Fort Greene
Streetsblog Basics
Bike-Share Works Just Fine in Historic London, Boston, and DC Neighborhoods
While polls have shown that upwards of 70 percent of New Yorkers support bike-share and DOT engaged in a multi-year public process for station siting, a vocal minority in Fort Greene is objecting to public bike stations in the landmarked district. At least one extremist has gone so far as to tar newly-installed stations with wheatpaste posters decrying the Citibank-sponsored kiosks. In response to the neighborhood chatter, Council Member Tish James has scheduled a community meeting about bike-share for tonight.
April 24, 2013
Speak Up If You Think Bike-Share Belongs in Fort Greene and Clinton Hill
Remember the Fort Greene residents who complained last year that bike-share stations don't belong in their historic, landmarked neighborhood -- even though you can find cobalt-blue Volvos and banana-yellow, late-model Beemers taking up the curb on those same blocks?
April 22, 2013
Citi Bike Stations Spotted in Fort Greene [Updated]
After the first Citi Bike stations were installed in Bed Stuy and Clinton Hill over the weekend, NYC DOT Policy Director Jon Orcutt told Transportation Nation that bike-share implementation will "be moving through the Brooklyn area and then into Manhattan over the next few weeks." And it looks like stations have now been installed at least as far west as Adelphi Street and as far north as Flushing Avenue.
April 10, 2013
Brooklyn CB 2 Committee Unanimously Supports Permanent Fowler Plaza
Last night Brooklyn Community Board 2's transportation committee voted 7-0, with one abstention, to support the conversion of Fowler Square Plaza in Fort Greene from a temporary public space to a permanent feature of the neighborhood. The committee vote followed a DOT presentation showing that Fowler Square Plaza has had a minimal impact on traffic and is overwhelmingly popular with businesses, plaza users, and nearby residents.
December 19, 2012
Tonight: Permanent Fort Greene Plaza Up for a Vote at Brooklyn CB 2
A reminder for readers who live in and around Fort Greene: The Brooklyn Community Board 2 transportation committee is taking up the matter of Fowler Square plaza tonight, and if you head over to 180 Remsen Street to weigh in, you can help this new public space become a permanent neighborhood fixture.
December 18, 2012
Eyes on the Street: New Places to Sit on Myrtle Avenue
Combining public seating and tree protection, the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership has begun a second round of street furniture installations. The project is bringing 28 tree guards and 22 benches to Myrtle Avenue between Flatbush and Classon Avenues by the end of the year, joining 40 tree guards and benches that were installed in 2011.
December 7, 2012
Public Takes to Plazas in East New York and Fort Greene
This weekend, three Brooklyn plazas became hubs of neighborhood activity.
December 5, 2012
Businesses on Fowler Square Plaza: Go Ahead, Make It Permanent
DOT is scheduled to go before Community Board 2's transportation committee on December 18 with plans to make the new pedestrian plaza at Fowler Square in Fort Greene a permanent redesign. Before the city went ahead with reclaiming this block of North Elliott Place for the plaza, a small, vocal contingent -- mostly upset that they would have to slightly alter their driving routes -- predicted that the new public space would be unsafe for walking. Previously, another opponent claimed the plaza would "split the neighborhood apart." Now that everyone has had the summer and fall to see the plaza in action, we thought we'd check in with some local business owners about what they think of the project.
November 20, 2012
NYPD Cruiser Hits Cyclist in Fort Greene
Streetsblog reader Chad Kellogg, a cyclist who lives and works in Fort Greene, came upon this scene earlier today. He writes:
September 21, 2012
“Park Avenue Is Broken, And It Can Be Fixed”
Council Member Letitia James and Assembly Member Joseph Lentol joined local residents on Park Avenue in Brooklyn yesterday to push DOT and other city agencies to implement recommendations from the Myrtle Avenue Revitalization Partnership's pedestrian safety plan. The plan calls for a set of pedestrian safety improvements and traffic enforcement measures to make Park Avenue less of a BQE service road and more of a neighborhood street.
September 11, 2012