Brooklyn Eagle_20190802

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BROOKLYN EAGLE

Volume 19, No. 28 Volume18, 19,No. No. 50 26 Volume 18, No. 25 Volume 14

Two Sections

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2019 THURSDAY, AUGUST 1,21, 2019 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2018 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2017 1,

Brooklyn's Hottest Graphic Novelist

$1.00 $1.00 $1.00

Photo by Gail Gaynin/Morgan Gaynin Inc.

An interview with

See page 6

RAUL COLON Illustrator behind this year’s Brooklyn Book Festival poster

Eagle photo by Lore Croghan

Graphic courtesy of Brooklyn Book Festival

SEE PAGE 3

Scaling the Heights: Arts Patron Shen Brings Fashion Into Unique Perspective

Don Newcombe ENVELOPE, PLEASE

Artist: Leon Polk Smith. Gallery: Lisson Gallery.

Photo courtesy of Carla Shen

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The Park Slope art show with FREE 1926-2019 BREAKFAST FOR KIDS at Bareburger Brooklyn Cobble Hill 149 Court Street Brooklyn, NY 11201 347.529.6673

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Made in Brooklyn Tours show visitors Industry City By Jaime DeJesus brooklyneagle.com

Showing Brooklynites and tourists alike a new side of Industry City, Made in Brooklyn Tours added the Sunset Park complex to its roster of destinations this summer. The new tour, dubbed the “Made in Industry City Tour,” kicked off on June 20 with a curated selection of Brooklyn makers based at the century-old manufacturing complex. Dom Gervasi, founder of the tour company and a one-time Sunset Park resident, said that Industry City had approached him about doing the tour. “They reached out to me and asked if I was interested in going out there and designing a tour around the makers of Industry City,” he said. “For so many years, it was empty. I’m sure there were things going on but it wasn’t something a lot of people knew about.” The goal for Gervasi — who launched his business in 2011 — was designing a tour that showcases both Industry City’s rich history and its variety of businesses. “Every neighborhood has a story and IC has its own interesting one, and I have to develop that. I try to capture the story and nature of Industry City,” he said. To do that, he explained, “It’s not my way just to find a company and business that makes something really cool and automatically include them on the tour. I want to go out and meet the people behind the business, get the backstory, see how welcoming they are.”

Glass Art of Brooklyn is one of the stops on the tour. Attendees can expect a different experience on this Made in Brooklyn tour from previous ones. “The way the tour is run is very different than the other ones I do [in Red Hook, DUMBO and Williamsburg],” Gervasi said. “They are primarily outside and we are walking around two miles throughout the entire neighborhood.” For Industry City, he went on, “It’s different because we’ll primarily be inside the six buildings that are between Second and Third Avenue visiting the different businesses.”

The tour covers several popular areas including Innovation Alley, Li-Lac Chocolate and Japan Village and also reveals the inner workings of the complex. “My challenge was to try to contrast the different types of businesses,” he said. “I wanted to contrast old school and new school, and traditional artisan versus what’s new today. That was a story I was trying to tell with Industry City.” “The maker community here is an integral part of Industry City, as well as the great land-

Photo courtesy of Industry City

scape of light manufacturing in cities around the country,” said Lauren Danziger, the complex’s chief marketing officer. “The ability to bring people inside maker spaces opens the doors of creativity and accessibility, dispelling the idea that it’s not possible to thrive as a creative business in New York City. These tours are providing a platform for this type of accessibility.” The Made in Industry City tour takes place every Thursday at 10 a.m. Tickets are $40. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit www.madeinbrooklyntours.com.

The Windsor Terrace artist who is giving her works away By Lore Croghan brooklyneagle.com

A Windsor Terrace artist is giving her work away one piece at a time — and bringing a little joy to her neighbors in the process. Once a week, painter and printmaker Emily Waters puts a work of art in a wooden display case that she made out of wine boxes and set beside her stoop. She posts a photo of the work on her Instagram account, and then she waits.

Emily Waters, seen here with a watercolor she painted of her cat, Bamboo, gives away an artwork every week. Eagle photo by Lore Croghan

2 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, August 1, 2019

If you want to own the piece, you have to write to Waters and tell her so, whether by email, Instagram direct message or via a note you leave in her real-life mailbox. The first person to ask for the work is the one who wins it. “We live in a time that’s so stressful,” Waters said in a recent interview in the back garden of her house. “And I think art is as important as what’s going on in the news … Maybe it’s the salve or something — I don’t know — of existence.” The art-display box is lit up at night, brightening the way for people out on the street. Dog walkers especially like it. So do people walking with their kids. Waters started the giveaway a few months ago. She got the idea from free libraries, those wooden stands where you can take a book or leave a book. A ‘morning painter’ The dining room of Waters’ Windsor Terrace home doubles as a studio, where the artist sits down every morning around 5 or 6 a.m. and paints for two hours. “It kind of continues the dream state,” Waters said. “The light is fantastic.” To keep from breaking the spell, she tries not to touch her phone or any other electronic devices. “I call myself a ‘morning painter,’” Waters said. “It’s just my methodology.” Her two cats, Bamboo and Houdini, keep her company. They are sometimes the subject matter of her works because they are “ever-present,” she said. From an Illinois farm to the East Village Waters, the seventh of nine children, grew

up on a farm in Illinois. Neither of her parents was an artist. But her father, who was an office worker, was also a dreamer. “He worked nights on the farm, because the farm was his dream,” she explained. “He loved the land.” At an early age, she decided to be an artist. It gave her a “personal identity,” she said, and a way to spend time alone, which is a valuable thing when you live with your big family. One of her sisters is also an artist. She lives in West Virginia and teaches art at a high school. Waters got her undergraduate degree from the University of Illinois, where she studied art history and graphic design. After that, at art school in Basel, she had teachers who taught old-fashioned drawing skills. She got her graduate degree in graphic design and drawing from the Swiss art school Kunstgewerbeschule Basel. “They were really masters,” she said. In 1984, once she finished grad school, Waters came to New York. For several years, she lived in a building on East 5th Street in the East Village. It was surrounded by vacant lots but “turned out to be a really cool building,” she recalled. Some of the tenants were performance artists. Some were “sort of indigent,” she said. The rent was just $175 a month when she moved in. There were rats in her apartment, though. “We had to learn how to stuff the rat holes with chicken wire and steel wool,” she said. She put her art career aside for a while, and worked in a restaurant and went to nightclubs. Now, Waters works as an adjunct professor at the Cooper Union and Parsons The New School.

A Park Slope apartment big enough for a loom When she had kids in the 1990s — a pair of twins, to be specific — she headed for Brooklyn. She found a seven-room apartment in Park Slope for $700 a month. There was room in the fourth-floor walk-up for her to set up a huge loom and weave. A friend at the Museum of Modern Art hired her to do graphics work for catalogs and create signage for exhibitions. It was a great time to be at MoMA, “when curators still kind of ruled,” she said. “They were really amazing, the curators, then.” She found a Windsor Terrace rowhouse in 2001 for around $300,000 a couple blocks from Prospect Park, where she still lives today. The closing was supposed to take place at a bank on Wall Street the week of the 9/11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. In the wake of the attacks, it was done later, on Staten Island. ‘Kind of spiritual’ Waters doesn’t have gallery representation. That will come in due time, when she’s ready. In the meantime, she plans to continue her art giveaway indefinitely. She’s happy that her work is out there. Her Instagram followers say they love seeing art in front of her house. “I walk by your display every morning and it never fails to make me smile,” one of them posted. “Thank you for this lovely addition to the neighborhood,” a second person wrote. “I’m obsessed,” said a third. The neighbors give Waters compliments in person, too. “This guy came by last night. He was walking his dog when I came home,” Waters recounted. “And he said, ‘Oh, you did this? This is really nice. I come by because it’s kind of spiritual.’”


An interview with Raúl Colón, the illustrator behind this year’s Brooklyn Book Festival poster By Mary Frost brooklyneagle.com

The Brooklyn Book Festival has unveiled this year’s poster, created by author and artist Raúl Colón. As the illustrator of more than 30 books for children, Colón has received numerous awards, including the Golden Kite Award, Pura Belpré Award, and gold and silver medals in the Original Art show. His picture books “Draw!” and “Imagine!” were chosen as American Library Association Notable Books. The festival takes place Sept. 22, with Children’s Day on Sept. 21. Colón spoke to the Brooklyn Eagle on Tuesday about his artwork, his sources of inspiration and how he created the Book Festival poster. There’s a hint of magic in this year’s poster for the Brooklyn Book Festival — a golden glow that suffuses the travelers in their little paper boat, sailing towards adventure. This is the signature style of artist Raúl Colón. The elusive glow can’t be created digitally, and that’s one reason why he is sought after as an illustrator. When the Book Festival representatives called him, it was a privilege, Colón said. “I decided okay, I’ll do it. They know my style. I started thinking about Brooklyn, and how people enjoy books. I sent them a few ideas, and they chose this one,” he said. “I wanted to show people coming across the East River, going to Brooklyn. There’s nothing better than the [Brooklyn] Bridge” to represent the borough, he said. “And the people — I wanted diversity, and I know the Book Festival people did too. “The boat symbolizes people going on an adventure. It’s a paper boat, to make it a page with words and text. The quotes are from Shakespeare’s ‘Romeo and Juliet.’ Colón said. “A little fantasy, a journey. All these folks reading in a little boat going to Brooklyn.” The poster also can be seen as representing a group of people, refugees, trying to reach another shore, to find a new world, he said. “This country was founded this way. When you read a book, you are going to another land.”

Colón creates his artwork using colored pencils over watercolor washes. The wash under-painting is almost monochromatic, he said, with just a few color varieties — sepias, golden yellow, ochres and brown washes. “On top, I draw images in half tones. After that dries, I draw in layers of colored pencil. I finish with lithograph pencil to put some darks in it. It takes a while.” Colón spent a week working out the colors and sent festival organizers three or four sketches. It took him another week to “put down the color.” “My first thought was which colors would work,” he said. Blues predominate. Life as an illustrator “I got my start in editorial illustrations, posters and novel covers — if you remember those,” Colón said. He illustrated his first picture book in 1995. While he now works mostly with books, Colón will occasionally create an illustration for a magazine or poster. With a tile setter, he created a ceramic mosaic wall mural at the 191st Street subway station (for the 1 and 9 train stop). When trying to decide if he wants to illustrate a book, Colón sees if he can visualize it while reading the manuscript. “Images start popping into my head. I’ll take a job if I feel the images are interesting.” One thing that people may not realize is when a writer and an artist work together on a book project, they seldom get together, Colón said. “In picture books, the artist and writer stay separated a long time. Editors give everybody free range. Usually writers depend on us,” he said. If it’s not working out, however, “They can have their say. Editors like it that way.” There are exceptions to this rule. When Colón worked with author Frank McCourt, “He had his say on that. Certain writers get theirs.” He added, “He was easy to work with.” While Colón is making a good living at his art, being an illustrator is harder now that it used to be, he said. “Album covers have disappeared,

A magical piece of artwork created by artist Raúl Colón illustrates the Brooklyn Book Festival’s poster this year.

Graphic courtesy of Brooklyn Book Festival

Award-winning illustrator Raúl Colón.

Photo by Photo by Gail Gaynin/ Morgan Gaynin Inc.

and print also in many areas. And there are a lot more people illustrating,” he said. “However, a new area is video games. Hopefully, new venues will open,” he said.

hid a small tribute to Kubrick inside a new book he’s working on about stars.) “Music and film inform what you do as an artist,” he said. “It’s another way to stay creative.”

Colón’s inspirations Comic books were his first inspiration as a kid, Colón said. He admired Steve Ditko, the original artist who illustrated the “Spider-Man” comics (with writer Stan Lee). He once saw an ad for the Famous Artist School and learned about Norman Rockwell, who was on the board. “I said, ‘Wow, I’d love to do that when I grow up.” Later, he admired editorial illustrator Brad Holland and illustrator Ralph Steadman (who famously collaborated with Hunter S. Thompson). Movies also have a big influence on his art, including the work of Stanley Kubrick. (While he can’t go into details, Colón hinted that he

A brief stint in Brooklyn Colón was born in New York City in 1952 and moved with his parents at the age of 10 to Puerto Rico. He studied commercial art there in a U.S government-funded program. In 1978, Colón moved to Florida, working at an educational television center. He also lived in College Point, Queens for a year and a half. “It was very expensive — $600 a month,” he laughed. Colón even lived in Brooklyn for a couple of months with his cousin. He enjoys visiting the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn Public Library and the Transit Museum “with all those old trains,” he said. “Brooklyn has changed so much,” he noted. “It’s more interest-

ing than it used to be.” He moved in 1991 with his family — a wife and two sons — to New City in Rockland County, where he lives today. He’s got six young grandchildren. Brooklyn Book Festival Colón joins the ranks of cartoonist Julia Wertz, illustrator Adrian Tomine and author and designer Chip Kidd, who created the art for past festival posters. The poster will be on sale on Children’s Day and Festival Day, as well as online, with all proceeds supporting the not-for-profit festival. Colón will be appearing with other picture book authors, illustrators and performers on Children’s Day, September 21, where he will give children a look at one of his “wordless” books, “Imagine!” or “Draw!” “Wordless books are like silent movies,” he said. “The children provide the stories. They come up with them better than I do.”

Thursday, August 1, 2019 • Brooklyn Eagle • 3


The Park Slope art show with snail mail submissions Ground Floor Gallery’s biennial is receiving submissions from all over the world. By Lore Crogham brooklyneagle.com

A Park Slope gallery owner is using an old-fashioned means of gathering works for a new art show: snail mail. Through Aug. 6, Krista Scenna is accepting submissions to a Ground Floor Gallery exhibition called “Priority Mail: Our 2019 Mail Art Biennial.” She’s expecting to receive artworks from Chicago, Block Island, Montreal and Brazil for the gallery show at 343 Fifth St. If you mail her a 5-by-7-inch piece by the deadline, she will include it in the exhibition. The pieces can be as large as 6-by-9 inches if they’re framed. Prints and photos must be limited-edition works. Just one submission per artist is allowed. She’ll include your art in the exhibition even if it arrives late if problems with the postal service caused the delay. This method of gathering submissions gives Ground Floor Gallery a “rare opportunity” to show works from artists who live outside New York and in other countries, Scenna told the Brooklyn Eagle. Usually, the gallery focuses mostly on Brooklyn-based artists. “It’s exhilarating to be able to show 100 to 200 artists in our little space,” she told the Eagle via email. “We also pride ourselves on accepting all submissions (not our usual practice), which provides an opportunity for dozens of emerging artists to show at a Brooklyn-based, commercial gallery space — something many of these artists would not have ac-

Ground Floor Gallery is displaying about 60 works it has already received for its mail-in biennial.

This is a detail from “Bird Brain” by Jeanne Tremel, which is included in Ground Floor Gallery’s “Priority Mail: Our 2019 Mail Art Biennial.”

Eagle photos by Lore Croghan

cess to otherwise.” About 60 paintings, drawings and prints have already arrived at the gallery and are on display. Scenna and Jill Benson, who were both independent curators, founded Ground Floor Gallery in 2013. Their aims were to create a comfort zone for people who are new to art buying and to advance the careers of up-andcoming but under-represented artists. The biennial makes contemporary art accessible to Brooklyn residents by zeroing in on small, modestly priced pieces, Scenna told the Eagle. As a democratizing gesture, she’s pricing each work in the biennial at $125. The gallery will donate 10 percent of its profits to the Committee to Protect Journalists. “Whether you have a slim budget for art, live in a studio apartment — or both — you can still buy original artwork while supporting a living artist,” she said. “The backstory involving who sent the work from where makes it a true conversation piece that Brooklyn residents want to live with, look at every day and discuss.” Ground Floor Gallery held mail-in biennials in 2015 and 2017. The opening reception for “Priority Mail: Our 2019 Mail Art Biennial” is set for Aug. 8., and the show will run through Sept. 15.

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United States District Court for the Southern District of New York SANWAR AHMED, Individually and On Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated, V. CITY OF NEW YORK, 17 CV 3044 NOTICE TO NEW YORK CITY MOBILE FOOD VENDORS: This settlement affects the rights of licensed or unlicensed New York City mobile food vendors who, in the three years preceding the filing of this lawsuit through and including the preliminary approval date of the stipulation, were issued a summons during the relevant time period and have had their nonperishable unpermitted vending equipment seized by the City of New York without the City of New York providing a voucher to enable retrieval of the seized property. If the settlement is approved, the City of New York will pay $585.00 to each class member who files a successful claim, with the possibility of a supplemental payment up to $415.00. Additionally, the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (“DOHMH”) shall conduct one additional training session on how to properly document and notice property seized from mobile food vendors, and establish when applicable new DOHMH staff members will be trained in due course after they are hired on properly documenting and noticing property seized from mobile food vendors. IF YOU WISH TO OBJECT TO THE FAIRNESS OF THE PROPOSED SETTLEMENT, YOU MAY APPEAR AT AUGUST 13, 2019 AT 4:00 PM OR SUBMIT WRITTEN OBJECTIONS BY JULY 23, 2019 TO: Clerk of the Court United States District Court for the Southern District of New York 500 Pearl Street New York, NY 10007 IF YOU ARE A CLASS MEMBER BUT WISH TO BE EXCLUDED FROM THE PROPOSED SETTLEMENT, SUBMIT YOUR REQUEST IN WRITING BY JULY 23, 2019 TO: Matthew Shapiro Urban Justice Center 40 Rector Street, 9th Floor New York, NY 10006 For further information or to get a copy of the full settlement notice or the settlement agreement, contact the Urban Justice Center at 646-602-5681 OR mshapiro@urbanjustice.org.


News Around the Boro NO GAS, NO BURGERS

BOROUGHWIDE — Two Brooklyn deli owners say National Grid may cost them $400,000 by refusing to supply natural gas to a new burger restaurant they’re planning in Brooklyn, according to Bloomberg News. The two men are victims of a face-off between the gas utility and state regulators since New York and New Jersey have denied approvals for the planned $1 billion Williams Cos. Pipeline expansion. Williams Cos. plans to reapply, but in the meantime, National Grid is declining to approve any new contracts to supply gas.  BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — The buyers of the $9.8 million Brooklyn Heights townhouse at 16 Sidney Place are horror movie producer Jason Blum, known for “Paranormal Activity” and “The Purge,” and his wife, television writer Lauren Schuker Blum, according to the New York Post. The house previously belonged to the late hedge-fund manager Sanjay Valvani, who killed himself after being charged with insider trading. The 22-foot-wide, five-story property features six bedrooms, four full bathrooms, an elevator, radiant-heated floors, an open-air cabana and a dining patio. The master suite includes built-in cabinets, a spa-like bathroom, office space and a terrace. 

CHURCH RECEIVES GRANT FOR MURAL

STUYVESANT HEIGHTS — The New York Landmarks Conservancy has given the 146-year-old Stuyvesant Heights Christian Church a $30,000 grant to repair a large stained-glass mural, according to the Brooklyn Paper. “We feel it is very important to help maintain religious structures that provide a sense of history and place to communities,” said Peg Breen, leader of the conservancy. The church, at 69 MacDonough St., is an example of 19th century Gothic Revival architecture. In addition to worship services, it sponsors a preschool, after-school program and food pantries. 

AMAZON, PRO AND CON

SUNSET PARK — Sunset Park residents are divided about the possible impact of the storage and shipping facility that Amazon reportedly wants to build in Industry City, according to the Brooklyn Paper. Adrian Roman, a member of a community group called El Grito, said, “Those are low-paying jobs. They don’t really help the community.” Councilmember Carlos Menchaca said that in its existing facilities, Amazon “terrorizes immigrants and treats its workers like robots.” But real estate lawyer Jeffrey Cintron said, “It’s going to be a huge plus. A distribution facility has to have blue-collar jobs.” 

GOWANUS COALITION SEEKS ZONING INPUT

GOWANUS — The Gowanus Neighborhood Coalition for Justice, made up of groups that advocate for the area’s low-income tenants, has called for the city to create an Environmental Special District within the area in Gowanus that it wants to rezone. One of the area’s challenges is to mitigate the untreated waste spewing into the Gowanus Canal when the city’s sewers are overwhelmed by runoff from heavy rains. The city estimates that the rezoning would create 8,200 new apartments in the neighborhood, and environmentalists fear the impact that added waste could bring. The coalition also wants the city to invest in local parks, increase the number of street trees and address critical needs at the area’s three NYCHA projects. 

BODY DISCOVERED NEAR HOME DEPOT

CONEY ISLAND — A man’s body was discovered in a wooded area behind a Coney Island Home Depot on Sunday, according to the New York Post. A passerby came across the victim, who police said was probably in his 30s, around noon on Sunday in the woods behind the store. The victim was lying face down and bleeding from his head, police said. 

BIKE LANE PROPOSAL SLAMMED

SHEEPSHEAD BAY — Southern Brooklyn community boards criticized Mayor Bill de Blasio for saying he would “just give the order” to install new bike lanes if the boards obstruct city efforts to build them. Theresa Scavo, chair of Community Board 15, which includes Sheepshead Bay and Brighton Beach, says the city has often ignored the board and “unilaterally decided to remove parking in southern Brooklyn.” Bob Tracy, a member of Marine Park’s CB 18, said that rather than protect bikers from cars, the mayor’s plan would put pedestrians in danger from cyclists. The mayor’s plan would add 80 miles of protected bike lanes to city streets. 

BRA STOPS SHOOTER’S BULLET

BROWNSVILLE — A woman’s bra strap stopped a bullet from penetrating her back during a Brownsville shooting on Saturday night, according to Newsweek. Daniesa Mardaugh was one of thousands of people who attended the Old Timers Day event where the mass shooting broke out around 11 p.m., leaving one person dead and at least 11 injured. When EMS

INBrooklyn photo by Paula Katinas

HORROR PRODUCER BUYS HEIGHTS MANSION

A small but vocal group of Coney Island residents held a rally on Saturday to protest a proposal to put a ferry landing at the Kaiser Park pier in their neighborhood, charging that having ferries coming and going all day long will ruin their quiet oasis and bring an abrupt end to fishermen’s enjoyment of the waterfront. See brooklyneagle.com for the full story. personnel unhooked Mardaugh’s bra, the bullet was just sitting in the strap and fell out, police said. Police Commissioner James O’Neill said the NYPD is looking into whether the shooting was gang-related. 

TAXI DRIVERS OFFER REWARD

BROWNSVILLE — Taxi drivers’ advocates are upset over the robbery and murder of cabbie Nomen Saleemi on Williams Avenue in Brownsville on Friday. “This was a young man, a brother, a son, a nephew, a cousin, a good human being whose life was taken senselessly,” said Fernando Mateo, spokesperson for the New York State Federation of Taxi Drivers. The group is offering a $5,000 reward for anyone with information about Saleemi’s death. They are also calling on the city to make cabbies’ jobs safer. Saleemi’s family said he had been driving with the Everywhere Car Service for about two years and was about to start a new job at a pharmaceutical company. 

PHYSICIAN, HEAL THYSELF

FORT GREENE — A female anesthesiologist who was heartbroken after a fellow physician ended their romance threatened to kill him and his mother with a muscle relaxant, according to the New York Post. Pik Lee allegedly refused to end the relationship, even groping Francisco Sebastiani while he performed surgery at the Brooklyn Hospital Center, according to a lawsuit filed in Brooklyn Supreme Court. Even as Sebastiani went through residencies in various hospitals, Lee “spewed a barrage of lewd, profane, explicit and threatening text messages and emails … that included gun, bomb, knife and syringe emojis,” the lawsuit alleged. 

IRON MAIDEN STORMS BARCLAYS

DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN — Forbes’ Derek Scancarelli recently reviewed Iron Maiden’s two nights of concerts at Barclays Center in Downtown Brooklyn. The British heavy metal group “pummeled through decades of hits among an evolving assortment of stage props, thematic backdrops and pyrotechnics,” the review said. Iron Maiden front man Bruce Dickinson changed his attire for each song’s theme — from fighter pilot goggles to the parka of an Arctic soldier. Guitarist Dave Murray said the group performs “an adrenaline driven show. There are quiet, moody parts in some songs, but it’s basically full-on.” 

POST OFFICE ROBBERS SOUGHT

BEDFORD-STUYVESANT — A group of men is wanted for repeatedly stabbing and then robbing a young man behind a post office in Bedford-Stuyvesant, according to PIX11. The group confronted the victim on July 20 at the rear of 1205 Atlantic Ave. The victim was stabbed three times in the upper torso and arm, police said. The robbers took $20, then fled in an unknown direction. 

BABY PRONOUNCED DEAD

EAST FLATBUSH — A 25-day-old baby was pronounced dead in East Flatbush on Saturday after authorities responded to a call about an unconscious child, according to silive.com.

Police responded to a 911 call of an unconscious child inside an apartment at 1242 East 72nd St. EMS workers transported the male child, who was later identified as Nio Kiellman, to Brookdale Hospital Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead. 

PARK SLOPE CO-OP FEATURED

PARK SLOPE — The New York Times, in its “What’s Selling Now” real estate column, recently wrote about “Homes That Sold for Around $1.5 Million.” The only Brooklyn home mentioned in the column was 397 Seventh Ave. in Park Slope, a co-op in a prewar building that includes a “breakfast bar,” a washer-dryer and a living room with fireplace. The co-op sold for $1.325 million, with monthly maintenance charges of $748. 

CAR BREAK-IN IN THE HEIGHTS

BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — A thief broke into a car in Brooklyn Heights and stole a backpack with $40,000 in cash inside, according to the New York Post. The suspect, a young white man who wore a blue-hooded sweater and brown shorts, was caught on video on July 11 on Joralemon Street near Hicks Street. He used a wrench to break into the Jeep’s passenger window, quickly stole the backpack and fled on foot. The owner, a 52-year-old man, had left the backpack unattended in the car, police said. 

DOMINICAN CHOCOLATE SHOP OPENS

WILLIAMSBURG — Rizek Cacao, a well-known manufacturer of chocolate bars in the Dominican Republic, has opened its first shop in the United States. The store, Kahkow, is located at 97 N. 10th St. near Berry Street in Williamsburg. Kahkow sells chocolate bars, chocolate for cooks, baked goods and other ingredients, according to The New York Times. Soon, the café expects to start roasting cacao on the premises. 

DISTURBED MAN THREATENS COPS

EAST NEW YORK — The Sergeants Benevolent Association on Sunday tweeted a video of a man walking into the 75th Precinct in East New York with what they say was a drawn knife. When the man refused to drop his weapon, one of the officers tased him, causing him to fall to the ground and allowing the cops to subdue him, according to PIX11. NYPD Chief of Department Terence Monahan commented on Twitter, “Cops face split second, life & death decisions every day. When an emotionally disturbed man holding a long knife walked into the NYPD75Pct and asked to be shot, these cops reacted quickly.” 

GREECE VS. PERSIA IN BAY RIDGE

BAY RIDGE — The Federation of Associated Laconian Studies recently held a commemoration of the Battle of Thermopylae and a tribute to King Leonidas of Sparta, according to the National Herald, a Greek Orthodox publication. The room was packed at the federation’s headquartered in Bay Ridge on July 28. The Battle of Thermopylae, in 480 B.C., pitted an alliance of Greek city-states led by King Leonidas against the Persian Empire led by King Xerxes.

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THREE GUYS GAZPACHO During the warm summer months, you may not be craving a hot bowl of soup, but a cold refreshing bowl of gazpacho may be just what you’re looking for. And Three Guys from Brooklyn has all the ingredients you’ll need to create your own delicious homemade gazpacho. Just mix together diced tomatoes, cucumber, a bell pepper, green onion, jalapeno and garlic. Add salt, cumin, oregano, cayenne pepper, and black pepper and blend with cherry tomatoes, olive oil, lime juice, balsamic, and Worcestershire sauce and get set to enjoy a delicious and refreshing bowl of gazpacho soup! The complete recipe is on the website. https://www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com/recipes/gazpacho/

Week of August 1–7, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 3INB


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Damascus Bakeries 56 Gold St. Brooklyn, NY 11201 718-855-1456 Damascus Bakeries has the perfect refreshing summer recipe for you! A cooling Bistro Ice Cream Sandwich made with some of the best bread anywhere. Just take four Brooklyn Bred Bistro Buns, and add one pint of your favorite ice cream, gelato or sorbet. Then divide the ice cream and scoop between four Brooklyn Bred Bistro Buns, packing tightly. Cover with bun top, dust with powdered sugar and serve immediately. It’s a fun and delicious snack that’s easily made . . . and always enjoyed!!! To learn more about Damascus Bakeries’ delicious products just go the website. www.brooklynbred.com

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Three Guys from Brooklyn 6502 Fort Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn, NY 718-748-8340 During the warm summer months, you may not be craving a hot bowl of soup, but a cold refreshing bowl of gazpacho may be just what you’re looking for. And Three Guys from Brooklyn has all the ingredients you’ll need to create your own delicious homemade gazpacho. Just mix together diced tomatoes, cucumber, a bell pepper, green onion, jalapeno and garlic. Add salt, cumin, oregano, cayenne pepper, and black pepper and blend with cherry tomatoes, olive oil, lime juice, balsamic vinegar and Worcestershire sauce, and get set to enjoy a delicious and refreshing bowl of gazpacho soup! The complete recipe is on the website. www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com

Finishing Touch 646-302-6511 finishingtouchnyc@yahoo.com Painting is a simple renovation that can suddenly create a brand new look for any space. At Finishing Touch Painting, the team of trusted professionals specializes in painting for a range of layouts and conditions to produce quality paint jobs in the New York City area. Whether it is interior or exterior painting, it will involve a lot of careful selection of colors, and you can trust Finishing Touch to get the job done right. Finishing Touch has experience in professional painting services in Brooklyn and only uses the best products and techniques so that it can give you the finest levels of performance that you expect. For more than 17 years, Finishing Touch has been providing specialty painting services in New York City. Check out all the incredible services it provides on the Finishing Touch website. www.Finishingtouchnyc.com

Lavender Blues 7601 3rd Ave + Locations 929-400-1436 Saturdays at Lavender Blues is a fun and special time for all. It begins with the ‘hello’ sing-a-long at 9:30 a.m. with an encore at 10:30 a.m. Alex Branson is a Brooklyn native who conducts an early education music and movement class for babies and toddlers. She brings her vast experience to early education with a program that isn’t just as enjoyable for the children as it is for parents and caregivers. After five years of building her brand, Lavender Blues has become one of the top tier music classes for babies and toddlers in New York City. And be on the lookout for the new Lavender Blues Presents the Remixes, a Baby Hip-Hop album which will be released this week. https://lavenderbluesmusic.com/

4INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of August 1–7, 2019


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Week of August 1–7, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 5INB


“Ask the Lawyer” host Mike Connors honored at American Heritage Dinner BY JOHN ALEXANDER JALEXANDER@BROOKLYNEAGLE. COM

Community leaders and elected officials came together for the Conservative Parties of Kings and Queens Counties’ American Heritage Dinner on Tuesday, July 23, at Russo’s on the Bay in Howard Beach. This year’s recipient of the Thaddeus S. Dabrowski American Heritage Award was attorney Mike Connors of Connors & Sullivan Attorneys at Law, host of the popular “Ask the Lawyer” radio show on AM970. Connors is a community leader who has been honored by numerous civic organizations in the borough, including the Bay Ridge Community Council, the Boy Scouts of America, the Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, the Bay Ridge Center and the American Legion. The entire evening was a heartfelt tribute to Connors, who was born in Manhattan and moved to Bay Ridge when he was four years old. After graduating from Pace University, he served in the Army. Upon his return from service, he enrolled in Brooklyn Law School and graduated in 1979 as a member of the Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity. Connors opened his private practice in Bay Ridge in 1981 and formed Connors & Sullivan, an elder law firm that specializes in trusts and estates and estate planning. He resides in Bay Ridge with his wife Beth and son Michael and is an active member of the Brooklyn Conservative Party. Brooklyn Conservative Party Vice Chair David Ryan hosted the event. Among the elected officials in attendance were Assemblymember Nicole Malliotakis, New York State Conservative Party Chair Jerry Kassar, Brooklyn Conservative Party Chair Fran

Vella-Marrone, Queens County Conservative Party Chair Thomas Long, Queens City Councilmembers Eric Ulrich and Robert Holden, Brooklyn Councilmember Kalman Yeger

Brooklyn Conservative Party Vice Chair David Ryan with comedian and radio talk show host Joe Piscopo. and New York State Assemblymember Simcha Eichenstein. Also attending were former State Sen. Marty Golden and former New York State Conservative Party Chair Mike Long. Msgr. Alfred LoPinto, president and chief executive officer of Catholic Charities of Brooklyn and Queens, delivered the invocation. Dozier Hasty, publisher and owner of daily and weekly newspapers including the Brooklyn Eagle, Home Reporter and Spectator, was also in attendance. Comedian, singer, radio talk show host and former star of

“Saturday Night Live” Joe Piscopo was at the event to salute his friend Connors. Piscopo said that it was an honor to be at the dinner and credited Connors with helping him straighten out his life. Piscopo introduced Connors, saying, “It is with great pride and great respect that I introduce a great New Yorker who doesn’t forget about his religion, his family or his community. He’s the most dedicated man I know and one of the most brilliant men I know.” Republican New York businesswoman Scherie Murray and retired NYPD Police Officer John Cummings were also at the dinner; both are running for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s seat in New York’s 14th District. Ryan called the event one of the most successful dinners the party has ever had and credited Connors’ selection as honoree as the reason for the large turn-out. LoPinto praised Connors’ “level of conviction to great moral values and how he promotes those in the most exceptional of ways, most especially with the radio station he is involved with.” Vella-Marrone called Connors “simply a great man and one of the first people I met in the Conservative Party back in 1980.” She explained Connors became an elder care lawyer because of his concern for his aging parents at the time. “He

ebrooklyn media/Photos by Arthur De Gaeta

Assemblymember Nicole Malliotakis, New York State Conservative Party Chair Jerry Kassar, honoree Mike Connors, Brooklyn Conservative Party Chair Fran Vella-Marrone, Queens Conservative Party Chair Thomas Long and Queens Councilmember Robert Holden. wanted to help other people so he chose a field where he could concentrate on that. Mike embodies the principles of God, country and family,” she added. Connors appeared deeply touched by the outpouring of love for him in the room. “I want to thank everyone for being here tonight. It’s really appreciated,” he said before asking everyone from his law firm to stand up and be recognized. “Sometimes when I go out of state or go to visit relatives in Texas, people ask me ‘what’s the Conservative Party, and why are you a Conservative? Why aren’t you just a Republican, aren’t Republicans good enough? Well, the reason I’m a Conservative is because Conservatives stand for principles and values,” he explained.

Honoree Mike Connors with his son Michael, comedian and radio talk show host Joe Piscopo and staff of AM970 The Answer radio station.

Members of the Catholic War Veterans and the Civil War Roundtable.

Congressional candidate Scherie Murray, second from left, with Republican District Leader John Quaglione, center, among friends and supporters.

Former State Sen. Marty Golden, Msgr. Alfred LoPinto and former OLPH Pastor Charles McDonald. Malliotakis thanked Connors, calling him a proud American who truly believes in his conservatism and in his nation and for “all he does for senior citizens, the Brooklyn community, the Catholic community and the veterans community.” Kassar also praised Connors for his many contributions to

the community. “Mike Connors is one of those special people that contributes so much in so many different ways to the people of Bay Ridge and our city,” Kassar told this paper. “I applaud the Brooklyn and Queens Conservative Parties in recognizing his contributions at a wonderfully successful dinner.”

John Seravalli, Fran Clyne, Arlene Rutuelo, John Quaglione and Serena MacLellan.

Thomas Long, Mike Connors, Fran Vella-Marrone, Beth Connors and Michael Connors.

6INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of August 1–7, 2019


Coming Soon to South Brooklyn Take a glimpse into the future and see our new state-of-the-art hospital building and transformed campus.

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Week of August 1–7, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 7INB


Tour showcases Industry City BY JAIME DEJESUS JDEJESUS@BROOKLYNREPORTER.COM

INGENIOUS BUBBLE WIZARDRY.” -THE NEW YORKER

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Showing Brooklynites and tourists a new side of Industry City, Made in Brooklyn Tours added Industry City to its roster of destinations this summer. The new tour, dubbed the “Made in Industry City Tour,” kicked off on June 20 with a curated selection of Brooklyn makers based at the century-old manufacturing complex. Dom Gervasi, founder of the tour company and a one-time Sunset Park resident, said that Industry City had approached him about doing the tour. “They reached out to me and asked if I was interested in going out there and designing a tour around the makers of Industry City,” he said. “For so many years, it was empty. I’m sure there were things going on but it wasn’t something a lot of people knew about.” The goal for Gervasi — who launched his business in 2011 — was designing a tour that showcases both Industry City’s rich history and its variety of businesses. “Every neighborhood has a story and IC has its own interesting one and I have to develop that. I try to capture the story and nature of Industry City,” he said. The tour covers several popular areas including Innovation Alley, Li-Lac Chocolate and Japan Village, and also reveals the inner workings of the complex. “My challenge was to try to contrast the different types of businesses,” he said. “I wanted to contrast old school and new school, and traditional artisan versus what’s new

Photo courtesy of Industry City

Glass Art of Brooklyn is one of the stops on the tour. today. That was a story I was trying to tell with Industry City.” “The maker community here is an integral part of Industry City, as well as the great landscape of light manufacturing in cities around the country,” said Lauren Danziger, the complex’s chief marketing officer. “The ability to bring people inside maker spaces opens the doors of creativity and accessibility, dispelling the idea that it’s not possible to thrive as a creative business in New York City. These tours are providing a platform for this type of accessibility.” The Made in Industry City tour takes place every Thursday at 10 a.m. Tickets are $40. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit www.madeinbrooklyntours.com.

You can keep the tunnel. As for the bridge, Fuhgeddaboudit.

Get the facts at: www.nycheart.org 888.MMC.DOCS (888.662.3627)

8INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of August 1–7, 2019


OBITUARIES We Notify • Social Security Administration • Veterans Administration • Insurance Companies • Pensions & Unions • Irrevocable & Revocable Accounts

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LIBERTH, Irene P. (nee Treiber) — On July 17. Beloved wife of 65 years to Eric Liberth. Loving mother of Barbara Zaremba (Alan), Maureen Liberth, Michael E. Liberth (Ana) and the late Susan Liberth. Dear sister of Catherine Clark and Mary Treiber. Cherished grandmother of Lauren, David and Patrick. A Mass of Christian Burial was held on July 20 at Saint Ephrem R.C. Church. All services arranged by Clavin Funeral Home.

MCGILL, William K. — (1943-2019). Beloved partner

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and Vietnam War veteran, U.S. Army. Bill McGill, 75, a native of Brooklyn passed away peacefully on June 24 after a short illness. Beloved son of the late William McGill and Frances (Cabot). He was the partner of Margie (Margaret) Farrell and dear brother to his late sister Peggy (Margaret McGill) Schultz. Beloved uncle to Michelle Schultz Meagher (Michael) and Michael Schultz (Kieran). Great uncle to Megan, Deirdre, Chris, Matt (Meagher) and Teagan Schultz. One-of-a-kind brother-in-law to Hank Schultz and his partner,

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Rita Barone. Bill retired after 12 years from Lehman Brothers. He served proudly with the United States Army 1st Air Cavalry Division, Company B, 1st Battalion of the division’s 5th Cavalry in Vietnam, participating in “Operation Irving” from 1965 to 1967. When he was not working, he enjoyed playing golf, watching old movies, traveling and spending time with friends and family. A Mass of Christian Burial was held on July 31 at Saint Patrick’s R.C. Church. All services

arranged by Clavin Funeral Home.

O most beautiful flower of Mt Carmel, fruitful vine, the splendor of heaven Blessed Mother of the son of God immaculate Virgin assist me in my necessity, o star of the sea help me and show me herein you are my mother holy mary mother of God queen of heaven and earth I beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor for me in this necessity ( make your request here ) there are none that can withstand your power O show me herein you are my mother, O Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to thee ( say 3 times) O Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands, Say (3 times) sweet mother I place this cause in your hands, (3 times) thank you for your mercy to me and mine. this prayer must be said for 3 days and after 3 days your request will be granted and the prayer must be published.

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John Philip Bigolski, a Williamsburg stalwart, Army veteran and city servant, dies at 71 BY JOHN NICHOLAS BIGOLSKI AND NED BERKE John Philip Bigolski, a father, husband and longtime fixture of the northside Williamsburg community seen frequently chatting up storeowners on Bedford Avenue and doling out wisdom from local barstools, died on July 28 at the age of 71. As a special investigator for the Office of Midtown Enforcement during Rudy Giuliani’s mayoral administration, Bigolski played a part in the resurgence of Times Square and Midtown Manhattan by bringing businesses up to code and ensuring safety for visitors. He stayed in the office until 2016, having served three mayors in the role. He took his job seriously and with an open mind, according to his son, John Nicholas Bigolski. “He would go into sex shops and gay clubs when no one else would want to. And he’d work with anyone so long as they focused on the job,” the younger Bigolski said. “He took assignments no one else would take; he’d take it and do it well.” Born on Dec. 22, 1947, Bigolski witnessed another of modern New York City’s most dramatic transformations closer to home, passing

most of his seven decades within the few square miles of Williamsburg’s northside. He moved to the neighborhood as a child from Jersey City, New Jersey, with his three sisters and his parents, John Biegalski and Mary Pryma Biegalski. He graduated from Eastern District High School in 1965, having previously attended P.S. 17 and J.H.S. 126. His father, a Greenpoint native, owned several bars and restaurants catering to the neighborhood’s longshoremen and dock and factory workers, who Bigolski would later see replaced by artists, entrepreneurs and throngs of tourists. “He’d say a lot of new people were not honoring the history of the neighborhood, and how it was growing up, and how it was a world renowned shipyard,” Bigolski’s son said. “[Yet] he always supported and was friendly with the artists who were moving in, because he always had an affinity for the arts. Artists and musicians alike.” From his stooped brownstone off Bedford Avenue at North Sixth Street, Bigolski watched much of that transformation alongside his wife, Mary Voloshin, to whom he was married for 38 years until her death in 2011. Voloshin and Bigolski were friends when he was drafted to the Army

Photo courtesy of John Nicholas Bigolski

John Philip Bigolski. in early 1968. He saw service as a military police officer at Checkpoint Charlie in East Berlin until 1970. He earned commendations as an expert in rifle and pistol, and received the National Service Medal and Army of Occupation (Berlin) Medal. Bigolski received an honorable discharge in early 1970. During his time overseas, Bigolski and Voloshin corresponded frequently. After he returned, they married on June 25, 1973. Their first and only

child, John Nicholas, was born on Nov. 12, 1984. Prior to his service in the Mayor’s Office, Bigolski worked several odd jobs throughout the ’70s, including fabric salesman, counselor in an inner-city charity and day school, gas station and gas truck inspector, and short-order cook. He completed his bachelor’s degree in sociology through City College in 1980 and took on a series of state and city jobs until he joined the Mayor’s Office of Midtown Enforcement in 1994, staying until his retirement. Bigolski was an avid fisherman, casting his line along the New York City and Long Island waterfronts. He had a thorough knowledge of the region’s beaches, inlets and bays. “On Long Island, as a kid, when we would go fishing and I’d see him haul in a really, really big fish it would impress upon me as a kid the strength and the power of staying in the fight. That’s a strong memory in my mind,” Bigolski’s son recalled. Bigolski was a lifelong Mets fan, having been a devout Brooklyn Dodgers fan and an enemy of the Yankees. He frequently recounted early childhood memories of hopping local buses with other kids down to Ebbets Field. As a Mets fan, he watched

nearly every game — except when the Mets disappointed too deeply. “He would usually turn on the game for at least a little bit, but sometimes he’d get so disgusted with the Mets he’d say, ‘I’m not watching them again.’ And then a day would go by and he’d watch again,” said his son. Bigolski’s oldest sister, Barbara Johnston, died on the same day as he did, July 28. He is survived by his son, John Nicholas, as well as his sisters, Virginia Bonofiglio and Eleanor Schub, and many nieces, nephews and extended family. He will be remembered as a neighbor, a public servant, a veteran, a gruff voice with an impish smile — and, ultimately, as a caring, generous father and a loving husband. Viewing hours for John Philip Bigolski will be held at Evergreen Funeral Home (133 Nassau Ave., Brooklyn) on Saturday, Aug. 3, 7-9 p.m. and Sunday, Aug. 4, 2-5 p.m. Services will be held on Sunday, Aug. 4, 7-9 p.m. Interment will be at Calverton National Cemetery (210 Princeton Blvd., Calverton, NY) following a short service at the funeral home on Monday, Aug. 5 at 9 a.m. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to a charity of your choice.

Week of August 1–7, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 9INB


Eye on REAL ESTATE Check out Greenpoint’s new waterfront green spaces By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

I’m the nerd who always exhorts you to walk, walk, walk to see the best of Brooklyn. Today I’m going to encourage you to loaf around instead. How else will you experience Greenpoint’s two new waterfront parks the way they deserve to be experienced? They’re best appreciated by visitors who plan to stay a while, and just sit here and watch the river flow, as Bob Dylan famously sang. So bring friends, bring a book, bring a blanket so you

can enjoy some leisure time on the green lawns. One of the two parks is revamped and refurbished rather than absolutely brand-new. I’ll tell you more about it in a minute. If you don’t live within walking distance from Greenpoint, your most entertaining way to get there is, as always, the NYC Ferry. The route from Brooklyn Bridge Park to Williamsburg to Greenpoint offers a big dose of Brooklyn waterfront scenery — and vistas of skyscrapers in Lower and Midtown Manhattan, from the World Trade Center to the Chrysler Building.

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There are two newly opened green spaces on the Greenpoint waterfront. This one’s Newtown Barge Park. Also, if you take the ferry, you’ll disembark on a dock that’s right beside the first new green space I want to show you, which is outside a new residential tower called The Greenpoint at 21 India St.

WATERFRONT PUBLIC SPACE IN FRONT OF THE GREENPOINT

When you walk to the end of the dock, you find the entrance to the new green space is right there.

This appealing public waterfront space is located in front of a residential tower called INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan The Greenpoint. This waterfront space belongs to the city Department of Parks and Recreation. It has a 275-foot promenade on the edge of the East River, 33 trees, low-rise plantings, a lawn and 312 linear feet of benches. The 29,500-square-foot green space stands in front of a driveway that leads from India Street to The Greenpoint’s front entrance. Mack Real Estate and Palin Enterprises are the codevelopers of the 40-story tower in conjunction with Urban Development Partners. Ismael Leyva Architects designed the building, which has rental apartments on the lower floors and condos on the upper floors. When I looked at The Greenpoint’s website the other day, available rental apartments ranged in price from $3,060 per month for a studio to $5,380 per month for a two-bedroom unit. Some condo sales have closed at The Greenpoint. For instance, city Finance Department records indicate, a unit on the 29th floor sold for $2,235,058 and a 36thfloor apartment sold for $2,158,690.

REZONING IN 2005 MANDATED GREEN SPACE CONSTRUCTION

The waterfront green space also has a 4,000-square-foot playground whose construction

wasn’t quite finished the day I was there. Some of the playground equipment looks a little bit like abstract sculptures.

— Continued on page 11INB —

10INB •• INBROOKLYN Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of August Gazette 1, 2019 • Week of August 1–7, 2019 10INB INBROOKLYN — — AA Special SpecialSection SectionofofBrooklyn BrooklynEagle/Heights Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint


The new sports field at Newtown Barge Park is quite an eyeful. INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan

Eye on REAL ESTATE

You can also sit and watch the sunset. I did. It was splendid. But the pictures I took at dusk are prettier than the sunset shots. A dinner-time picnic would be fun at Newtown Barge Park. There are nearby restaurants that would be good places to get a to-go dinner. A promenade was added to imThe Brooklyn Ice Cream Factory is a few blocks away on prove public access to the shoreline. Commercial Street. You might want to eat dessert there beThis particular bit of shoreline is the cause if you carry ice cream all the way to the park in this East River, very near where Newtown weather, you could wind up with a drippy mess. Creek empties into it. The park has a lovely swath of lawn, pretty plantings and a fenced-in sports field suitable for baseball and soccer. If you’re at Newtown Barge Park when the weather’s nice, you’ll see the sun glinting on the windows of an adjacent apartment tower whose address is 41 Blue Slip. It’s part of a 22-acre, multi-building shoreline development called Greenpoint Landing that Brookfield Properties and Park Tower Group are building. By the way, these developers were also obligated by the 2005 rezoning to construct publicly accessible waterfront space. Last year, they opened a section of that green space. It runs between

Check out Greenpoint’s new waterfront green spaces

Grasses grow in neat rows in the green space outside The Greenpoint. — Continued from page 10INB — The Greenpoint’s developers were required to build the waterfront green space, give it to the city and promise to fund its maintenance. A 2005 rezoning imposed this requirement on developers of the neighborhood’s waterfront sites. By the way, the park outside The Greenpoint is open from dawn until dusk. It’s a tranquil spot to watch the sunset. If you point your camera in the right direction, you’ll be able to include the Empire State Building in your pictures.

A NEW PROMENADE AT NEWTOWN BARGE PARK

The second green space I want to show you is Newtown Barge Park. To get there from The Greenpoint, Here’s the playground equipment outside The Greenpoint. walk inland to Franklin Street and 41 Blue Slip and another tower of theirs, 37 Blue Slip. stroll several blocks north to Commercial Street. Newtown Barge Park was an existing city park. Plans to expand it were made several years ago. SUNRISE, SUNSET, SUNRISE, SUNSET Also by the way, the construction of residential towers marks a new phase in the history of the Greenpoint waterfront. In the 19th century, the area was a shipbuilding mecca. — CONDO FOR SALE — More than a dozen shipbuilding firms moved to the neighbor1 Bedroom Condo For Sale. Fully Renovated, hood from Manhattan in the 1850s, the city Landmarks PreservaStainless Steel Appl. tion Commission’s designation report about the Greenpoint Wood Floors, Washer and Dryer; and Private storage Historic District says. The famous ironclad Civil War vessel, the 102 GUERNSEY ST. Monitor, was made in Greenpoint. Brooklyn, NY 11222 But more about Newtown Barge Park. It’s open from 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. Asking $549,000 This means you can do outdoor yoga at sunrise — though I Owner: 516-301-8357 don’t have the self-discipline to get up that early, so I don’t have any photos of anything like that. Week of August—1,A2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/HeightsPress/Home Press/HomeReporter/Brooklyn Reporter/BrooklynSpectator/Brooklyn Spectator/BrooklynRecord/Greenpoint Record/Greenpoint Gazette Gazette •• 11INB 11INB Week of August 1–7, 2019 • INBROOKLYN Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights


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Week of August 1–7, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 15INB


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Thursday, August 1, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • 5


Brooklyn Botanic launches protest exhibit about proposed high-rise development

The Spice Factory towers would cast shadows on the Desert Pavilion for four and a half hours per day.

Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

Brooklyn Botanic Garden is deploying a new tool to muster public opposition to Crown Heights’ high-rise Spice Factory development: education. It’s an exhibit called “Fight for Sunlight,” which details the harm that would be done to rare and endangered plants in the garden’s greenhouse and conservatory complex by shadows that two planned 39-story towers would cast for up to 4 1/2 hours per day. The Spice Factory site, where the towers would stand, is just 150 feet away from the garden. Ian Bruce Eichner’s Continuum Co. and codeveloper Lincoln Equities are seeking rezoning for the site at 960 Franklin Ave. in order to build a 1.37 million-square-foot residential and retail project with 1,578 apartments. Half of them would be affordable units for people with four different income levels. The lowest-income individual tenants could make up to $36,550 per year, and the highest-income residents could earn as much as $125,160 annually for a family of four. “It’s a false proposition to pit so-called ‘affordable’ housing against open space,” BBG President and CEO Scot Medbury told reporters during a tour of the greenhouses and conservatories on Tuesday, the day the exhibit opened. The garden’s top officials think the project plan is “inappropriate” and hope the developers withdraw it, Medbury said. Zoning in the area near the famous 52-acre garden was changed in 1991 to protect its access to sunlight. The zoning capped new-building heights at seven stories. If Continuum and Lincoln Equities are going to develop the Spice Factory site, they should stick with the current zoning, said Medbury, who is stepping down from his post as the garden’s president and CEO in January. The greenhouse and conservatory complex has 31 separate chambers, or growing spaces, with tens of thousands of different plants with specific light and temperature requirements.

Shadows that would blot out sunlight for 4 1/2 hours per day will cause some plants to succumb to fungal diseases, Medbury said. Some plants may not flower; others won’t grow at all. In one of the conservatories, a semi-transparent exhibit scrim shows an outline of the Spice Factory’s proposed 464-foot towers looming over 54-foot conservatory buildings. In a nearby room in the Aquatic House, a sign that’s part of the “Fight for Sunlight” exhibit stands beside a huge hanging contraption that holds a tiger orchid Medbury said is as big as a Volkswagen. Thanks to the Aquatic House’s sunshine and warmth, “BBG has been lucky enough to successfully bloom this species three times since

1997,” says the message on the sign, which is from curator Dave Horak. “It remains one of the rarest events in a botanic garden in this country. Reducing natural sunlight would make it a virtual certainty that these plants would not bloom again at BBG,” Horak’s message concludes. Curators will be posting messages about Spice Factory shadows beside other plants in the weeks to come. The exhibit will be in place through the end of the year. Another element of the “Fight for Sunlight” exhibit is a video comparing what shadows at the garden currently look like on the longest day of the year to longer-lasting shadows that would be cast by the Spice Factory towers.

Here’s a look at the high-rise towers proposed for the Spice Factory site. Rendering via the City Planning Department

6 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • Thursday, August 1, 2019

INBrooklyn photo byPaul Frangipane

“With reduced sunlight, many plants would get sick, weaken and die,” the video warns. It’s playing on a wall outside the Desert Pavilion — which would be hit especially hard by shadows from the towers. BBG’s collection of 400 bonsai trees is threatened by the shadows that Spice Factory towers would cast. Some of the miniature trees are several hundred years old. Medbury took reporters to an outdoor nursery that’s not open to the public, where the bonsai spend their summers soaking up the sun. The Spice Factory developers have suggested artificial light could be used in the greenhouses when shadows fall over them. Medbury said that wouldn’t help. During his walk with reporters, Medbury said Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s youth education programs, which were first established a century ago, make extensive use of its greenhouses and conservatories. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden draws 825,000 to 1 million visitors per year, depending on how wet the spring weather is. “We know New Yorkers care about us,” Medbury said. “This is a very special place.” Brooklyn Botanic Garden is also running a petition campaign against the Spice Factory’s proposed rezoning. A spokesperson for the developers did not immediately respond to request for comment about the new exhibit. Medbury and numerous BBG employees testified in March at a public scoping meeting about the harm that would be caused by shadows from the towers. The meeting was a prelude to a Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, or ULURP, which is required when zoning changes are sought. At that meeting, numerous Crown Heights residents expressed their opposition to the proposed Spice Factory high-rises, including members of Movement to Protect the People, an organization founded by activist Alicia Boyd. Numerous members of construction unions, on the other hand, expressed their support for the developments.


Brooklyn Botanic launches protest exhibit about proposed high-rise development

Brooklyn Botanic Garden President and CEO Scot Medbury takes reporters on a tour. See opposite page for more.

Eagle photo by Paul Frangipane

Thursday, August 1, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • INSIDE BACK PAGE


EFFECTIVE AD CAMPAIGNS FOR LESS! Ask for a consultation: jdh@brooklyneagle.com BACK PAGE • Thursday, August 1, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record


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