Jan. 4, 2019) died peacefully at home. She was a beloved parent, friend and neighbor. Her kind heart and thoughtfulness were widely known. Annabel was born in Sunset Park to Norwegian (Arendal) parents Martha Nelson (b.1885) and Torje Midtbo (b.1879). She had two brothers, Harold and Earling. Married to Jerome Patrick Flynn in 1943, they had six children: Thomas (Ofelia Zuniga Rivas); Peggy (John Kelly); Dennis; John (d.1953); Anne (James Gottselig); and Peter (Sheila Pettersen); six grandchildren: Alyson Kelly (Kirk Bamford); Sereane Watkins-Flynn (Andrae Sanchez); Damion Watkins (Catherine Mer); Kathleen Kelly (Dave O’Connor); Flynn Gottselig; Sean Flynn; Sarah Flynn; and three great grandchildren: Jack and Annabel Bamford; and Margaret (Maggie) O’Connor. Annabel attended P.S. 169, graduating in 1932, and graduated from Manual Training High School in 1936. She completed her formal education at the YWCA Secretarial School in 1937. Annabel worked at Morgan Guaranty Trust from 1937-1946 where she met her future husband Jerome Patrick Flynn. They were married in 1943, and Annabel moved to the Flynn family home on 16th

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(718) 745-1600 Street. In addition to raising her children, Annabel worked as a medical secretary for Holy Family Home from 1969-1993. She had fond memories of visits by Dr. Oliver Sachs who was conducting research there. Few New York residents spend an entire 100 years living within a 26 block rectangle of this enormous city. Annabel’s stories of Brooklyn were extensive and detailed, and the Brooklyn Historical Society recorded a formal life history with her in May, 2018. The family would like to extend special thanks to Jackie Cruz for over three decades of hair-dos and friendship; Dennis Flynn for his loyal weekend visits and companionship; and

the dedicated home health aides (Adama Doumbaye and Rookmin Gittens) who cared for Annabel in the last years of her very long life. In lieu of flowers, donations on Annabel’s behalf can be made to: C.H.I.P.S. (http://chipsonline.org/donate/) or Trinity Lutheran Church (https://www.trinitybrooklyn.org). All arrangements handled by Duffy’s Funeral Home. Funeral St. John-St. Matthew-Emanuel Lutheran Church.

+++

HASNER, Corey -- Passed away on Jan. 12, 2019. He was 61 years old. Corey was the beloved husband of Cherylanne

(nee Milmoe). He was the loving father of Corinne, Cayla and Christopher. Corey was the cherished grandfather of Gaetano. All arrangements handled by Marine Park Funeral Home. Funeral Mass Good Shepherd Roman Catholic Church.

Remember a loved one in our paper To place an In Memoriam

Call the Home Reporter and Brooklyn Spectator at 718-238-6600

14INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


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• The waterfront on both sides of the East River in Manhattan and Brooklyn were full of breweries. By the mid 1800s, the Turtle Bay cove had been infilled and was packed with breweries, slaughterhouses, industrial uses and slums, and was one of the most polluted places in the city. This land would be purchased and redeveloped into the United Nations.

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18INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


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Week of January 17 - 23, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 19INB


“Singing with Rock Voices has helped me to take risks, follow my passions, and make deeply meaningful friendships.” -Elyse Langer-Smith, shown singing with the Northampton, MA choir

Started seven years ago in Massachusetts, Rock Voices provides a safe space for self expression and community in an increasingly disjointed world; an outlet for the soul. The mission of Rock Voices is “to heal ourselves and others through song.” Therapists often “prescribe” the group as a road back to wellness to clients who are struggling with depression and anxiety, and with good reason. There are precious few opportunities for adults to nd community and make new friends. Rock Voices adds the healing power of music to that mix, and magic happens. Friendships are forged, community forms, and members ride the wave to lives changed for the better. The Brooklyn Heights group will be directed by local performer and music educator Marianne Cheng and will meet Tuesday nights from 7-9 pm at First Unitarian Congregational Society, with the rst rehearsal January 29. Enrollment continues throughout February. Prospective members can sing for up to three weeks before committing. Tuition fees each season are comparable to other classes in the arts, and scholarships are available to those who demonstrate need. Every effort is made to make the choir accessible to all who want it in their lives. Curious? Go to a rehearsal and try it out. Find out if Rock Voices is what has been missing from YOUR life. (Brooklyn not convenient? If you live near Syosset, you can join the brand new chapter there on Thursday nights, starting January 31!) Learn more and pre-register at: www.RockVoices.com

When: Tuesdays, 7-9pm starting January 29 Where: First Unitarian Congregational Society in Brooklyn Heights

20INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of January 17- 23, 2019


FAITH IN BROOKLYN Brooklyn Church Secures $1.5M, Breaks Ground On Senior Housing Borough President Adams, Councilmember Williams Help Underwrite East Flatbush Construction Project

The Evangelical Crusade of Fishers of Men, in partnership with community leaders and residents, broke ground on Sun., Jan. 13, on a new low-income senior housing development project in East Flatbush. Seniors on a fixed income who live in apartments that are not rent-regulated may find themselves at greater risk for eviction if their landlords engage in predatory practices. Because of the unprecedented need for affordable housing in Brooklyn, considered one of the epicenters of gentrification, this longstanding congregation is expanding its 45-year ministry by providing shelter that would enable seniors to age in place. The Bishop Philius and Helene Nicolas Senior Residence Project (BPHN), named in honor of the church’s founding bishop and first lady, will be an 89-unit apartment building for seniors ages 62 and older who earn less than 50 percent of the area median income (AMI). The residence, at 1488 New York Avenue, will consist of 88 studio rental units and one one-bedroom super’s unit. It will also include a community room, common area space, laundry facilities and on-site social services. Additionally, there will be a 10,575 sq. ft. community service facility located on the first and cellar levels that the congregation has envisioned as a medical office suite for geriatric primary care. The construction of this $45 million project has been financed through discretionary capital allocations from Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams of $1 million and Councilmember Jumaane Williams of $500,000, the Senior Affordable Rental Apartment (SARA) program of the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development, and Bank of America’s debt and equity financing programs. The building will be developed by BEL Community Housing LLC, which is a partnership between Brisa Builders Development LLC; Evergreen City LLC, an M/WBE affordable housing development group; and Lemle & Wolff Dev. Co. It was designed by Heritage Architecture and Rodney Leon Architects. “The Bishop Philius and Helene Nicolas Senior Residence Project is our answer to God’s call to serve the community and meet a fundamental human need—shelter. God has rewarded our faith by bringing to fruition a project that we’ve been speaking about for the past 12 years. This building will enable us to expand our capacity to help our neighbors live a better life. We are grateful for the opportunity to fulfill our mission on this earth and work with great partners to strengthen the East Flatbush community,” said Rev. Dr. Samuel Nicolas, senior pastor. “Through the unwavering efforts of Borough President Adams’ Faith-Based Development Initiative, another church was able to expand their ministry to include building shelter for the residents of the Brooklyn community during a housing crisis. Evangelical Crusade Christian Church, in partnership with the development team and the City of New York, had the faith to see their vision come to fruition and are able to celebrate that victory with this ceremonial groundbreaking. I am honored and humbled to have been a part of this journey,” said Ericka Keller, managing member, BEL Community Housing LLC.

17th-century Church in Park Slope Hosts Martin Luther King Interfaith Service

The Old First Reformed Church, founded in 1654 and marking its 365th anniversary this year, will host a Martin Luther King Interfaith Commemoration on Sun., Jan. 20 at 3 p.m. “This service of music, readings and prayer will bring together six communities for an afternoon of justice and hope,” wrote the Rev. Steven Paulikas, rector of All Saints’ Episcopal Church in Park Slope. Old First Reformed Church is at Seventh Avenue and Carroll Street, a few blocks north of All Saints.

The Old First Reformed Church

Eagle Photo by Francesca N. Tate

Elected officials, clergy and community leaders break ground on the upcoming senior affordable housing complex in East Flatbush. Photo Credit: Francklin Valme

Brooklyn Chapter of Organists’ Guild Announces Competition, Youth Event

The winners of the 2018 George R. Mathison Memorial Scholarship Competition give a bow at their recent victory recital. Pictured, left to right: Roshane Chakane (third prize winner); Evan Currie (second prize winner) and Austin Philemon (first prize winner). Photo courtesy of Joe Vitacco The Brooklyn Chapter of the American Guild of Organists is currently accepting applications for its fourth annual George R. Mathison Memorial Scholarship Competition. The chapter established its annual George R. Mathison Memorial Scholarship Competition in honor of its friend and colleague. The competition’s purpose is to encourage excellence in the performance of organ music, and to inspire, educate and nurture future generations of organists. The 2019 competition will take place on Mar. 2, at Grace Church Brooklyn Heights. Candidates will play the church’s 69-rank 2001 Austin pipe organ. The prize pool totals $2,000, with a first-place prize of $1,000,

a second-place prize of $650, and a third-place prize of $350. The application deadline is Feb. 2. For more information, including eligibility and repertoire requirements and the application form, visit https://www.brooklynago.org/2019-scholarship-competition.

***

Children in grades three to six who have had some experience with the piano are invited to hear, play and explore the pipe organ. A free event, titled “Pipes, Pedals, and Pizza,” will take place Sat., Jan. 26 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Brooklyn Chapter of the American Guild of Organists sponsors the event. For more information or to reserve a spot, email dean@brooklynago.org

Faith in the Brooklyn Eagle Archives

The Brooklyn Eagle of Jan. 14, 1894 reported, “To-day Bishop McDonnell will dedicate the new church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help which the Redemptorist fathers have built at Fifth Avenue and Fifty-Ninth St. [in what is now Sunset Park]. The ceremony will begin at 10 a.m. and an imposing gathering is expected. The first church of one of the regular orders in the diocese of Brooklyn will thus be formally consecrated to its

sacred purposes. Bishop McDonnell gave the Redemptorists permission to locate in the Diocese in the autumn of 1892.” A brief report in the following day’s Eagle mentioned that the neighboring Diocese of New York was well-represented at the dedication. The Redemptorists were founded by St. Alphonsus Liguori (born 1696) in Naples to serve the poor and spiritually-abandoned. Thursday, January 17, 2019 • Brooklyn Eagle • 5


THIS WEEK IN HISTORY

5

Founded 1841

CENTS

big night On Jan. 15, 1861, the Brooklyn Academy of Music opened on the south side of Montague Street, between Court and Clinton. The location had the advantages of proximity to both the city’s civic and commercial center and the fashionable Brooklyn Heights residential district. An impressive musical program was arranged featuring the music of Mozart, Verdi, Donizetti, and Flotow. Opening night was followed the next evening with a brilliant ball. The subscription price for both was $5 per person. At a concert on Jan. 19, one of the boxes at the Academy was occupied by Mary Todd Lincoln and her two young sons. The first audience discovered properties which for several generations endeared the Academy to all Brooklynites: wonderful acoustics, a warmth of coloring and a coziness in spite of its great stage. Two auxiliary buildings were erected. One, known as Knickerbocker Hall, was a two-story, 70-foot-long building just west of the Academy. It housed a gigantic restaurant where delicacies were served Cover of the Eagle Picture and Sporting Section, Jan. 19, 1909

apro-poe

BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE • JAN. 19, 1909 The centenary of the birth of Edgar Allan Poe will be observed today by exercises in this city and in other places. A monument in Poe Park, Fordham, was dedicated this afternoon under the auspices of the Bronx Society of Arts and Sciences. The exercises were held in full view of the little Fordham cottage in which Virginia Clemm, Poe’s child-wife, died, and in which he lived the closing years of his life. Memorial exercises in honor of

Poe were held also at the New York University, Poly Prep and Columbia University. References to the works on Poe were made in many schools.  The one-hundredth anniversary of the birth of Edgar Allan Poe did not pass unnoticed at the Girls High School’s assembly yesterday morning. Two of the best of the many well-trained girls in the art of public reading recited from the poet’s writings, and E.H. Holt, teacher of physics, sang, as a solo, Poe’s poem, “El Dorado.” Mr. Holt is an accomplished vocalist. The recitations were “The Raven,” by Marie Kellner, and “The Bells,” by Lillian Sperr.

BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE • JAN. 17, 1951

6 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, January 17, 2019

The interior of the Brooklyn Academy of Music on opening night, Jan., 15, 1861. Library of Congress image via Wikimedia Commons by waitresses dressed in red, white and blue uniforms. The other structure was across the street from the Academy and housed the Hall of Manufactures, displaying various industrial products, and the New England Kitchen, an early example of an “authentic reproduction,” designed just as it would have appeared in the late 1770s. Inside was a mammoth fireplace in which huge logs were constantly burning. Beside it was a large chowder pot and innumerable spinning wheels, at which costumed attendants officiated. The Academy was built in a style often used in churches. A New Yorker was quoted as saying, “These Brooklyn people wanted a theatre which would be as near as possible to a church — where they could

hold a religious revival if they wanted to and a Shakespearean revival if they had to.” In 1883, the Academy hosted the evening reception for the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge. The event was attended by thousands, including President Chester A. Arthur and Governor Grover Cleveland. Late in the evening of Nov. 30, 1903, during preparations for a political banquet, a stray spark became a fire, and within 20 minutes the auditorium was a blazing volcano of flame. Crumbling walls crushed a saloon next door, and other surrounding buildings caught fire. In 1908, the Academy was rebuilt with another complex of stunning performance spaces at 30 Lafayette Ave. at the corner of Ashland Place.

gigantic narrows bridge may be begun this year BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE • JAN. 16, 1955 The long-envisioned Narrows Bridge, now closer to reality than ever before, will be a $220,000,000 double-decked, 12-laned colossus presenting a greater engineering challenge than the Golden Gate Bridge. The tremendous suspension span, connecting Brooklyn and Staten Island, may be under construction by the end of this year at the earliest and may be in use by Jan. 1, 1960. Recommended by the Port of New York Authority and the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority after a joint year-long study, the structure will be connected to a proposed 12-lane expressway running north through Bay Ridge along 7th Ave. Plans call for the bridge approaches to be located on the Fort Hamilton Military Reservation in Brooklyn and Fort Wadsworth on Staten Island. Permission to use government property for approach and anchorage purposes is being sought and a plan is being developed in conjunction with the First Army and the Army engineers for reconstruction and relocation of military installations in the way of the bridge and approaches. The structure would extend 7,200 feet from anchorage to anchorage and would have a 4,400-foot center span, the world’s longest. Including the immediate approaches at either end, the bridge would stretch 2 1/2 miles. The roadway, 237 feet above the Narrows at mid-channel, would be suspended from 700-foot towers on either side. The Brooklyn tower would be located just west of Fort Lafayette, the tiny island off Fort Hamilton. The Brooklyn anchorage of the bridge would be 1,400 feet in back of the tower, just east of Shore Parkway.

Eagle map by Gene Craig


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8 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, January 17, 2019

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