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Cobble Hill

Arts and Entertainment, Events

Week-Long Brooklyn Book Festival Blankets The Borough

August 26, 2012

The Brooklyn Book Festival has announced its comprehensive lineup for the first-ever weeklong series of “Bookend Events” that will take place at venues throughout the borough from September 17 through September 23. The seventh-annual event is presented by Brooklyn Tourism and the Brooklyn Literary Council, initiatives of Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, with support from AT&T.

It’s billed as the largest free literary gathering in New York City, with numerous events taking place in Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens, Fort Greene and Park Slope. See the full schedule here.

Markowitz commented, “Brooklyn has more writers per square inch than almost anywhere else in the country, all contributing to our growing reputation as the epicenter of the literary universe—where authors from across the globe gather each fall for the Brooklyn Book Festival, one of the world’s most prestigious free literary festivals. This year, the Festival expands from four days to an entire week of diverse literary offerings.”


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7785

From the Web

Health

Winter Sun Farms Invites Cobble Hill & Park Slope Residents To Participate

August 22, 2012

Winter Sun Farms, which partners with local sustainable farms to supply a winter share of frozen and storage vegetables throughout the season, is available in Cobble Hill and Park Slope (as well as Bed Stuy, DUMBO, Prospect Park and Kensington). Their goal is to deliver a superior product at a fair price for consumers and the farmer, with a larger mission of creating a regional, fair and sustainable food system.

The initiative’s farmers “care for the land and the food they grow. They are part of our communities. We want you to know them, who they are and how they grow. We make it simple… the name of the farm goes right on the package,” Winter Sun Farms says.

For information on joining, see their website here.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7773

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Food

Cobble Hill’s Eastern European Eatery Karloff Reopens After Renovations

August 21, 2012

Welcome back to family-owned Eastern European restaurant Karloff in Cobble Hill, which has been closed for the past two months for some major whitewashing. Owners Olga and Artur tell Cobble Hill that the eatery is “back on track, introducing comfy ‘grandma cooking’ with a modern twist.”

Karloff serves lunch, dinner and brunch with all-time favorites like latkes, blintzes and varenikis, plus new additions like oxtail. “We still carry our delicious natural ice cream sourced from upstate New York, and currently feature six flavors that are neighborhood favorites,” they tell us.

Hours are: Monday-Friday, 5-10:30 p.m., and weekends, 10 a.m.-11 p.m. The address: 254 Court Street. Check out their website here.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7767

From the Web

Food

Cobble Hill’s Five Guys In A Pickle: Closes Down After A Year

August 20, 2012

After opening in Cobble Hill at 266 Court Street near Butler just last year, burger chain Five Guys has closed its doors, according to Brownstoner. The joint has nearby locations in Brooklyn Heights on Montague Street and in Downtown Brooklyn at the end of Fulton Mall at the Flatbush Extension. Pretty curious… This place has been expanding like mad and most locations seem to pack ‘em in.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7764

From the Web

Update Following Tragic July Accidental Death At Cobble Hill’s Christ Church

August 11, 2012

Following the tragic death of 61-year-old Richard Schwartz July 26, after lightning struck Clinton Street’s Christ Church steeple and dislodged stones, the Cobble Hill Association has posted an update from Father Ron Lau. The entire surrounding block is currently closed to traffic.

He says: “The tower is being partially dismantled and the stones stored until the engineer deems it safe to open the street and our buildings. All four pinnacles are down now. This was the slow part, as they are round and the basket is rectangular. Now that that is done, they have commenced dismantling the walls and buttresses, probably down to just below the bell chamber louvers, or perhaps the clock faces, [which] depends on what they find as they work. The tower is massive (walls are approximately 8 feet thick at buttress base and 4 feet at the bell louvers and 3 feet up top).”

The long range plan from the engineer’s point of view, Lau says, is that once the tower is stable and safe, the Parish House offices and preschool will be reopened, followed by repairs to the roof and northeast corner walls, removal of rubble from inside the church, repairing the organ (now full of grit), and then addressing tower restoration. He adds, “I have been asked to refer all questions in the future to The Rev. Canon Shawn P. Duncan, Canon for Media and Mission, who serves as Chief Information Officer for the Diocese of Long Island”: sduncan@dioceseli.org


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7740

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Real Estate

Vacant Lot At Henry & Kane Approved For New Townhouse Build

August 10, 2012

The Landmarks Preservation Commission has approved the design for a new townhouse to be built on an empty lot at 437 Henry Street at Kane Street. Brownstoner reports that the plans include a carriage house and modification of the fence along Kane. The lot is next to the double-wide mansion at 439-441 Henry Street.

The entire 100-by-200-foot property was purchased in January 2011 for $5.4 million by the current owners of 439-441 Henry. The existing Henry Street property will be subdivided into apartments, with CWB Architects overseeing plans—the same firm that is designing the Strong Place Townhouses next door on Kane Street. Work on the new townhouse isn’t expected to begin until next spring or summer.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7730

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Events

Car On Congress Walks Itself Across The Street?

August 10, 2012

A Cobble Hill Blog tipster who has lived in the neighborhood for a decade sent us the following mysterious quandary, which we shall file under the WTF category: “On Sunday we parked our car on Congress Street between Clinton and Henry on the north side, in a spot that would expire Thursday morning. When I dutifully went to move it last night, it was now on the south side of the street. The north side was covered in fresh tar and marked with saw horses, so clearly it was moved for road/utility work.”

She adds, “I am grateful the city did not tow the car (when we left it there Sunday we saw no warnings), but the car was in reverse with the emergency brake still on and locked, just as we left it. How in the world did they physically move it, and are there any regulations about this?”

Any ideas, out there?


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7725

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

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Real Estate

Developers Plan Townhouse Row Along Cobble Hill’s Congress Street

July 30, 2012

A pair of real estate developers is planning to renovate four pre-Civil War Cobble Hill townhouses—and to build from the ground up five more—all on a single block, at 118–123 Congress Street. The Real Deal reports that the project is a joint venture between 184 Kent developer JMH Development and Madison Estates. Morris Adjmi is its architect. It has yet to win approval from the Landmarks Preservation Commission. Madison Estates’ president and owner Gerard Longo expects that sales of the properties will bring in $27 to $30 million.

Currently, there are two properties at the site: one comprising the four townhouses, which were previously adjoined but will be separated into single-family residences; and the other a building constructed in the late 1970s, Longo tells the Real Deal.

Before their sale on March 1, both buildings were owned by the Brooklyn Diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, and the townhouses were used as a church rectory. JMH and Madison together purchased the Cobble Hill properties for $6.6 million.

The developers will be renovating townhouses with an eye toward accuracy, they say. They have vowed not to use materials that weren’t used at the time of construction, more than 150 years ago. The other building will be razed to accommodate five new single-family townhouses with features similar to their older neighbors in the Cobble Hill Historic District. The firms hope to break ground in the fall and estimate a rough 12-month completion.

(Photo: The Real Deal)


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7691

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News

Clinton and Kane Streets Closed Because of “Unstable” Christ Church

July 28, 2012

Notify NYC gives us the latest in the unfolding story that began with the fatal lightning strike on Christ Church:

Due to an unstable building in the vicinity, the following streets are closed to both vehicular and pedestrian traffic: Clinton Street from Degraw Street to Kane Street; Kane Street from Strong Place to Court Street. These closures are projected to last at least five days.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7672

From the Web