Park Slope

Park Slope Living at Manhattan Rents!

Nigel Holmes; Source: Real Estate Group

For over a decade now, Manhattan and Brooklyn have competed for the affections of younger or first-time renters. Manhattan was Manhattan, the gentrifying New Rome with all the amenities and nightlife one could want, often with shorter work commutes. Brooklyn was ever-emergent, the cool capital with reservations—longer commutes and sparser retail, plus the burden of pioneering in neighborhoods that didn’t always welcome newcomers.

But, oh, Brooklyn! What deals!  read more »

Park Slope Condo Prices: Oh, So Trendy

wallyg via flickr.com

The average price of a condo in Park Slope, Brooklyn's answer to the West Village, increased by 8 percent year-over-year, from $591,000 in 2006 to $640,000 in 2007, according to the year-end market report released by the Cocoran Group earlier this week. Here are some more Park Slope figures from the report:  read more »

Shott On Location: Doomed Donuts Coffee Shop Shutters Friday

Donuts Coffee Shop.
Chris Shott.
Donuts Coffee Shop.

The donut case was already empty. The last stacks of coffee cups were dwindling. A bouquet of roses from appreciative patrons adorned the intimate 12-seat counter.

Nostaglic customers snapped photos over breakfast as business winded down on Wednesday morning at doomed Donuts Coffee Shop on Fifth Avenue in Park Slope—pperhaps the last place you'll find a 90-cent cup o' joe in the gentrified nabe.

The longstanding Greek diner closes Friday as its tiny retail space gets swallowed up by the expanding Associated supermarket next door, which is also taking over an adjacent restaurant space.  read more »

Park Slope Parents Trotting Tots to Baby Gap Audition Emit Aura of Careful Nonchalance

The scene outside Tea Lounge in Park Slope.
kansasliberal via flickr.com
The scene outside Tea Lounge in Park Slope.

Just a few doors up from the Park Slope Coop, where the righteous buy their organic kale, and across the street from the Tea Lounge, where neighborhood mommies meet to nurse, share their in-the-trenches stories, and show off their strollers, a group of 10 or so parents and their babies (and sometimes an extra kid in tow) formed an orderly line outside of Kidville, a child learning and play center.

When a passerby asked one of the moms what was going on, the mother shyly replied, “Um, it’s a casting call for the Gap.”  read more »

Sidewalk Cops Confront Bobo Brooklyn's Sandwich Board Epidemic

Nicole Braun/The Brooklyn Paper.

Retailers in the "cradle of tough guys" are under siege as authorities crack down on a rampant form of outdoor advertising, according to a report in this week's Brooklyn Paper:

Shops in Park Slope and Cobble Hill have been slapped with $100–$300 tickets over the last three weeks for the crime of obstructing the sidewalk with their A-frame, or sandwich board, signs.

Some wary shopkeepers are now flattening the offensive frames to keep from violating the city's three-feet-from-the-storefront rule, according to the report.

“It’s kind of ridiculous," said one employee of a recently ticketed shop. "It looks like they were just going up the street giving out tickets."

Nobody [Messes] With The Community Bookstore!

Brooklyn-based actor John Turturro has stepped in to help bail out Park Slope's debt-ridden Community Bookstore, according to Sunday's New York Times.

Facing foreclosure, the owner of the Seventh Avenue indie retailer, Catherine Bohne, reportedly "offered up to 49 percent ownership in the store to a group of friends willing to put up at least $10,000 apiece," and Mr. Turturro, a frequent customer, was among the first in line.

"[A]ll these great small bookstores and art house movie theaters, so many things I love, are being swallowed up by a supermarket mentality," he told the Times.

It's a dramatic turn for the actor perhaps best known for his role in 1998's The Big Lebowski as tongue-wagging alleged child-molester and superstar bowler Jesus Quintana: "Nobody fucks with the Jesus!"

A Grand Opening for Douglas Elliman's First Park Slope Office

Prudential Douglas Elliman will hold a grand opening for its first Park Slope office tomorrow evening. This office, located at 154 Seventh Avenue between Carroll Street and Garfield Place, comes on the heels of archrival the Corcoran Group announcing a Williamsburg location.

And the invasion of the boroughs by Manhattan brokers continues unabated...

North Slope Too Steep For Music Venues

Puppets Jazz Bar is a-moseying down Fifth Avenue, while adjacent Somethin’ Else record shop searches for new digs. Sharp rent hikes imposed by a new landlord will split up the side-by-side Park Slope retailers this week.  read more »

The Afternoon Wrap: Friday

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  • Restoration heroes Beyer Blinder Belle are fixing up the Empire State Building: uncovering the lobby's gold-and-silver "celestial sky" ceiling mural. But, of course, the original lighting will be replaced by "modern, energy-efficient fixtures" [Interior Design]
  • Tragically, Brooklyn bars are now officially over-packed: "Manhattanites are actually commuting to our fair borough to party in Boerum Hill, Park Slope, Prospect Heights, and Williamsburg." [Brooklyn Record/Time Out NY]
  • Speaking of Park Slope: Residents turned out in droves last night to bemoan plans [above] for bicycle lanes: "There is no way in hell there is going to be a bike lane on Ninth Street," a charming Sloper screamed before the meeting started. Why? "A bike lane would interfere with double parking." [Curbed]
  • The neighborhood isn't as hip as it was in the Truman Capote/Norman Mailer days of yore, but Brooklyn Heights' open houses are still a hot ticket. A studio is up for $265,000; a house costs 13 times more. [NY Mag] - Max Abelson

The Round-Up: Thursday

  • Residents fret Park Slope one-way traffic conversions.
  • [NY Sun]
  • Bistricer-owned Flatbush Gardens seeks change.
  • [NY Sun]
  • Milstein plans apartment tower near Union Square.
  • [NY Sun]
  • "Hotel mania" grips Manhattan!
  • [NY Sun]
  • New York dodges mortgage problems--for now.
  • [NY Sun]
  • Subprime mortgage debacle snags state teachers' fund.
  • [NY Post]
  • Hotels going up across Queens.
  • [Daily News]
  • Possible Sunnyside Gardens historic district moves.
  • [Daily News]
  • Kingsbridge Armory redevelopment stalls.
  • [Daily News]

    Did we miss any New York City real estate news this morning? Please send along tips and links.

The Afternoon Wrap: Tuesday

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  • The greatest thing ever in fake-billionaire furniture will debut by the end of the month. Behold: "Westchester" and "Central Park," two groups of affordable-luxe furniture. Both have been "personally signed off on" by Mr. Donald Trump. [Luxist]
  • It seems that the Department of Transportation's quiet plans to narrow Fourth Avenue (and make Park Slope arteries Sixth and Seventh avenues into one-way streets) has something to do with Atlantic Yards. Frank Gehry probably just wants to take some space away from hip stroller-pushing dads. [Streetsblog]
  • More in Forbes' billionaires: They have expensive houses! They like New York! Apparently many "maintain secondary homes on New York's East Side," like #19 Paul Allen and #86 Sumner Redstone. Michael Gross knows all the rich guys at 740 Park. [Forbes Life]
  • Is Scarlett Johansson moving to 79 Laight Street? She's looked at Chelsea and Tribeca penthouses: neighborhood brokers think she's quite "delightful." [NY Mag] - Max Abelson

The Afternoon Wrap: Thursday

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  • Ann Coulter doesn't like inconsiderate liberals in East Hampton: "It does not occur to them that someone has to manufacture the tiles and steel and glass and solar panels that go into those 'eco-friendly' mansions... Liberals are already comfortably ensconced in their beachfront estates." But who else is ensconced? Ms. Coulter has a $1.7 million waterfront estate in Palm Beach. [The Atlantic/Andrew Sullivan]
  • First came Maggie Gyllenhaal and Peter Sarsgaard. Now Park Slope's ongoing quest for namebrand hipster coolness scores another victory: Ryan Schreiber, the godly editor of uber-music Web site Pitchfork Media, is moving in. [New York D.I.]
  • Not only is green home-construction hip--and a primo way of making sure the world doesn't prematurely end in a fiery inferno and whatnot--but it's a good move for folks who like tax breaks. [Forbes]
  • Tragedy strikes REBNY's plans for a global Manhattan real-estate Web portal! This is a sad day for New Yorkers who were hoping to further fuel their firey Internet real-estate addiction. [Real Deal] - Max Abelson
  • The Afternoon Wrap: Friday

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    • A skinny, possibly "gloomy" Harlem townhouse is granted "Estate of the Day" honors at Luxist. Why? The 1910 house has a planted terrace, garden, 12-foot-high parlor floor, and original details like mahogany-framed windows and carved staircase. [Lux]
    • The 'New Park Slope' bears shockingly little semblance to the original. Unless the old Park Slope was a pioneer of comfort and style, and a modern and exciting residential corridor, and "rich with the ambience and energy..." [Curbed]
    • Pity the poor Greenwich VIllage KFC/Taco Bell! Even though it miraculously provided Villagers with both tasty fried chieck and Challupas, a few measly rats have put the restaurant in peril. To be fair, though, technically it was a "rat infestation." [NY1, via everyone]
    • The Observer's favorite mega-uber-luxury broker, Leonard Steinberg, works the "art week" angle into selling his condos at 200 11th Avenue. "Most units have double-height ceilings, which gives you a tremendous opportunity to display sculpture and artwork... It is not attracting the Kevin Federlines of the world." [Real Deal] - Max Abelson

    The Afternoon Wrap: Thursday

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    • What'd you get for that friend who just got the perfect New York pad with a terrace? How about the Cocoon Hammock? Designed by Henry Hall, the hammock becomes its own little outside room, apparently, and so you should be warned: "The hammock is not meant to be moved once it is assembled, as it is roughly 12-sq. ft. and weighs over 400 pounds."
    • [Luxist]
    • Whole Foods plans a new location at Third Street and Third Avenue along the happy banks of the Gowanus Canal, and a group calling itself Park Slope Neighbors wants the food giant to reduce the location's planned 420 parking spaces by at least 100. The main beef the group has is with Whole Foods apparent attempt to implement "a suburban-style plan"--because, when people think of Park Slope, they don't think suburban. No, not at all.
    • [Brooklyn Record via Brownstoner]
    • The final day of the Futuristic Dumbo exhibit is on Friday. Catch it while you can, then, and see what urban-design students at Pratt envision for Brooklyn (see above). Among other questions, the exhibit seeks to answer one most New Yorkers would rather quietly avoid: "How do we adapt to the rising seas in our waterfront neighborhood?" Indeed.
    • [DumboNYC]
    • The Times throws at us today a story about that certain little sadness some money-flush New Yorkers endure: "post-renovation depression." The Wrap would crack a joke or some sort of dry witticism, but, truth be told, the whole thing's rather sick (and not in a clinical way). Behold: "While remodeling is often portrayed as a nightmare -- with delays, cost overruns and scary contractors -- some say it is more like a dream they would rather not wake up from." [NY Times via Gawker] - Tom Acitelli

    Analyzing Eugene's Win

    An informed reader emailed over a rough breakdown of the results of Tuesday's special Council election in Brooklyn.

    It turns out that Mathieu Eugene's union-backed victory was just as thorough as the overall numbers indicated. He was the top vote-getter in nearly all of the Assembly districts that lie at least partly within the Council district.

    The only one he lost was the 44th Assembly District in Park Slope.

    A more detailed analysis should be ready by Friday when the city's Board of Elections finalize the results. But here, according to my source, is how the order of finish broke down:

    42nd Assembly District - Flatbush, Midwood Mathieu Eugene (almost 50 percent) Jennifer James Wellington Sharpe Richie Leithland 43rd Assembly District - Crown Heights/Flatbush Mathieu Eugene Jennifer James Wellington Sharpe Jesse Hamilton 44th Assembly District - Park Slope Harry Schiffman Moe Ravzi Joel Toney Mathieu Eugene 57th and 58th Assembly Districts - Clinton Hill, Brownsville Mathieu Eugene Wellington Sharpe Jennifer James/Jesse Hamilton (close 3/4th) -- Azi Paybarah

    Parking Is Traffic in Park Slope

    Crain's Insider (subscription req'd) carries news Friday that Transportation Alternatives will release a study next month showing that "40% of traffic in Park Slope, Brooklyn, consists of drivers searching for parking." - Matthew Schuerman

    Bess Rimona Harris Adelson


    Oct. 28, 2006 6:44 p.m. 7 pounds, 4 ounces St. Vincent’s Hospital    read more »

    The (Big) Round-Up: Monday

    • Higher city property values drive higher property taxes.
    • [Daily News]
    • Report: Tribeca, Soho priciest neighborhoods to rent.
    • [Daily News]
    • City property market values up 19 percent in '06.
    • [NY Times]
    • Big-name retail chains invade the outer-boroughs.
    • [NY Times]
    • Nods to China and New York in carpet showroom.
    • [NY Times]
    • Twists of designing a starter townhouse.
    • [NY Times]
    • Story behind new white gleam of old GM Building.
    • [NY Times]
    • Where to find a city townhouse for under $1 million.
    • [NY Times]
    • Living in Park Slope's coveted real estate.
    • [NY Times]
    • 17-room duplex at 1020 Fifth quietly on the market.
    • [NY Times]
    • Mortgage fraud climbing, FBI says.
    • [NY Times]
    • When a co-op board president acts like a king.
    • [NY Times]
    • When is a garage space rent-stabilized?
    • [NY Times]
    • "Meticulous focus" of Planning Commissioner Burden.
    • [NY Times]
    • City set to license homebuilders.
    • [NY Post]
    • Crobar, Sol reopen to slower business.
    • [NY Post]
    • Judge orders Seinfeld to pay broker commission.
    • [NY Post]
    • The bigger downside to cheaper home prices.
    • [NY Post]
    • News flash: Brooklyn real estate very healthy.
    • [NY Post]
    • Landmarks Commission vote looms on 980 Madison.
    • [NY Sun]

      Did we miss any New York City real estate news this morning? Please send along tips and links.

    The Afternoon Wrap: Thursday

    • It's a big deal when a rich writer gets robbed near his lush Park Slope home, and it's a bigger deal when the rich writer and his wife vow on blogs to ditch the borough ("It costs $2,000 a year to insure my wedding ring....We outta here.") But best of all is when the once-hidden vows are dug up in all their Brooklynesque glory. [Gowanus Lounge]
    • Sure, crusading against Marlboros and French crullers is brave. But Mayor Bloomberg could "hit the trifecta and reap perhaps his biggest public-health bonanza yet" if he tilts his horns against Manhattan's "car-dominance." And bike-riding would be way more fun. [Streetsblog]
    • Steve Case's cheesy Miraval Living (where "healthy eating facilities" come with the million-dollar apartments) makes Forbes' list for wishlist-level abodes. (And, illogically, it beats out a globe-trotting yacht.) [Forbes]
    • Rental agents do not fear 2007's prices--or evil landlords or prissy renters--nearly as much as they fear other rental agents. [NY Press]
    • Real estate murder mysteries are really hot right now. [NY Mag]
    • - Max Abelson

    The Round-Up: Wednesday

    • City plans playground near South Street Seaport.
    • [NY Times]
    • New York developer touts "green" office renovations.
    • [NY Times]
    • City OKs schools on toxic Bronx site.
    • [NY Post]
    • New tenants for 1800 Park in Harlem?
    • [NY Post]
    • Brooklyn housing complex selling for $21 million.
    • [Daily News]
    • Mag: Park Slope among U.S.'s top eco-friendly enclaves.
    • [Daily News]
    • Landmarks OKs changes to 195 Broadway lobby.
    • [Daily News]
    • City gives tax breaks to Boerum Hill condo buyers.
    • [NY Sun]
    • Big year ahead for Manhattan office market.
    • [NY Sun]
    • Take a closer look at Gowanus.
    • [Voice]

      Did we miss any New York City real estate news this morning? Please send along tips and links.

    Events for December 9-11, 2006

    On Saturday at 11 a.m., the NAACP protests the police shooting of Sean Bell, at 168th Street between Jamaica and Archer Avenues.

    At 11 a.m., Councilman Bill de Blasio discusses the need for "e-waste" legislation, outside P.S. 321 in Park Slope.

    At noon, Manny Innamorato will announce his candidacy for Staten Island City Council seat being vacated by Andrew Lanza. [added]

    At 1 p.m., the New York Society for Ethical Culture hosts an impeachment forum, with Cindy Sheehan and Elizabeth Holtzman, at 2 West 64th Street.

    Also at 1 p.m., high school students host a mock session of the City Council in the Council chambers.

    At 3 p.m. a march against "police terrorism," organized by the New Black Panther Party, starts at 125th Street and 7th Avenue.

    At 8 p.m., the CEO of Google discusses politics and the Internet on C-SPAN. At 8:35 p.m., there is a discussion about ethics and journalism on C-SPAN.

    On Sunday, South African President Thabo Mbeki meets George Bush in D.C.

    Potential 2008 presidential candidate John Edwards gets the Paul Wellstone award from the AFL-CIO at their meeting in D.C.

    At 6:30 p.m., Evan Bayh appears on a segment of Road to the White House.

    And two Democratic clubs, Broadway Democrats and Ansonia Independent, have separate holiday parties.

    On Monday at 8 a.m., the Drum Major Institute hosts a discussion about the cost or prescription drugs at The Harvard Club (27 West 44th Street).

    At 9:30, housing advocates rally on the city hall steps before the 10 a.m. hearing on the 421-a housing program.

    And at 8 p.m., the Bill Clinton presidency is discussed on C-SPAN 3.

    -- Azi Paybarah

    Quinn's Brooklyn

    Quinn%27s%20421a.jpg

    The green outline shows Speaker Christine Quinn's proposed 421-a exclusion zone in northern Brooklyn--the area within which developers would need to include on-site affordable housing in order to qualify for tax breaks.

    Currently, the exclusion zone covers only well-established neighborhoods (West Village, the Upper East and West Sides), where an automatic 421-a tax abatement for new multifamily housing (which is what the rest of the city currently enjoys) would seem too much of a giveaway. Adding in Billyburg makes sense (as well as Park Slope-Fort Greene-Downtown Brooklyn, of which you can see a greenish corner at the bottom).

    But that two-block strip along Broadway, which goes through the southern part of Bushwick all the way to Eastern Parkway? Has that become a condo corrider? Or is anti-developer sentiment so strong in those parts that City Council members Diana Reyna and Eric Martin Dilan wanted a little piece of that green to cut into their districts?

    - Matthew Schuerman

    The Afternoon Wrap: Friday

    • What are Cooper Union students doing about the impending destruction of the Hewitt Building? They're staging school-wide walkouts (and tossing around cruel words like disenfranchisement). Apparently, these young artists really don't want to move out to studios in Long Island City, where they'll work until Cooper Union gets a newer and greener $120 million building. [Villager]
    • The Opening Paragraph of the Day, presented in its glorious entirety: Park Slope's pampered tykes might soon have one more reason to love life in Brooklyn. FAO Schwarz -- toy store and child magnet since 1862 -- said this week it might open a satellite shop in the Slope. [Brooklyn Papers]
    • Down in the Financial District, $90 million will help pay for a luxury condo conversion. So, the old Chase Manhattan Bank HQ will turn into "20 Pine," with $90 million-worth of ebony-stained hardwood floors, high-end wooden cabinetry, Hudson River views, a pool, a spa, a yoga studio and, best of all, a golf simulation room. [Multi-Housing News]
    • Brownstoner reports that Joshua Guttman (who has the world's "universal contempt") is going to tear down a Dumbo foundry built by Brooklyn Bridge man E.W. Bliss. Or will 205 Water Street (aka 188 Plymouth) be saved by local preservationists? Tune in tomorrow. [Brownstoner]
    • - Max Abelson

    Wednesday: Luxury Bathrooms vs. 'Green'; Central Park West vs. NYHS

    bill3.jpg
    Mr. Moyers, Mr. CPW
    • Saunas, towel warmers and heated floors are still hot commodities in the luxury home industry, but the single biggest new trend is "everything green." That means New Yorkers are increasingly unwilling to kill a rainforest for "one piece of exotic wood for inlay." (Forbes)
    • Classy behemoth Clear Channel and (at least) two other big billboard companies are suing New York over limitations on outdoor ads. Is it a matter of free speech or corporate graffiti? (NY Post)
    • Opening a successful Central American comfort food eatery in Park Slope is easy. Park Slope really is perfect. (NY Daily News)
    • New Yorkers (i.e. Bill Moyers) do not want the New-York Historical Society to build "a 23-story glass apartment tower behind the society's museum." (NY Times)
    • Shouldn't we always listen to Mr. Moyers? Maybe not: after all, New Yorkers also don't welcome more development in the Lower East Side. Or in the East Village. Or in Washington Square Park. (Sun)
    • - Max Abelson  read more »

    Be Careful What You Wish For

    Traffic_Jam_Lanzhou2-749323.jpg
    The D.O.T.'s traffic-calming plan for Park Slope/Gowanus.
    Ariella "Scoop" Cohen at The Brooklyn Papers reports that the 68,000-square-food Whole Foods gigantiplex due to open in Park Slope at Third Avenue and Third Street in spring 2008 will have a three-story 430-car parking garage.

    Cohen quotes a traffic engineer as saying that as many as 1,800 cars could use the facility per hour.
    It seems oxymoronic that a healthy-lifestyle brand such as Whole Foods would promote driving in a neighborhood such as Park Slope/Gowanus; but it's never been said that a little environmentalism gets in the way of capitalism in our Mayor's city.
    Prepare for "health conscious" mamas eating from bags of Pirate's Booty while gunning their S.U.V.'s down Third Avenue.  read more »

    -Matthew Grace

    Mystery Solved! Park Slope, Please Meet Mr. Bell

    witch.jpg
    The hunt for the buyer is on

    Yesterday, Brownstoner broke the exhilarating news that the 31-foot beauty at 45 Montgomery Place had been sold for more than $6 million. (Oval rooms! Fireplaces! It's all there.)

    According to the website, $6m would be the highest price ever paid for a 1-family townhouse in Park Slope. New Yorkers everywhere asked: who is the lucky, oval-loving owner?

    According to our calculations (i.e. according to city records), that would be Gregory Bell, who bought the place for a clean $6,050,000.

    But is it the mathematician Greg Bell, who studied the Asymptotic Dimension of Groups? Or is it TV's Gregory Bell? (He played Shakespeare in Dennis Hopper's "Witch Hunt.") Or is it NATO's Assistant Secretary General for Defense Investment, Mr. Robert Gregory Bell?

    Probably the actor, no?  read more »

    - Max Abelson

    Friday: A Big Lawsuit, A Big Park Slope Townhouse Deal, A Big Map Of Death

    • Headline of the Day: "New York Isn't the World's Undisputed Financial Capital." Maybe so, but at least we're not Chicago. (The New York Times)
    • After a year on the market, 45 Montgomery Place goes for over $6 million, which likely makes it the most expensive single-family townhouse in Park Slope. Mr. and Mrs. Safran Foer have now been utterly humiliated--Slope style. (Check in soon for more...) (Brownstoner)
    • NYC Map of the Month: the "graveyards" of famous musicians. The lesson is you shouldn't treat a cold with Valium (and Darvon) if you're a rock critic in your Sixth Avenue apartment. (L Magazine)
    • The Hester Street playground gets $4.75 million for a much-needed overhaul. But if shabbiness isn't even chic in the Lower East Side, what will happen to the hipsters? Won't someone please think of the hipsters? (The New York Times)
    • - Max Abelson

    Countdown to Bliss

    The bells are ringing for Mimi and her guy! Creative director and M.B.A. candidate Elliot Cravitz joins N.Y.U. psychiatric resident Miriam (Mimi) Schultz on the couch in their Murray Hill apartment.
    The bells are ringing for Mimi and her guy! Creative director and M.B.A. candidate Elliot Cravitz joins N.Y.U. psychiatric resident Miriam (Mimi) Schultz on the couch in their Murray Hill apartment.

    Aaron Matthew Guzikowski and Alison Hope Silverman   Met: May 2001 Engaged: Dec. 25, 2005  read more »

    Wednesday: 'Blatant' Corcoran Racism (and Paper Owls) in Brooklyn

    • An undercover investigation by the National Fair Housing Alliance accuses Corcoran's Brooklyn office of "blatant housing discrimination against African-Americans." White clients were steered toward white neighborhoods like Park Slope and Cobble Hill, while black clients were deprived of information about incentives. 2006 is the new 1934. (New York Times)
    • An advisor to the Times' architectural selection committee said that though he appreciates Renzo Piano's design for the newspaper's new tower, he is "madly in love with the Gehry." (The Gehry is the "tower-that-might-have-been," had Frank won the NYT's big competition). But is there really a measurable different between a Piano "triumph" and a Gehry "masterpiece"? (Metropolis)
    • Fighting the good fight for non-billionaire housing, Mayor Bloomberg will recommend an overhaul of the city's "most popular tax break for housing developers." (Now rich Manhattanites can no longer get city money for building homes for rich Manhattanites). Does the name 421-a sound familiar? (New York Times)
    • This is what House & Garden has to say about Brooklyn: "I fell in love with the one-cup coffee presses in cherry red. They also have quirky cutlery and smart pocket clocks, and craftier creations, like papery owls, mobiles, chrome cuckoo clocks and vintage, rustic-lite furniture." What has happened to this chrome cuckoo-loving borough? See above. (House & Garden)
    • - Max Abelson

    The Excitement of (Writing About) Haalgaard!

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    Ms. 'Haal and Mr. 'Gaard

    If you're a celebrity-obsessed (or celebrity-loathing?) Brooklynite, the most exciting piece of today's Manhattan Transfers has to be the news that Peter Sarsgaard and Maggie Gyllenhaal have signed a contract for a grandmotherly $1.75 million Park Slope brownstone. As the Boswell Sisters would say: Yowza!

    (Also: Don't miss the personal story of our friend Miranda Purves, who couldn't afford said brownstone but resents the fact that Haalgaard snapped it up before she could! Life in Brooklyn is full of such contradictions.)

    If we were to pat ourselves on the back we'd say that we actually took the trouble to confirm what had been a smoldering-hot Stoop-Sale Rumor. Anyone up there at the Pulitzer commission listening?

    But if instead we were to indebt ourselves to previous reports that they were looking at the place, with non-transparent sourcing, we'd have to give Kudos to Brooklyn Record, who wrote in to remind us (how could we have forgotten?) that their blog was the first to publish. Hey, you take the risk, you get the credit, right? Here's the link.  read more »

    - Max Abelson

    Atlantic Yards DEIS Meeting Tonight

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    The Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods will be holding a meeting tonight at the Old First Reformed Church in Park Slope, at 126 Seventh Avenue at Carroll Street, at 7 p.m. to present its findings on the Atlantic Yards draft environental impact statement.

    For more info, check out the CBN Web site.  read more »

    -Matthew Grace

    Civility

    While Mark Green and Andrew Cuomo are still working on their definition of negative campaigning, a similarly constructive dialogue is being carried out between the Democratic candidates in Brooklyn's 11th Congressional district.

    Outside the candidate forum in Park Slope last night, a flier was distributed that said, "Why is David Yassky, a Democrat, taking money from Jack Abramoff's law firm and from supporters of Rick Santorum?"

    Yassky, reading from the flier on stage, noted that it did not say who paid for it and was therefore a violation of FEC regulations. He then addressed the accuracy of the attack, explaining that he worked at one of the law firms in question, and that his friend from law school worked at another firm referred to in the flier.

    Then, to move things in a more positive direction, Yassky asked if all the candidates if they would agree not to negative campaigns for the remainder of the primary.

    Yvette Clarke and Carl Andrews, whom Yassky praised for not going negative, agreed.

    Chris Owens didn't.

    Later, Owens said the person distributing the flier was a volunteer, not a paid member of his campaign.

    -- Azi Paybarah

    Clarke and The War

    Tomorrow should be a good day for Yvette Clarke. She's hosting a town hall meeting and getting endorsed by Rep. John Murtha, the hawkish Democratic congressman from Pennsylvania who is now calling for troops to be withdrawn from Iraq. (Anthony Weiner, who already endorsed her, will also be there.)

    While all four Democrats in the Brooklyn 11th congressional race have taken similar anti-war positions, Clarke has a unique argument:

    "Imagine a Congress that was half female, allowing our children to be sent to war, in harms way without an extremely good reason."

    Anybody know how many women in Congress voted for the war?  read more »

    Update: Town Hall info after the jump. -- Azi Paybarah

    Willem Claudio Guzmán Mitchell

    June 24, 200612:30 p.m.

    7 pounds, 6 ounces  read more »

    New York Hospital–Cornell

    Willem Claudio Guzmán Mitchell


    June 24, 2006 12:30 p.m. 7 pounds, 6 ounces New York Hospital–Cornell    read more »

    In the 11th -- Park Slope and Crown Heights

    In keeping with our ongoing obsession with the up-for-grabs 11th Congressional race, we sent our man John Koblin out into the district to talk to residents about what they hoped for out of their new member of Congress.

    Here are a few randomly selected interviews that show, if nothing else, the radically different priorities of voters in different parts of the district.

    brem hyde.jpg
    Brem Hyde
    I'd like to see the the new congressman stop the futility with the war in Iraq. On a more local level, I'd like to see the new congressmen become involved with city and state energy issues and social issues like Healthcare.

    -- Brem Hyde, 39, landscape designer, corner of President and 7th Ave, Park Slope  read more »

    Events for August 22, 2006

    New York State Young Democrats host a candidate forum for attorney general candidates at the 420 Lounge.

    Flushing Assembly candidates attend a debate at the Flushing Library at 6 pm.

    The Green Party files petitions to secure a place on the ballot.

    Yvette Clarke holds a press conference touting support from an "influential" member of congress in Park Slope.

    Al Sharpton hosts the annual Dream Keepers Awards in Beverly Hills at the residence of Judge Greg Mathis honoring Congresswoman Maxine Waters, Clarence Avant and Ken Sunshine.

    Hillary Clinton attends the Washington County Fair in Greenwich, New York.

    Stonewall Dems host a social meet and greet with some of their endorsed candidates at the LGBT Center at 7pm.

    —Nicole Brydson

    Monday: Gowanus Is Not Park Slope, Tribeca Is Not Jersey, SoHell Is Not Hell?

    pp.jpg
    Brooklyn's new Holiday Inn
    • The Jack Parker Corporation is trying to rezone north Tribeca--from manufacturing into residential--so that it can put up a hefty, dense apartment building. If you live in the area, you're probably complaining about damage to "low-rise character" or to waterfront views. And you're probably rich, too: the neighborhood proudly claims the "city's wealthiest zip code," even though just 18% of the land is zoned for residential housing. Jack Parker is salivating. (New York Sun)
    • The Gowanus Holiday Inn is open, so everyone can get his $139-per-night Gowanus fix! The Times halfheartedly points out that "most people still aren't calling [the area] Park Slope." Mightn't that be because Gowanus is (still) not Park Slope? (New York Times)
    • The Hamptons won't be officially dead until the H-word is no longer meaninglessly dropped in the lede sentences of big Post articles on international business deals. Or maybe the Hamptons has already died and gone to Purgatory. (New York Post)
    • New York says "you might want to spend some time in" in the avant garde-heavy, friendly bar-happy 'hood below Hell's Kitchen. Why? Because it's SoHell. (New York)
    • It's old news, but it's good news: New York does not qualify as a "wellness community." This has something to do with "germs" and "full-body age assessments," and possibly people named bubble sitters. (CNN/Money)
    • - Max Abelson  read more »

    What Project?

    billandbill.jpg
    "It looks like we just got done playing Backgammon." -Bill Batson
    Bill de Blasio has endorsed Bill Batson for the 57th Assembly District, despite the fact that they differ in their views on the Atlantic Yards project. De Blasio's district does not overlap with the 57th, but is just north and east of Flatbush Avenue from his Park Slope district.

    "The important thing is that Bill and I disagree on the Yards, but we can work together in seeking a community brokered development model," Batson said in a just-completed phone interview. "That's what I think the people in Brooklyn want right now. We want development, we want affordable housing, we just want to be onboard the planning process."  read more »

    De Blasio was out of town and unavailable for comment, but at least some opponents of the project consider him to be "conditionally" supportive.

    —Nicole Brydson

    Batson's Crowd

    batson.jpg
    Bill Batson, apparently, was late to his own fundraiser last night as his official business at Community Board 8 kept him listening to testimony on the Atlantic Yards project. (Which, as you probably know, he strongly opposes.)

    But he eventually made it in time to mingle with the 40 or so people waiting for him at a private home in Park Slope. Batson estimates the event brought in "$1,500 with money still coming in."

    The list of attendees included some locally recognizable political names: Norman Siegel -- who won the 57th district in his campaign for public advocate last year -- Jonathan Tasini and Josh Skaller, president of CBID and Tracey Tullis of Democracy for NYC.

    "You know your supporters love you when they come out to bring you money on the hottest day of the year," Batson said.  read more »

    —Nicole Brydson

    Early Morning Owens

    Chris Owens was out bright and early this morning handing out campaign pamphlets to commuters entering the 2 and 3 station on Bergen Street in Park Slope. Unlike the groggy morning straphangers -- me included -- Owens, in his crisp white shirt, was downright chipper.

    "Things are going very well," he said.

    Owens, who is at a pretty severe financial disadvantage in the race, took the opportunity to point to this weekend's developments -- Thelma Davis, mother of the slain Councilman James Davis, pulled her endorsement from David Yassky yesterday -- as evidence of disorder among his opponents.

    "There has been some more excitement, with Thelma and Geoffrey Davis and the people surrounding them. What's going on in those campaigns?"

    He also said that the issue of race, which he has not exactly shied away from addressing during the campaign, had subsided "a little bit," and he boiled the rest of the contest down this way: "We're passed the petitioning stage so at this point, people are just going to have to make a choice."

    --Jason Horowitz

    Artful Brooklyn Industries Goes to Chelsea; Then the World?


    An artist's artsy rendering (click to expand)

    Next month, Brooklyn Industries--Williamsburg's finest purveyors of hip messenger bags and expensive T-shirts--will open their first Chelsea shop at 8th Avenue and 18th St.

    "In a way it's a big move," co-founder Vahap Avsar explained. "We allowed ourselves a little bit of a bigger budget, more time, and we planned it pretty well in terms of concept."

    The concept, of course, is sustainable design. "As a company, we have [been] very much--how would you say--environmentally friendly," the Turkish-born artist said. "Very conscious of how we make the products, and our resources." So the new store's furniture will be designed by Scrapile, a group that makes leftover wood into tables, light-fixtures and shelves.

    Better yet: Chelsea will get its first watertower-shaped chandelier and "trouser trestle" (a pants rack).

    But mightn't such Manhattanized niceties jeopardize Brooklyn Industries' outer-borough coolness? "We have to have at least eight, ten stores to make sense economically," Mr. Avsar explained. Yet the Chelsea place will only be their seventh. "We are looking around the East Village and Union Square, we are looking at Broadway below Canal."

    Earlier this year, the BKI Williamsburg flagship was vandalized with anti-consumerist graffiti.

    But the group hasn't suffered. For example: "We are getting quite a lot of online orders from the Upper West Side. So we'll look at that. It's similar to Park Slope."  read more »

    - Max Abelson

    Hope for Gowanus Canal?

    gowanus.jpg
    Via the Gowanus Lounge, the Park Slope Courier reports that Senator Chuck Schumer has funds coming out of the Senate Appropriations Committee that are earmarked for an Army Corps of Engineers feasibility study to assess "environmental problems and potential solutions in the Gowanus Canal."

    The canal, which connects the Red Hook waterfront to the Park Slope-Carroll Gardens nabe (a.k.a. Gowanus), is currently a pollution-saturated, industrial nightmare. It's got a certain beauty and charm, though, and once--if ever--it's cleaned up, real-estate values in that area are certain to soar.
    The money is for a study only, but the city's D.E.P. says it'll upgrade the canal's flushing tunnel soon--beginning in 2008 and continuing for three to four years--which will hopef