Monthly Archives

May 2012

Watch Your Pedal! Cops Keeping Watch For Hicks Street Speeding

May 28, 2012

Police have amped up speed enforcement on Hicks Street in Cobble Hill following complaints from residents about chronic speeding and too many accidents. As of May 16, officers put a new radar gun in service, handing out eight tickets in one day, according to DNAinfo.com.

A police source comments that many folks use Hicks Street “as a service road when the BQE gets backed up.” The Department of Transportation also installed a “Speed Limit: 30 mph” sign, with accompanying radar to deter speeders. Police officers will sporadically visit the area to enforce speeding on that street, DNA says.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7234

From the Web

Events, Landmark Preservation

Cobble Hill Association Honors Two For Community Service

May 28, 2012

The Cobble Hill Association will honor two historians at its annual spring meeting on Tuesday May 29. Local historian Francis Marrone and dedicated preservationist Christabel Gough will be receiving CHA’s annual “Cobble Hill Hero Awards.”

Park Slope resident Marrone (pictured) has offered numerous tours over the years, while working to develop a “History Wiki” for Cobble Hill. He teaches history at New York University and will be guiding another tour of Cobble Hill on June 9. Roy Sloane, president of the Cobble Hill Association, notes: “He is considered one of New York City’s best tour guides.”

Gough is an officer for the Society for the Architecture of the City, covering landmark hearings for the West Village. At the meeting, Gough will be speaking on the topic of “Can Cobble Hill avoid Manhattanization?” Sloane adds, “She was the first person I was introduced to when I joined the Cobble Hill Association. She has been one of the landmark lions of the West Village.”

Following the reception, CHA will be holding its annual election of officers for the executive board. The meeting and reception will take place May 29 at Christ Church, located on the corner of Clinton and Kane streets. The reception begins at 6 p.m. and the meeting begins at 7:30 p.m.

For more information, see here.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7230

From the Web

Quote Of The Day: Brooklyn Heights Is ‘The Most Uninspiring Place To Live’

May 27, 2012

Comedian & actor Reggie Watts, who released Comedy Central special “Reggie Watts: A Live At Central Park,” earlier this month and appears in an IFC talk show this summer, was interviewed Friday by website College Times and had plenty to say about his former residential neighborhood of Brooklyn Heights.

The uber-hipster, who now resides in Williamsburg, mouths off by describing the neighborhood as “upper-middle class, a few white rich people and their ethnic nannies taking care of their white babies. If you’re an artist, it’s the most uninspiring place to live.”

REGGIE WATTS JOINS THE DISCUSSION: SEE HIS COMMENTS BELOW THE JUMP.

Ready or not…

I use to live in Brooklyn Heights, and it was mainly just brownstones with kind of upper-middle class, a few white rich people and their ethnic nannies taking care of their white babies. There’s a lot of strollers going up and down the street with all these women that are obviously not the mothers of these children just walking around.

And then some kind of boring college students going to whatever university is there. It’s the most uninspiring place to live. If you’re an artist, never live in a family community, unless you draw inspiration from children and nannies. It’s just horrible.

Watts’ current locale of Williamsburg, on the other hand, gets this stream-of-consciousness review:

Even though there are a bunch of partiers, there are really great artists amongst all those people. And it has great stores and shops and restaurants and a cool Promenade. It’s really a fun, happy area. Kind of the best area to live in.

It gets ragged on a lot, though. Yeah, which is good. The good thing is that it makes other people [too] annoyed to live here. The less people move here the better. Now we’re starting to see outside of coffee shops, like, six strollers. It’s either the hipsters that live here are getting older and having kids or the kids are moving to Williamsburg. I like kids, but kids kind of bum me out. It’s fine. I mean, people need to have kids. It’s just, like, you kind of go, ‘Aww, where are the adults having fun?’ Instead they’re running around asking, ‘Do you need some milk now?’ I love that they’re trying to still stay cool, you know. The parents will get their babies CBGB shirts.

Perhaps it’s best that the dude has found his solace outside of the Heights, huh?

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights

Eamonn’s in Brooklyn Heights Closing

May 26, 2012

Emmonn’s In Brooklyn, the Irish pub and restaurant at 174 Montague Street that has served the community for 17 years, will be closing its doors permanently on June 17. A manager on duty told BHB that the owner of the building is converting the space into condos.

The Brooklyn Eagle is also reporting the story Saturday here, which quotes Eamonn’s GM Heloise Traynor confirming that landlord Robar Inc. sold the building and its air rights to a developer, who plans to turn it into condos. Eamonn’s shares the two-story building at 172-174 Montague St., between Clinton and Court streets, with Hallmark.

“It’s the end of an era. We’re very sad for our whole extended family here,” Traynor told the Eagle. “It’s just a shame all the mom-and-pop shops are getting pushed out. It’s impossible to keep up with these rents, absolutely impossible; whoever they get in here is going to be a chain store.”


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/41173

From the Web

DUMBO, Food

New York Times Gives Mexican Gran Electrica A Taste Test

May 26, 2012

Gran Electrica, the Mexican restaurant that opened in March at Five Front Street on the DUMBO border, gets the full treatment in a New York Times review. Mind you, our own BHB Karl Junkersfeld has already weighed in. His verdict: “Delicioso.”

The Times’ Robin Finn remarks that the restaurant “is a brick-walled, votive-lighted, tin-ceilinged amalgam of the sustainably local and the whimsically loco. The mescal beverage options promise to knock your Birkenstocks off, as does the back garden, where the Brooklyn Bridge curves overhead like a distant awning.”

See full review here. (Photo: NYT)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/41166

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Food

Montague Street’s Oh My Pasta! Kaput; Successor Lined Up

May 26, 2012

Oh My Pasta! has gone limp. After opening about nine months ago, on September 3, 2011, the Italian eatery at 142 Montague Street has shuttered. The locally run restaurant was owned & operated by Marco Lasala, a native Italian from Barletta in southern Italy, who had moved to Brooklyn Heights, serving a menu of family recipes assembled from his homeland.

While reviews were generally positive for the locale, there’s something about that second-floor location at 142 Montague that’s had a tough time catching a break. Before Oh My Pasta!, the site held Taze Turkish restaurant, and Turkish Kapadokya previous to that. And let’s not forget there have been two fires in the building, one in September 2008 and another in March 2007. Somehow, Aerosoles in the ground floor space has managed to carry on.

Fortunately(?), a successor is already lined up for the second-floor space. A sign posted in the window has a hearing set for “Sangthongsiri Inc.” to open a restaurant, with a request to serve liquor, wine and beer. (The Community Board 2 hearing is June 6 at 6 p.m. at the Brooklyn Hospital Center, 3rd Floor Conference Room, at 121 DeKalb Avenue.)

A Google search for the biz lists its address as 156 Court Street in Brooklyn, 11201. Good luck… and let’s hope the joint’s name is a little easier on the ears than Sangthongsiri.

(Photos: Pasta!/Chuck Taylor; Taze/Sarah Portlock; Kapadokya/Homer Fink)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/41148

From the Web

Books

Brooklyn Bugle Book Club: Rebecca Rogers Maher, a romance novelist in our midst

May 25, 2012

Racy romance novels may not be for every reader, but it’s not every day that a writer of one of them presents herself in our neighborhood. Yet there, sitting in Tazza with a cup of tea, was Rebecca Rogers Maher, author of the forthcoming “Snowbound with a Stranger,” a contemporary (and racy) romance novel about to be released by Carina Press, Harlequin’s digital branch.

Maher, the mother of two young sons, calls herself a typical clog-wearing, playground-hanging neighborhood resident. A former teacher, Maher found that parenting made similar deep spiritual and emotional demands on her. In response, she says, “I decided to make some time for myself, and started writing a few hours a week.”

And as she wrote, Maher found she liked writing about sex. “I write about sex because I always want to see sex scenes, in every movie or book. It’s an important part of character development.” Maher’s books focus on working class women. The protagonist in “Snowbound with a Stranger” is a nurse; the main character in her first book, “I’ll Become the Sea” is a teacher. Her third book, “Fault Lines,” about a rape survivor, will be published in September, also by Carina Press. In her blog, Maher calls these books her Recovery Trilogy.

“I am trying to write characters who have rich emotional lives but remain working-class,” she says. Nurses, teachers, firefighters, social workers – they work hard, for little money or prestige, and when “they do the job well, they are invisible.” Maher hopes that her books, light in genre and content, can spark a wider discussion. “I want to convey that there is no more value to a wealthy person than to a working class person, that both can have deep and rich emotional lives.”

So where does sexuality come into it? “Women’s sexuality in movies and fiction is problematic—there’s no place for women to initiate sex, to want it, to have emotional reactions to it. But sexuality is an important part of character development. We need to follow characters into the bedroom. Cultural issues explode in the act: how we see our bodies, our relationships.” Yes, her books can be raw—but the sex scenes in “Snowbound with a Stranger” are fresh and alive. You can read a preview of the book here.

The line between sex scenes and erotica can be a fine one, and Maher refuses to draw it, saying “I’m interested in erotica as it builds character, because I’m interested in what real people do in sexual situations.” As for the people in her life, Maher has told certain family members that they may want to avoid her books. Her boys are too young to read the books now; Maher’s best guess is that they will not want to read them when they are older.

Maher went to Vassar, where she majored in sociology, then worked as a political organizer. After a couple of years she joined the New York Teaching Fellows program, and taught for four years in a Crown Heights Elementary School. Perhaps it’s not the background you’d expect for a writer of romance novels, but for Maher, it’s working.

Have a book you want me to know about? Email me at asbowie@gmail.com. I blog about metrics for people who hate numbers here.

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment

Brooklyn Hosts OpSail At Red Hook Marine Terminal Memorial Day Weekend

May 21, 2012

Four tall ships, four foreign navy vessels and two U.S. Coast Guard cutters will be open for public visits at the Red Hook Marine Terminal in Brooklyn, Memorial Day weekend, from Saturday May 26 through Monday May 28. The event is part of New York City’s OpSail celebration.

The week-long citywide OpSail event kicks off at 8:11 a.m. Wednesday May 23, with the Majestic Parade of Ships—17 tall ships and 10 U.S. Navy and foreign military ships—sailing beneath the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.

Ships will arrive from Spain, Mexico, France, Japan, Canada, Finland, the U.K. and U.S. ports. More info is below:

Where: Red Hook Marine Terminal, Columbia Street entry at Congress Street
Public transportation is strongly suggested: B61 and B63 to Atlantic Avenue and Columbia St.

When: Saturday, May 26, Sunday, May 27 and Monday, May 28, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.

Ships
Tall Ships
Juan Sebastian de Elcano, schooner, Spain
Cuauhtemoc, barque, Mexico
Etoile, schooner, France
La Belle Poule, schooner, France

Navy Ships
HMCS Iroquois, destroyer, Canada
JS Shirane, destroyer, Japan
FNS Pohjanmaa, mine layer, Finland
RFA Argus, hospital/cargo, United Kingdom

US Coast Guard Cutters
USCG Seneca
USCG Willow


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7223

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Events

Third-Annual Brooklyn Bridge Birthday Celebration At Brooklyn Tattoo May 27

May 21, 2012

How’d you like the Brooklyn Bridge generously sprawled across your back? The third-annual Brooklyn Bridge Birthday celebration will do the honors for you on Sunday May 27, 1-7 p.m., at the Brooklyn Tattoo & Urban Folk Art Gallery in Cobble Hill. To commemorate the 129th anniversary of the Brooklyn Bridge, a group art show and a special $29 rate on tattoos is scheduled.

The event planners note: “It is a time honored tattoo parlor tradition to commemorate an auspicious date or event with a themed tattoo.” Shops have long been inking $13 “13″ tattoos when that date falls on Friday the 13th, or $31 Halloween images on October 31.

And thus, Brooklyn Tattoo at 99 Smith Street, will again honor one of its biggest inspirations three days after the Bridge’s 129th anniversary on May 24. The Urban Folk Art Gallery, adjacent to the shop, will host a group art show commemorating the Bridge through the eyes of 20+ local painters illustrators, educators, photographers, comic book makers and tattooers, opening Friday, May 25, 7-11 p.m.

The Brooklyn Bridge tattoos draw from several flash (pre-drawn) images that evoke the spirit that has defined New York’s iconic skyline. Tattoos will be etched into your skin by Brooklyn Tattoo staff on a first come, first serve basis. Copies of the flash design sheets will also be available for purchase, as well as a limited edition book by Adam Suerte showcasing 50 Brooklyn Bridge tattoos he’s done in the past. And: Brooklyn Bridge t-shirts, pint and shot glasses, and other themed merch will be sold in the gallery, as usual.

The third-annual, two-part event is sponsored by Bar Great Harry at 280 Smith Street.

Brooklyn Tattoo has been operating in South Brooklyn for more than a decade. Its gallery opened in January 2011. For more information, contact Adam Suarte at 718-643-1610.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7213

From the Web

Food

Tale of the Tweets – The Weekend at Googa Mooga

May 20, 2012

The Bonnaroo of food, Googa Mooga, hit Prospect Park this weekend. And if you ask the Twitterverse it was either awesome or a mess. With the Roots and Hall & Oates playing the event, we’re thinking awesome. Add in the photo of Coolio included here and it closes the deal. We’ve compiled some of the best Tweets from GM here via Storify. Enjoy!

Googa Mooga in Brooklyn

@googamooga #brooklyn

Storified by Brooklyn Heights Blog · Sat, May 19 2012 22:06:19

I had a great time at @googamooga. The lines were OD, but for the most part the food made up for it. Would definitely go again. #googamoogaDamien Lemon
.@HolyGhostNYC at @GoogaMooga main stage from earlier today #nyc http://pic.twitter.com/FgrFhzZjNashville Nights
@coolio was "cookin" @googamooga !! By far the funniest thing there: http://pic.twitter.com/vOOtQOrjEric Isaac
Fried chicken from @BlueRibbonNYC #extramooga @GoogaMooga. I really had to fight the crowd to get this chicken. http://pic.twitter.com/pmvlk5amKatie Chlada
Horchata shake from @biggayicecream @GoogaMooga. One of the only GA food vendors @philwnyc and I waited for. http://pic.twitter.com/i1pFObTYKatie Chlada
Shrimp sandwich from Fedora #extramooga @GoogaMooga that I had to chase a waiter for. Was not even that tasty. http://pic.twitter.com/vaH4KuoFKatie Chlada
Dirt cake from @dirt_cake. Another GA food we managed to snag @GoogaMooga http://pic.twitter.com/iW7vEL3zKatie Chlada
@GoogaMooga I have so many recommendations I don’t even know where to start. Event planning 101. Hope tomorrow is better for the lucky few.Carrie Baizer Tracy
This pretty much sums up @GoogaMooga. Almost there but not really. Left early to go home and order in. http://pic.twitter.com/EJ0AssjDKatie Chlada
@GoogaMooga I for one had a great day. People need to relax. Enjoy the park and the beautiful day along with the FREE music. Thanks !Spencer Lindenman
holy ghost! @googamooga http://instagr.am/p/K1J4tkGUuY/Laura Kadamus
I loved seeing the graceful butchery art of @AprilBloomfield #extramooga @GoogaMooga. http://pic.twitter.com/xdDe2rMhKatie Chlada
Ass ass ass ass ass #BigSean @GoogaMooga http://pic.twitter.com/BO2uj1O1Eddie Huang
The unabashed @NoReservations #ExtraMooga @GoogaMooga. http://pic.twitter.com/V2kFpTjeKatie Chlada
Smile for the cameras! Team Dirty Bird @GoogaMooga !!! What a glorious day. http://pic.twitter.com/EPYaHqhfDirty Bird To Go
@coffeeandbikes @counter_culture @GoogaMooga @jessekahn – Apollo 8.0 + @umamiburger is a truly satisfying combination. http://pic.twitter.com/sveV8pb4Tyson Stagg
@googamooga great idea tragic executionziegz
Hamageddon @googamooga http://instagr.am/p/K1K2OnIdrX/Sarah Burton
Besides ridic beer lines & black hole for all things phone/web, @GoogaMooga was sweet.. Holy Ghost! a huge highlight http://pic.twitter.com/gnFdblNeEmily Million
weird –drove past @GoogaMooga sign makin fun of it. wk later manager is like "you guys are headlining that!" who’s coming out to BK 2day?!Questo of The Roots
@GoogaMooga by the numbers — 300 pounds of horse meat, 3,000 slices of crack pie and more! http://nyp.st/M3ePdd via @NewYorkPostChristina Amoroso

From the Web