Archives

Open Thread: Best Car Service

August 9, 2012

In light of Brooklyn Heights Blog’s sixth birthday, it seems appropriate to re-address some posts that provide service to the residents of this great neighborhood. Over the next several weeks, we’ll offer Open Threads for a number of goods & services that folks regularly rely upon in the Heights.

I recently took a vacation westward and Google-searched “Best Car Services in Brooklyn Heights,” and sure enough, a 2008 post from BHB came to my aid. Four years later, we’re due for an update…

As Homer Fink wrote then: Subways and buses are nice, but if you’re just not in the mood, a friendly neighborhood car service is but a phone call away. Which local livery service do you use? Have any stories negative or positive? Comment away!

For the record, I went with Arecibo (718-783-6465), which was on time, efficient and competitively priced. (Feel free to send suggestions for future posts… contractors, locksmiths, painters, dog walkers, etc.)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/45333

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights

Brooklyn Commercial Real Estate Flourishes Jan-June 2012

August 9, 2012

Commercial real estate in Brooklyn remained robust throughout the first half of 2012, according to a report from commercial realty group TerraCRG. Some 563 sales worth more than $1.23 billion were recorded, an increase of 50% in dollar volume over the period last year.

Downtown—which includes Brooklyn Heights in the report—and Park Slope led with the highest dollar volume of total sales ($341M, 78 transactions); while Williamsburg & Greenpoint region were second ($334M, 75 sales). Perhaps more surprising, the neighborhoods of Bed-Stuy, Bushwick, and Crown Heights had the largest amount of trades overall ($195M, 191 sales), also boasting 2.3 times the number of multi-family transactions over any other region of Brooklyn.

The TerraCRG report’s largest transaction in Brooklyn Heights from January-June 2012 was 75 Clinton Street, which sold for $50.825M, over $1,100/SF. As BHB reported in July, the new rental property at the corner of Montague Street (above Rite Aid) is now 90% leased, with 66 of the 74 units spoken for.

South Brooklyn, including the Heights, had the highest dollar volume of all commercial retail sales in the borough during the first half of 2012, with more than $50 million among a mere 11 transactions. See a round-up of the TerraCRG report here.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/45321

From the Web

Open For Biz In Park Slope: Die Koelner Beirhalle Beer Hall

August 9, 2012

After months of bureaucratic delays, Die Koelner Beirhalle opened August 8 in Park Slope. The “KBH” beer hall at 84 St. Mark’s Place near 4th Avenue, boasts long wooden tables with capacity for 200+, with 30 German beers on tap and simple German fare, according to its Facebook page.

“We’d like to think of ourselves as a place where old meets new. Old (as in our beers) meets new (as in you, friendly neighbor folk and all your fun-lovin’ friends),” the KBH website hearkens. Beers range from 150 to over 500 years old and counting. “Good beer, plump sausages & more awaits.”


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7712

From the Web

History

Crain’s: Cobble Hill & Carroll Gardens’ Court Street Maintains Old-World Feel

August 9, 2012

“Court Street Shops Defy the Odds” is the headline of a Crain’s New York Business profile of the main street that runs through Cobble Hill and Carroll Gardens, which surveys the 13-block strip between Warren Street and Fourth Place, where nearly 20 longtime, mostly Italian-American mom-and-pop stores maintain healthy business.

The story notes that row houses within the region “can now fetch as much as $3 million. Pricey cars dot the curbs of low-key streets. Celebrity sightings—from Jay-Z to British novelist Martin Amis—are increasingly common. Yet out along Court Street, one of the neighborhoods’ main shopping drags, there is a surprising degree of continuity.”

Crain’s says that many of the Court Street stalwarts—from cafés to a clothier, many of them dating back to the early decades of the past century—have been able to escape rising rents “that have killed scores of their erstwhile neighbors, because their forebears had the foresight to snap up their spaces while they could. And nearly all of them have found ways to adapt to the area’s ever-evolving tastes while carefully preserving as much of the old ways as possible.”

For one, veteran sausage purveyor G. Esposito & Sons Jersey Pork Store, “started hawking rice balls, sandwiches and pasta alongside its curtains of handmade sopressata and pepperoni that hang from the pressed-tin ceiling.” Up the street, the owners of D’Amico Foods has been thriving since 1948. Current owner Francis D’Amico, whose grandfather Emanuele opened the store, says that when it opened, there were two kinds of coffee: dark-roast Italian and an American brown roast. Today, Francis cooks up more than 100 gourmet blends, while his wife, Joan, “still greets some longtime patrons with hugs and many others by their first names.”

Changes have also come at pub P.J. Hanleys, which is going strong 138 years after its first beer hit the bar, and at Scotto Funeral Home, which has been laying locals to rest for four generations.

“I had heard about the old-school Italian vibe here,” says Rachel Kash, a writer who moved to the area from the East Village three years ago. “I just had no idea about how many of these places still actually existed. Few areas have this kind of character or heritage.”

Read the full piece at Crain’s here.

(Photo: Row House Magazine)


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7708

From the Web

Celebrity Residents

Actor Patrick Stewart Sets Up House In Brooklyn

August 9, 2012

Trekkies might want to set their Transporters for Park Slope. Yorkshire, England-born actor Patrick Stewart, best known for his seven-season role as Captain Jean-Luc Picard in the “Star Trek” redux, has set up digs in the nearby Brooklyn neighborhood. Read more on the Cobble Hill Blog here.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/45315

From the Web

Celebrity Residents

Patrick Stewart Sets Up Digs In $2 Million Home (Somewhere) In Park Slope

August 8, 2012

Actor Patrick Stewart has moved to Park Slope, according to a Brownstoner tipster. While the address is not revealed, the writer hints that his new digs offer a plentitude of bedrooms and a large outdoor space. He reportedly paid around $2 million for the home.

The Yorkshire, England-born Stewart is best known for his starring turn for seven seasons as Captain Jean-Luc Picard in the “Star Trek” redux, as well as numerous Broadway roles. Check out “8 Reasons Why Park Slope Is A Lot Like The Enterprise (And Maybe Better)” at F”d in Park Slope here.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7701

From the Web

Real Estate

Boerum Hill Parking Lot At 71 Smith On The Market For Whopping $40 Million

August 8, 2012

A 27,582-square-foot parking lot at 71 Smith Street in Boerum Hill is on the market for a whopping $40 million, according to a story in the New York Observer. The property, between Schermerhorn and State streets, is primed for development, legally permitted to accommodate 206,530sf of residential space and 105,271sf of commercial space.

Nat Rockett, an EVP with Cushman & Wakefield’s Capital Markets Group, which is marketing the property with JRT Realty Group, believes it could be converted into a residential building, hotel or school. He says, “Boerum Hill is one of Brooklyn’s most exciting neighborhoods, and a development at this site is positioned to capitalize on its access to its countless amenities, superior access to transportation and rising population of young professionals.”

The Observer says that according to Streeteasy, comparables in the area for new townhouse and residential space range from $810-$860 per square foot. Rockett expects the land to trade for about $130 per square foot, which would translate into about $40 million. Continue Reading…


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7696

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Landmark Preservation, Real Estate

In The Pink: 29 Grace Court Finally Finds A Buyer

August 8, 2012

The 25-foot wide, four-family brownstone at 29 Grace Court, which has been on the market for nearly two years, has at last found a buyer. Originally listed for $6.2 million in September 2010, followed by a price drop to $5.95 million in January 2011, Brownstoner reports that its sale has been recorded for $5.25 million—not exactly a sacrifice. The home entered into contract June 8, closed July 18, with the deed recorded July 30.

The Brooklyn Heights residence, listed by Brown Harris Stevens, boasts a massive parlor floor with beaucoup original details and a stained glass skylight. It comprises a 2.5-floor owner’s duplex, ground floor studio and two additional floor-through apartments above. (Lots of [very pink] interior photos below.)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/45259

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment, Brooklyn Heights

Syfy’s Movies With A View: ‘Barefoot In The Park’ Screens Thursday

August 8, 2012

Syfy’s “Movies With A View” will feature the Robert Redford and Jane Fonda G-rated comedy “Barefoot In The Park” tomorrow night, Thursday August 9… with only three more films left in the 13th-annual summer series. The accompanying short film is “Love Competition by Brent Hoff, with music from DJ Still Life. The event takes place at Brooklyn Bridge Park’s Pier 1 Harbor View Lawn, beginning at 6 p.m., with the movie at sunset (just after 8 p.m.).

As usual, no lawn chairs, no pooches. There’s a 40% chance of scattered thunderstorms Thursday, with an evening low of a cool 73°.

Coming 8/16: “The Big Chill”; 8/23: “Unforgiven”; and 8/30, the final movie of the summer is selected by public vote.

More information is here. Movies With A View is presented by the Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy and the Brooklyn Bridge Park Corporation. Shorts are curated by BAMcinématek.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/45248

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights

Council Members Ponder Widening Brooklyn Bridge Walkways

August 8, 2012

Three City Council members representing both Brooklyn and Manhattan believe the Brooklyn Bridge needs to fatten up. Citing tight quarters along the pedestrian and bicycle paths, the members proposed Tuesday to widen the upper-level platform for tourists and commuters.

The New York Times reports that Brooklyn Councilman Stephen Levin suggested that “the engineering and ideas community” could be enlisted to widen the artery by as much as three times its current span, perhaps through a competition organized by local design groups.

Likewise, Councilman Brad Lander of Brooklyn, believes that “just looking at how the path goes around the buttresses gives you a sense that a wider path is feasible. If it can widen out there, surely we can find a way to widen it out elsewhere.” Councilwoman Margaret Chin, who represents the Manhattan side, also attended the event on Tuesday to lend support.

Lander’s office says the city Transportation Department has not yet been consulted about a possible plan, though Seth Solomonow, a spokesman for the Transportation Department, said the city shares their “interest in enhancing safety and accommodating the growing number of people crossing this iconic transportation hub and tourist destination.” Any proposed designs “would be part of a long-term look at improving bridge access and safety,” he said.

The width of the main portion of the 129-year-old Bridge’s pathway varies between 8 and 16 feet. A bike lane on the bridge can comfortably fit only one rider in many areas, though traffic is intended to flow in both directions. The council members cited a Transportation Department estimate that 4,000 pedestrians and 3,100 cyclists cross the bridge each day.

See the full NY Times story here. DNAInfo also reports here.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/45242

From the Web