Showing posts with label Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Street. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Security Measure Turns Public Street into Prison Parking Lot in Sunset Park

A concrete barrier with the initials for the Federal Bureau of Prisons has closed 29th Street to thru traffic since 2001. It’s now used as a parking lot, according to prison officials. (Camilo Smith/The Brooklyn Ink)

A concrete barrier with the initials for the Federal Bureau of Prisons has closed 29th Street to thru traffic since 2001. It’s now used as a parking lot, according to prison officials. (Camilo Smith/The Brooklyn Ink)

By Camilo Smith

Along the southwest edge of 29th Street and Third Avenue in Sunset Park, cars dart along the shadow cast by the Gowanus Expressway. While drivers may not be able to distinguish the industrial red brick of the Federal Bureau of Prisons’ Metropolitan Detention Center from the other factories along the route, what’s immediately out of place is the long white concrete barrier that clumsily crosses 29th Street ending atop the sidewalk on the other end.

The barrier has been in place since just after September 11, according to city officials. It’s a security measure meant to protect the 12-story, double towers at 80 29th Street and its adjacent seven-story 100 29th Street building. The structures are respectively known as the West and East buildings that make up the Department of Justice’s MDC: Brooklyn.

Ed Ross, a Bureau of Prisons spokesman in Washington, confirmed that the access to the street in front of the detention center has been blocked for years. But members of Community Board 7 and local residents are saying enough is enough and that 29th Street, a public road, needs to have its concrete blockade removed and returned to public use.

“From a planning standpoint and from a community standpoint, it is something we view negatively,” says CB7 District Manager Jeremy Laufer. “Perhaps there are legitimate security reasons, but they’ve never been explained to this community.”

Most residents complain that the blocked street is used as a parking lot and although the blockage has been in place for nearly a decade its taken on a renewed importance. Given Brooklyn’s waterfront development initiatives, which include a planned 14-mile, multi-use waterfront greenway and a recycling center set to open next year, the concrete barricade is a reminder of transportation limitations in that section of Sunset Park’s overburdened industrial zone.

“It’s an inconvenience, not only for the community, but it’s an inconvenience for the recycling facility,” said Murad Awawdeh, a Sunset Park resident and community activist, referring to the nearly $100-million center owned by Sims Recycling of NY, which broke ground two months ago.

Laufer, the district manager, says the fact that Third Avenue is a one-way street, the 29th Street access is vital to get to the recycling center, which will sit on the edge of the Gowanus Bay once it’s complete. The blockade could create a bottleneck on Second Avenue. According to a City press release, the recycling center will function 24-hours a day, 6-days a week, and will receive drop-offs by “no more than 100 trucks per day”.

Laufer feels 29th Street was “seized” from the community, and knows the concrete barrier will cause trucks to reroute through his community, which already deals with a heavy truck presence. The area gets clogged due to the Gowanus Expressway lack of on ramps. Freight vehicles are often forced to use neighborhood streets to find highway access. Trucks making their way to the 30th Street Pier, where the Sims facility is being constructed may find that “There’s only one way in, and one way out,” after making their drop-offs, says Laufer.

The nearly 3-foot-high security barricade is made of several 10-foot-long concrete segments connected together to close the street at its crosswalk. This is a security measure for the federal prison, according to New York City Department of Transportation spokesman Scott Gastel. The facility, which opened in 1994, became famous for housing 9/11 suspects who later sued the prison, in what the media dubbed Brooklyn’s Abu Ghraib.

According to the Federal Highway Administration these so-called concrete Jersey barriers are intended to lift and redirect a vehicle that crashes into them. They have become fixtures near federal facilities throughout the country. Security experts say this form of perimeter security for government buildings increased following the September, 11 attacks. Especially for locations built near the curb or streets, “setback” distance from the street of 50-feet to 100-feet is seen as crucial for security.

“Security is a big issue,” says James Davis, spokesman for the Metropolitan Detention Center, Brooklyn located near the Sunset Park waterfront. (Camilo Smith/The Brooklyn Ink)

“Security is a big issue,” says James Davis, spokesman for the Metropolitan Detention Center, Brooklyn located near the Sunset Park waterfront. (Camilo Smith/The Brooklyn Ink)

“Security is a big issue. Most prisons sit on a couple hundred acres of land. In the city,” says James Davis, spokesman for Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center “we don’t have that luxury.” Davis says the prolonged shutdown of the street doesn’t rest with the Bureau of Prisons or the MDC. He would not say which agency has that final decision to keep 29th Street blocked. He did confirm that the street is designated for public use, however.

Perhaps the most perplexing thing about the street closure and the thing everyone in the community notices is that the barricade has helped turn 29th Street into a private, free parking lot. “We benefit from [the closure], the fact that we have a lot of lawyers come through. We have them park here.” Davis says the street is commonly used to park visitor and staff cars, among others in the local business community.

“That doesn’t sound like security to me,” says Laufer. “If employees of the prison are using this public space as a private lot, is that considered a taxable benefit and are they paying taxes on it? he asked.

The fact 29th Street is openly used as a parking lot behind a concrete security barricade is often referenced at Sunset Park community board meetings. CB 7’s waterfront development plan created in 2007, and called a 197-a plan, mentioned a goal of opening waterfront access at 29th St. It’s one of only two access points in the neighborhood, the other being the 58th Street Pier. Sunset Park borders 2 ?-miles of waterfront, and another access point at 43rd and 51st Street is being worked on as part of Bush Terminal Pier Park, set to open within the next two years.

The Brooklyn Waterfront Greenway initiative, which plans to connect Greenpoint to Sunset Park at one point in its early design phase, focused on a path through 29th Street, but that changed earlier this fall according to Awawdeh, a local resident and organizer with environmental justice organization Uprose, “The community plan was to get the Greenway onto Second and First Avenue as soon as possible, we found out at the last meeting that it’s not possible, because the prison won’t budge on that.”

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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Brooklyn Morning — Macy’s on Fulton Street

By 10:30 shoppers were dodging and weaving through the displays at Macy's on Fulton Street. Every available surface seemed covered with strings of Christmas lights. Christmas Trees were ubiquitous. You can hear the endless tape of Christmas music from the bathroom. The only colors in the spectrum are red, green, and gold. The effect was warmth, even as a cold wind blew outside. (Alex Eriksen/The Brooklyn Ink)

By 10:30 shoppers were dodging and weaving through the displays at Macy's on Fulton Street. Every available surface seemed covered with strings of Christmas lights. Christmas Trees were ubiquitous. You can hear the endless tape of Christmas music from the bathroom. The only colors in the spectrum are red, green, and gold. The effect was warmth, even as a cold wind blew outside. (Alex Eriksen/The Brooklyn Ink)

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Saturday, November 13, 2010

Google Street View Cameras Nab Brooklyn Drug Dealers

Three drug dealers were busted by images that Google’s Street View Cameras took that showed three men dealing in front of the Neighborhood Grocery on Jackson Street and Kingsland Avenue in Williamburg, New York’s PIX11 reports. Shaundell Dade, Jamel Pringle and Jonathan Paulino were arrested after the police conducted an undercover sting operation, Prosecutor Bridget Brennan said. They are allegedly heroin dealers. Police disguised as hipsters staged drug buys on the block after many complaints of drug-dealing were brought to their attention, police said. The three men are charged with multiple counts of criminal sale of a controlled substance.

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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Filene’s Basement, H&M and Aéropostale To Come to Fulton Street

Retailers like Filene’s Basement,? SYMS, H&M and Aéropostale are setting up shop at Fulton Street Mall in Downtown Brooklyn. With upscale housing developments being built, developers want to attract big name retailers. More on WSJ

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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Filene basement, H & M and the Aéropostale To Come Fulton Street

Retailers Filene basement, SYMS, H & M and Aéropostale taking place at Fulton Street Mall, shop in downtown Brooklyn. With high range construction housing developments, developers want to draw the name of major retailers. More WSJ

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Thursday, October 21, 2010

Street Carving

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

08: 00: 00 PM

SUNSET PARKWe don't know exactly how the first annual great pumpkin party turn out, but the idea of carving pumpkins tens, punch streets artists pumpkin, dance, a "mini zoo" involving live animals and the possibility of breaking the pumpkin against the walls and floors, looks like an adventure, especially since it takes place in the city always frightening industry, and it's free.

Published on 10.20.10.

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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Friend infiltration of art: extraordinary art the Covert Street

Ian Joseph's self portrait.

Undercover art lover is a bi-weekly column highlighting unexpected art or places.

There is more than this infiltration.

At the corner of Broadway and Covert Street (you cannot it), on the third floor of a building with apartments, seat of the take a look see Fine Art Gallery it has no signs, no mailbox, and although their website claims that they have regular hours of weekend, if you want to see the work box you better call in advance.

When Galerist Ian Joseph you leads to three floors of the residential building and opens the door to a modest space but well used, it is clear that this is not your typical experience of the gallery.

For the last month, photographs and acrylic paintings by the artist Chris McCardell occupied the main room to take a Look See and work definitely has its strengths.

McCardell photos (especially all reversed negative) present a concise composition and razor focused. However, this is not the main reason to hike this far from Bushwick - Look See lies a J Halsey - where a few galleries dare tread block.

In fact, it is work of Joseph benefits.His photographs are immediately stop.

Two parts that are currently up at the gallery are a series entitled "Heaven And Hell" was recently exposed to Christie.Ils auction house are two partially draped figures, disturbing images - search.According to the artist, is the point of the series - which often terrifying things is not as strange or horrific they seem.Photos strike a digitally manipulated as delicate balance works who feel always at hand.

In what is perhaps more strong piece of Joseph, a 28-inch-by-48-inch on called canvas print "this is me (Self Portrait)", repeated image gives the appearance of a Warhol, but with all added quality prints hers.Muted colors and images almost resembling video games artist has a soothing, child quality.

Paintings Joseph are considerable promise, especially abstract view room; a tribute to the expressionist painter abstract, Joan Mitchell.

Nicely, Joseph bears influences on his manche.Il there postcards of works by Mitchell and Jean-Michel Basquiat suspended in the small Hall of the gallery which houses his travail.Bien this section to take a Look See is barely big enough for five persons to remain standing in comfortably, Joseph has plans to mount a solo in the galerie.Toutefois main room show, even this small collection is something to see.

Published on lent 10.15.10.Jesse

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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Friend infiltration of art: extraordinary art the Covert Street

Ian Joseph's self portrait.

Undercover art lover is a bi-weekly column highlighting unexpected art or places.

There is more than this infiltration.

At the corner of Broadway and Covert Street (you cannot it), on the third floor of a building with apartments, seat of the take a look see Fine Art Gallery it has no signs, no mailbox, and although their website claims that they have regular hours of weekend, if you want to see the work box you better call in advance.

When Galerist Ian Joseph you leads to three floors of the residential building and opens the door to a modest space but well used, it is clear that this is not your typical experience of the gallery.

For the last month, photographs and acrylic paintings by the artist Chris McCardell occupied the main room to take a Look See and work definitely has its strengths.

McCardell photos (especially all reversed negative) present a concise composition and razor focused. However, this is not the main reason to hike this far from Bushwick - Look See lies a J Halsey - where a few galleries dare tread block.

In fact, it is work of Joseph benefits.His photographs are immediately stop.

Two parts that are currently up at the gallery are a series entitled "Heaven And Hell" was recently exposed to Christie.Ils auction house are two partially draped figures, disturbing images - search.According to the artist, is the point of the series - which often terrifying things is not as strange or horrific they seem.Photos strike a digitally manipulated as delicate balance works who feel always at hand.

In what is perhaps more strong piece of Joseph, a 28-inch-by-48-inch on called canvas print "this is me (Self Portrait)", repeated image gives the appearance of a Warhol, but with all added quality prints hers.Muted colors and images almost resembling video games artist has a soothing, child quality.

Paintings Joseph are considerable promise, especially abstract view room; a tribute to the expressionist painter abstract, Joan Mitchell.

Nicely, Joseph bears influences on his manche.Il there postcards of works by Mitchell and Jean-Michel Basquiat suspended in the small Hall of the gallery which houses his travail.Bien this section to take a Look See is barely big enough for five persons to remain standing in comfortably, Joseph has plans to mount a solo in the galerie.Toutefois main room show, even this small collection is something to see.

Published on lent 10.15.10.Jesse

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