Brooklyn Points of Interest

Brooklyn College
2900 Bedford Avenue, Phone: 718-951–5000
Brooklyn is known around the country as the place where young folks move after college — but it’s actually a college town itself. Brooklyn College has been attracting great minds since 1930. With its scenic campus, esteemed faculty, and it’s highly regarded MFA in creative writing program, this school is a gem of the City University of New York system.

Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy
334 Furman Street, Phone: 718-802–0603
Say what you will about Atlantic Yards, Domino Sugar, the Northside Piers, or any of the other huge development projects that are reshaping Brooklyn today — but when completed, no project will mean nearly as much to Brooklynites as Brooklyn Bridge Park. Once open, the 85-acre sustainable waterfront park has reshaped the way Brooklynites see the borough. Though the funding mechanisms for park upkeep remain undetermined, the green space, which is under the purview of the Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy, will one-day rival Prospect Park as the borough’s prime recreation destination.

Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center
1 Brookdale Plaza, Phone: 718-240–5000
Thanks to the Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center, the future’s great medical minds come to Brooklyn to learn. With a long history dating back to 1921 (when the 75-bed hospital building was a lone outpost among the fields and farms between Brownsville, East New York, and Canarsie) the Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center has become one of the borough’s largest nonprofit teaching hospitals. With a 14-acre campus, 530 beds dedicated to inpatient care, a newly opened coronary critical care unit, and a maternity ward that delivered 1,633 babies last year, it’s a great place for medical students to learn — and Brooklynites to seek excellent care.

Brooklyn Botanic Garden
900 Washington Avenue, Phone: 718-623–7200
Apparently, more than one tree grows in Brooklyn. More than 52 sprawling acres, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden is a treasure. Known for it’s 220 flowering cherry trees of 42 different species — the biggest and most diverse collection outside Japan — the facility also boasts a number of specialty gardens including the historic Alice Recknagel Ireys Fragrance Garden — the first garden in the United States to be designed for the blind. A visit to this beloved Brooklyn institution might convince you to move somewhere greener than Greenpoint. Or at least participate in the garden’s popular “Greenest Block in Brooklyn” contest.

Brooklyn Flea
176 Lafayette Avenue, Phone: 718-935–1052
This is one award-winning flea — with a certificate of merit from the Municipal Art Society and a Community Leadership Award from the Citizens Union to prove it! Since 2008 the Brooklyn Flea has been a top city attraction, providing a jaunty alternative to big-box retailers. Credit for that goes to the hundreds of top vendors of antique and re-purposed furniture, vintage clothing, collectibles, and antiques, in addition to a tightly curated selection of jewelry, art, and crafts by local artisans and designers, plus delicious fresh food.

Brooklyn Boulders
Degraw Street, Phone: 347-834-9066
Tread-happy trekkers – from novices to experts – can take on the “Himalayas” without leaving Brooklyn at the city’s largest rock-climbing gym, boasting more than 22,000 square-feet of climbable terrain. That’s as big as Tom Brady and Gisele Bundchen’s $20-million dream home in California! Brooklyn Boulders offers the aspiring alpinist plenty of choices to be high on life, including bouldering with 12-inch thick pads to cushion any potential falls, top roping, and lead climbing. Climbing classes for all levels are available in addition to yoga and pilates instruction.

Beautiful Earth Group
179 Columbia Street, Phone: 718-488–8426
Brooklyn is the borough of bicycle-powered smoothie machines and rooftop gardens — so of course, they’ve got our own green energy company. Since 2008, the Beautiful Earth Group has generated plenty of buzz by developing and operating sustainable and renewable energy technologies including the much-ballyhooed solar-powered electric vehicle charging station at Brooklyn Bridge Park. With a focus on creating solar and wind power facilities that emit no carbon for government, utility and commercial clients worldwide, the electricity company has a bright future.

Brooklyn Center for Independence of the Disabled
27 Smith Street, 718-998–3000
“Disabled” doesn’t mean “unable” at this consumer-based, non-profit agency. It has helped people with challenges to live independently and integrate into mainstream society since 1956 by providing advocacy and services that help them to gather information, consider their options, and make self-tailored choices. Compassion is key at the Brooklyn Center for Independence of the Disabled where staff members know first-hand about the barriers and frustrations facing their clients because many of them are developmentally challenged. Peer counseling — a central service — provides a positive and safe environment in which to share thoughts, feelings, and experiences, while educational programs promote civil rights for the disabled.

ASA Institute of Business and Computer Technology
81 Willoughby Street, Phone: 877-679–8772
With Downtown becoming a bona fide business hub, the neighborhood is a fitting home for a career-oriented school. Since it started as a computer programing school, ASA Institute of Business and Computer Technology has been giving Brooklynites the education they need to find the jobs they want. Over the years, the school has expanded to offer degrees in fields including pharmacy, technology, criminal justice, healthcare, business, and office administration. Certificates in areas of study including office technology and administration are also available.

Brooklyn Brewery
79 N. 11th Street, Phone: 718-486–7422
Brooklyn’s long beer brewing history seemed like it had come to its end in 1976 when the last brewery in Bushwick closed its doors. But in 1987, Park Slope resident and beer lover Steve Hindy quenched the borough’s thirst when he helped open Brooklyn Brewery.

Though most of its beer was initially brewed upstate, the brand’s beloved Brooklyn Lager found a spot on taps across the borough and quickly emerged as a hometown favorite. In 1996, Hindy and company turned an old Williamsburg matzo factory into their center of operations — and some years back, they finished a major expansion that allows the company to brew most of its suds in North Brooklyn. Cheers to that!

Brooklyn Public Library
Multiple locations
Brooklyn is a literary capital, so it’s only fitting that the Central Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library is a monument to books themselves. The iconic Art Deco building, which from a vantage point on Grand Army Plaza is intended to look like the spine of a book opening outwards, welcomes nearly one million book-lovers every year. Inside the 1941 building, visitors can peruse a massive collection of more than a million books, magazines, and other forms of media, as well as the Brooklyn Collection — a treasure trove of local history.

Sandwiched between the bookish neighborhoods of Park Slope and Prospect Heights, home to great writers including Rick Moody, Nicole Krauss, and Keith Gessen it’s only fitting that the Central Branch is a major destination for readings, lectures, and performances in the new Dweck Center for Contemporary Culture. The Library’s 65 branches have been serving Brooklyn’s diverse communities since 1892.

Coney Island USA
1208 Surf Avenue, Phone: 718-372–5159
Where would Brooklyn be without Coney Island? The Mermaid Parade. The Cyclone. Penguin Boy and Baron Von Geiger. At the heart of it all is Coney Island USA, a non-profit organization devoted to the preservation of the boardwalk empire’s vibrant history and the celebration of its quirky culture. Part of that effort is the maintenance of the Coney Island Museum where onlookers can gaze into the seaside park’s roots in the 19th century.

Fairway Market
480 Van Brunt Street, Phone: 718-694–6868
Before Fairway Market opened in Red Hook in 2006, it was hard to convince Brooklynites to visit the waterfront neighborhood. Now it’s hard to keep them away. The beloved grocer’s decision to open an outpost in a Civil War-era coffee warehouse sparked a wave that brought cute stores to Van Brunt Street, a big-box retailer to the piers and picky shoppers who know it’s worth driving to Red Hook to stock up on the highest quality seafood, meats, and cheeses.

Galapagos Art Space
16 Main Street, Phone: 718-222–8500
It would be hard not to overstate the role that Galapagos Art Space has played in building Brooklyn’s art and music scene. Since opening in Williamsburg in 1995 — when nothing was opening in Williamsburg — this venue has become a cultural beacon by hosting concerts, readings, films, lectures, burlesque shows, and other emerging arts events. The club didn’t miss a beat following its 2008 move to DUMBO, where it turned a 10,000-square-foot former horse stable into the city’s first LEED-certified performance space. Galapagos started supporting the local art scene years before Brooklyn became the next big thing, and it’s showing no signs of slowing down – like the turtles of its namesake islands.

Heart of Brooklyn
789 Washington Avenue, Phone: 718-638–7700
Heart of Brooklyn proves true the old adage “strength in numbers.” Since 2001, the borough’s
biggest cultural institutions have joined forces in a partnership intended to promote and draw visitors to Brooklyn’s great attractions. With members including the Brooklyn Museum, Prospect Park, the Brooklyn Public Library, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, the Brooklyn Children’s Museum, and the Prospect Park Zoo, the organization has helped form the Washington AvenueProspect Heights Merchant Association and organized a free trolley to shuttle visitors around Brooklyn following free Saturdays at the Brooklyn Museum, among other initiatives. Heart of Brooklyn’s youth arts program (Brooklyn Cultural Adventures Program) has even been recognized by former First Lady Michelle Obama with a National Arts & Humanities Youth Program Award.

Kingsborough Community College
2001 Oriental Boulevard, Phone: 718-265–5343
Since 1964, Kingsborough Community College has provided Brooklynites a place to learn. Growing to welcome about 35,000 students to its 71-acre campus annually, the Manhattan Beach school educates high school graduates, veterans, transfers, and students looking to broaden their knowledge and advance their careers. Kingsborough offers more than 40 degree and certificate programs in fields including criminal justice, fashion design, and marine technology — a fitting area of specialization considering the school’s scenic location between three bodies of water.

League Education and Treatment Center
30 Washington Street, Phone: 718-643–5300
When it comes to caring, the League Education and Treatment Center is in a league of its own. The nonprofit is one of the state’s largest day treatment programs, providing aid and innovative
education to more than 500 children and adults who suffer from psychiatric and developmental disabilities. One of those innovative initiatives is the facility’s groundbreaking League Artists Natural Design (LAND) Studio & Gallery, which offers individuals with special needs an artistic forum to show off their skills and express themselves.

Long Island University
1 University Plaza, Phone: 718-488–1011
Since 1926, Long Island University has served Brooklyn — all of Brooklyn. In an era of racial, religious, and economic discrimination, the school opened its doors with the mission to educate students from all walks of life. Staying true to that goal, Long Island University continues to boast a diverse campus and stellar programs in a number of fields including pharmacy,  education, and business.

Luna Park
1000 Surf Avenue (Coney Island), Phone: 718-373–5862
More than 60 years after a series of fires destroyed one of Coney Island’s most cherished amusement parks, a new theme park has opened with the same name. The new Luna Park thrilled visitors for the first time in 2010 after it opened on the former site of Astroland. Operated by the Italian amusement company Zamperla, Luna Park’s second iteration is part of the city’s plan to revamp Coney Island. The new park features a gateway reminiscent of the original Luna Park, new rides like the Brooklyn Flyer, the Electro Spin, and the Wild River, as
well as family-friendly attractions like the Happy Swing.

Music Hall of Williamsburg
66 N. Sixth Street, Phone: 718-486–5400
The arrival of the Music Hall of Williamsburg in 2007 drastically altered New York City’s
music scene. By that time, Brooklyn acts like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and TV on the Radio had already earned acclaim on the national stage — but they lacked a hometown stage worthy of their presence. Enter the Music Hall of Williamsburg: a cutting edge venue in an old mayonnaise
plant with space for more than 500 music lovers. Add an amazing calendar booked by the pros at Bowery Presents and you’ve got the best music rock music venue in the borough, if not the city.

Medgar Evers College
1650 Bedford Avenue, Phone: 718-221–1795
Medgar Evers College is the youngest four-year college in the City University of New
York system — but it’s a bit of an over-achiever. Since 1970, the Crown Heights institute,
named after late civil rights activist Medgar Wiley Evers, has grown up fast. It recently launched new programs in religious studies, social work, and business management services to accompany its existing course offerings and cut the ribbon for a new academic building and student lounge. The 7,000 students aren’t just benefiting from new facilities — they’re also benefiting from an increasingly prestigious faculty of professors and educators including two recent recipients of Fulbright scholarships.

New York Aquarium
602 Surf Avenue (Coney Island), Phone: 718-265–3474
The New York Aquarium has found a perfect home in Coney Island, as both the science
institution and the neighborhood share a love for freaky things and the sea. Since 1957, this year-round attraction has drawn Brooklynites eager to see sea creatures up close and personal. With wowing species including black-footed penguins, giant Pacific octopus, and a floor-to-ceiling shark tank loaded with sand tiger sharks, nurse sharks, and reef sharks, this aquarium might be the most thrilling way to spend a day in Coney Island.

New York City College of Technology 
300 Jay Street, Phone: 718-260–5500
In this case, bigger is better. With a student body of over 14,000, New York City College of Technology is the largest and most diverse public college of technology in the Northeast. Established in 1946 to educate and prepare returning soldiers for civilian careers, the school has played a large role in Downtown’s ongoing transformation into a college town. Today, the school attracts students with more than 60 areas of study including architectural technology, computer science, applied mathematics, fashion marketing, and a unique concentration in entertainment technology.

NYU Polytechnic
5 Metrotech Center, Phone: 718-260–3600
Brooklyn’s big culture shift hasn’t anything to do with farm-to-table cuisine or bike lanes. No, the last big change in the borough has turned Brooklyn into an academic capital. For decades, neighborhoods from Downtown to Manhattan Beach have boasted institutes of higher learning. But the merger of New York University and Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn heralded a new era for education in Kings County. One need look no further than NYU-Poly to see big plans on the horizon. The school already plans to take over two more buildings on its Metrotech campus, expand enrollment by 40 percent and potentially move other NYU schools, not just Polytechnic, to Downtown as part of a plan to acquire more than one million square feet of classroom, residential, and administrative space by 2031.

Pratt Institute
200 Willoughby Avenue, Phone: 718-230–0904
Artists live in Brooklyn — but they also learn in Brooklyn. Since class went into session in 1887, Pratt Institute has attracted creative minds to its 25-acre Clinton Hill campus. The school boasts undergraduate programs in fine arts, writing, industrial design, and art education, among others, as well as graduate concentrations in fields including architecture, graphic design, and animation and the environment. As Brooklyn has emerged as a leader in the national and international art scene, Pratt has pushed forward, gaining recognition as one of the country’s top art, architecture, and design schools.

Prospect Park Zoo
450 Flatbush Avenue, 718-399–7339
Prospect Park is undeniably a bucolic place to visit. But when you’re looking to see wildlife more exotic than squirrels or golden retrievers (they roam free during off-leash hours!), a visit to the zoo might come in handy. Opened in 1935, the wildlife conservation center features more than 125 species including black-tailed prairie dogs, red pandas, California sea lions, and Western Gray Kangaroos. Yes, it is a jungle in there.

Restoration Plaza
1368 Fulton Street, Phone: 718-636–6919
To see evidence of the on-going renaissance in Bedford-Stuyvesant, look no further than Restoration Plaza. Thanks to the hard work of the Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation, the former milk bottling plant at the corner of Fulton Street and Marcy Avenue has been
transformed into a commercial, educational, and cultural hub that’s home to the Billie Holiday Theatre, the Youth Arts Academy, a Super Foodtown, three banks, a Duane Reade, and an Applebee’s Bar & Grill — the first national sit-down eatery to set up in the neighborhood in more than three decades.

St. Francis College
180 Remsen Street, Phone: 718-489–5200
They call St. Francis “the small college of big dreams” — and with good reason. With only about 2,500 students, this tiny Brooklyn Heights school has an over-sized presence, offering diverse fields of undergraduate study including biology, criminal justice, physical education, and women’s studies, several graduate programs in business, 19 Division I athletics teams, a top-flight HDTV production studio, high-tech classrooms, newly renovated science labs, Wi-Fi everywhere, and a new fitness center.

St. Joseph’s College
245 Clinton Avenue, Phone: 718-940–5300
Sure, education is an investment in the future — but why does it have to cost so much? While other college tuitions skyrocket, St. Joseph’s College in Clinton Hill has remained dedicated to providing a high-quality liberal arts education at an affordable price. Since 1916, the school has grown to offer more than 20 majors in fields including biology, business administration, Spanish, and psychology at a price that makes it one of the best educational values in the nation.

Touro College
Multiple locations
“There is no greater gift than the gift of knowledge,” once contended Touro College founder Rabbi Dr. Bernard Lander, who launched his dream to provide a competitive education to the masses with a single class of 35 Liberal Arts and Sciences students back in 1971. Today, Lander’s vision is being realized at Touro’s many thriving undergraduate divisions at the New York School of Career and Applied Studies where approximately 19,000 students are studying for certificate programs, Associate, and Bachelor degrees in a wide spectrum of majors at 11 different locations across the city, including several in Brooklyn.

40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks
75 S. Elliott Place, Phone: 718-522–5189/488–6570.
Brooklyn has changed a lot since Spike Lee focused his lens on the borough in the 1980s classics “Do The Right Thing” and “She’s Gotta Have It.” But one thing that hasn’t changed in the 25 years since is the constant flow of fine films from Lee’s production company, 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks. The Fort Greene enterprise has been behind great pictures like “When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts,” “25th Hour,” and “Malcolm X.”

Aviator Sports & Events
3600 Flatbush Avenue (Bennett Field in Marine Park), Phone: 718-758–7500
With the arrival of JFK and LaGuardia, Brooklyn’s Floyd Bennett Field seemed like it had been put on ice — that is until Aviator Sports brought two regulation-sized hockey rinks to the decommissioned airfield. The sports complex has turned the underutilized park near the foot of Flatbush Avenue into a destination, offering Brooklynites a rare facility where they can practice ice skating, gymnastics, basketball, indoor soccer, volleyball, rock climbing, and flag football.

Brooklyn Conservatory of Music

Alicia Keyes, a Grammy-award winning pop artist, started her music career right the Conservatory of Music in Brooklyn. Also, composer and Pulitzer Prize-winner John Musto, Miles Faye (Village People singer), and Kathleen Hurley (Dora the Explorer’s voice) began here.

The professional destinies of Danny Mixon (Hank Crawford’s pianist, Armelia McQueen (Broadway star), and Emerson Buckley (director of the Madison Square Garden concerts of Luciano Pavarotti) were also shaped at this top-quality educational institution. Brooklyn Conservatory of Music is an over 120-year-old music academy that’s housed in an entirely restored, 5-story, Victorian Gothic mansion right in the historic heart of Park Slope.

A visit there — on any day, evening, or weekend — is literally music to the ears. Stand in the lobby, and one minute you hear the soothing, solitary strains of a lone instrument. The next, it’s the sound of rambunctious 2-year-olds warbling away with their parents.

Wait some more, and you might catch seniors rehearsing Bob Marley tunes for an upcoming concert. You might even catch a show featuring an award-winning jazz artist — Grammy winners Arturo O’Farrill, Dave Valentin, Wallace Roney, and Taj Mahal have all performed there.

It’s all in the service of making music, according to Executive Director Karen Geer, whose academy is one of the nation’s oldest and largest community music schools, serving more than 6,000 students of all sorts of ages, skill levels, and backgrounds with programs ranging from Teen Jazz, Beginning Songwriting, and Chamber Ensembles to The Art of Improvisation, Vocal Technique, and even Yoga for Musicians.

“The depth and breadth of our programs cannot be matched in Brooklyn,” says Geer, whose organization targets schools, Head Start programs, senior centers, libraries, and museums.
“We are everywhere, serving anyone and everyone,” adds Geer, whose major asset remains an impressive faculty composed of prominent performers, composers, musicologists, and theorists, many of them holding advanced degrees from the world’s top conservatories and universities, while maintaining active and prestigious performing careers.

Kate Richards-Geller, a music therapist at the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, has witnessed the healing power of a sweet tune. She has also seen it move mountains. In the fall of 2006, she began musical therapy sessions with a boy named Oluyemi, who was born with Down’s syndrome.

She watched in wonder as Oluyemi made a beeline for the djembe drum, piano, guitar, and jingle bells, which he fastened to his ankles, rejoicing over their silvery jangle. Soon, the budding musician was playing with enthusiasm, flair, and a posture that attuned itself correctly to each instrument.

Oluyemi’s mother sings the organization’s praises for giving her son a voice. “His foundation of self is stronger,” she says. “Music helps him feel good about himself.” The untold numbers of aspiring musicians — from 18 months to adults — who comprise the conservatory’s illustrious alumni have replicated Oluyemi’s uplifting experience.

Onsite and outreach students have gone on to study at prestigious preparatory programs or specialized high schools, including the Juilliard Preparatory Division, the Mannes School
of Music Preparatory Division, the Middle School Jazz Academy at Lincoln Center, and La
Guardia High School of Music, Art, and Performing Arts.

Others have launched professional music performance or teaching careers, or become directors of music programs, arts organizations, and arts councils. Pint-sized student Shiloh Gonsky, 8, was so inspired by her Suzuki Guitar group that she practiced 870 days in a row, mastering such classics as Paganini’s Waltz from Sonata no. 9, and earning herself an honorable mention in Gary Marcus’s acclaimed book, “Guitar Zero.”

The academy’s gift to Brooklyn and beyond remains irrefutable — music just makes life better. “Even in grief and suffering, the fact that music has an impact is just remarkable and exhilaratingly hopeful,” remarks Richards-Geller.

Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, 58 Seventh Avenue, Phone: 718-622–3300

LIU’s Brooklyn Campus

Turning dreams into careers for more than 90 years

The Brooklyn campus of Long Island University prides itself on being in a class by itself — from its inception in 1926 as the original arm of the learning institute to its current distinction as one of the world’s most diverse campuses, whose students hail from 75 nations and speak 35 languages.

The founders’ work was cut out for them from the start. They admitted students based on merit and promise and pledged never to impede enrollment because of sex, race, religion, or national origin. The policy was progressive in an age defined by quotas and discrimination because it dealt a blow to the racism that defined the Roaring ’20s and 1930s as eras marked by national race riots, lynchings, and a revival of the Ku Klux Klan.

The university’s trailblazing lessons continue today. “We don’t deal with privileged students,” says Provost Gale Stevens Haynes. “We are privileged to deal with them.” Three hundred and 12 of those ambitious learners attended the first class at the original campus site at 300 Pearl Street
— all of them immigrants or the children of immigrants in search of the knowledge and skills that would equip them for the working world.

The college, mindful of their needs, offered courses in secretarial studies, retailing, and accounting, and balanced their curricula with a liberal arts foundation. A popular new major was added in 1929 after the campus affiliated itself with the Brooklyn College of Pharmacy.

Today, it boasts the first state-approved physician assistant program as proof that not even the Great Depression, World War II, or bankruptcy could stall this road scholar from providing a quality education for the mostly low-income, first-generation collegians with high needs who sought it. It also weathered the tough times by selling off its Pearl Street building and conducting classes in makeshift quarters.

A new horizon dawned with the introduction of the GI Bill of Rights, boosting enrollment that peaked last year at more than 11,000 students. Post-war demographics played a large part in further diversifying the city and students from new, under-represented groups found a welcome mat awaiting them at the campus.

Alexandra Gratereaux — once a financially strapped journalism student who feared having to drop out in 2008 because of money troubles — has the college to thank for making her career dreams come true. She maintained a near-perfect grade point average, completed her studies, and landed a job as an entertainment editor for Fox News Latino after Haynes stepped in to create a financial plan that allowed her to complete her courses, stress-free.

“LIU made it happen for me!” says Gratereaux, whose experience is among the success stories that followed Haynes’s appointment as campus provost in 1989 — a time she describes as “one of its darkest moments.” “We had a campus that can best be described as cracked cement,” she says. “It was not a pretty place.” The provost and her fellow execs pursued a novel approach. “We decided that for every dollar received, 50 cents would be reinvested into the campus,”
she states.

The cash infusion has helped to triple the college’s green space, double student enrollment, build a $45 million Wellness, Recreation, and Athletic Center supporting 18 Division I athletic teams, and construct a Cyber Cafe and a community performing arts center.

LIU’s Brooklyn Campus is geographically unique, too. Its more than 200 academic programs — from business, arts, and pharmacy to the liberal arts and sciences — are enlivened by a short subway ride to financial epicenters, such as Wall Street, and world-renowned museums,  galleries, and theaters. It also retains its competitive edge through partnerships with some of the top hospitals, healthcare facilities, and pharmaceutical companies in the world earning its reputation as the place of higher learning that educates students for a career while preparing them for life.
Long Island University, 1 University Plaza, Phone: 718-488–1011

Elsewhere Brooklyn

Brooklyn Center for Performing Arts
2900 Campus Road. Phone: 718-951–4500
In Walt Whitman’s poem “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry,” the famous Brooklynite writes romantically about a crowd’s shared experience.

At the recently refurbished Walt Whitman Theatre at Brooklyn Center for Performing Arts, there’s no denying that the audience sitting in the art deco theater’s 2,350 seats are sharing a romantic, rousing, or riveting experience while watching wallet-friendly performances by greats like Tony Bennett, Luciano Pavarotti, Les Ballets Africains, Tom Jones, and the late Ray Charles. So let’s see what’s going in Elsewhere Brooklyn.

And that’s not even all that this organization – known as BCBC around the borough – has to offer. Established in 1954 on the scenic campus of Brooklyn College, its mission is to offer arts education programs that mirror Brooklyn’s diverse communities at affordable prices.

They introduce the youth to theater, dance, and music –  boosting their imagination, honing raw talent, and exposing kids to new ideas and cultures that create a community-connection that would make Whitman proud.

Continue reading Elsewhere Brooklyn

Brooklyn Historical Society Review

Fort Hamilton
Poly Place and Washington Drive on the Narrows, Phone: 718-630–4681
Any Brooklyn middle school student can tell you about the borough’s important role in the Revolutionary War — but Brooklyn’s military significance doesn’t end there. Thanks to Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn continues to play an important role for the armed forces today though its future remains uncertain. This is one of the most interesting places in this Brooklyn Historical Society review.

The base at the foot of the Verrazano-Narrows is home to a United States Army Recruiting Battalion, a Department of Defense Military Entrance Processing Command, and a United States Army Corps Engineers, among other units. Civilians can visit the Harbor Defense Museum — aptly placed considering that a battery located in present-day Fort Hamilton fired on a British vessel on July 4, 1776.

Brooklyn Borough Hall
209 Joralemon Street, Phone: 718-802–3900
In 1898, Brooklyn bigwigs made the worst decision in the history of the borough — allowing the then-independent city to be consolidated as a part of New York City. Though the power players handed off much of Brooklyn’s autonomy, they didn’t tear down Brooklyn’s old city hall.

Continue reading Brooklyn Historical Society Review

Output Brooklyn – An Introduction

Over the past decade, Brooklyn, the most populous of the five New York City boroughs, has become The Place To Be in New York. Brooklyn is where creative, edgy, interesting and amazing things happen. This is Output Brooklyn – An introduction to a vibrant New York Borough.

Fact is that even Manhattanites need to admit that these days, Brooklyn really is the NYC place to be or to be seen. So here we go:

Brooklyn was originally named Breukelen, after a small town in the Netherlands. If Brooklyn would have been an independent city, it would have ranked fourth in America with over 2.6 million residents.

Brooklyn is, in fact, New York City’s most thriving, electric, energetic, and culturally rich area, and the center of Brooklyn’s cultural and creative crescent is found along the East River.

Continue reading Output Brooklyn – An Introduction

Fun Runs and Backpage Brooklyn

I know it’s not the time of the year yet with our sometimes horrible winter weather. But once spring will be here, get out and back in shape again. So let’s look at some fun runs and backpage Brooklyn.

Prospect Park-The Red hook track run

The Red Hook track run is important for track training. It is a lot shorter than it feels. We run 15th street to Red Hook, come back along Union street, where the group normally disintegrates when crossing 7th avenue. Industrial archeology and brownstone Brooklyn shape this run through near-empty roads.

Continue reading Fun Runs and Backpage Brooklyn

Brooklyn Schützen Corps

Brooklyn Schützen Corps

founded 1922

The Brooklyn Schützen Corps (BSC) welcomes visitors to the German/American shooting club located at the Plattdütsche Park in Franklin Square, NY. The organization is a member club of the Plattdütsche Volksfest Verein and holds monthly General Meetings and monthly practice shoots.

It is the goal of the club to shoot competitively within the club as well as with other clubs in the New York area and the sister clubs in Germany. The organization strives to promote their heritage and to enjoy the fellowship for which the BSC has become known.

Besides Brooklyn Schützen Corps’ longstanding interests in the shooting sports, they are a very active social club which works toward the Good and Welfare of their German Heritage and Community by participating in many activities and events at the Plattdütsche Park and in the area.

A Brief History of the Club

On April 28, 1922, 47 friends met at P. Rudy Schumacher’s Empire Hall at 2 Ralph Avenue in Brooklyn, NY and the new Brooklyn Schützen Corps was founded. It was an immediate success and new members joined at every meeting. The first “Schützenfest” was held in September 1922 and has been an annual tradition ever since.

The “Schützenfest” is the highlight event of every calendar year. Members compete for many different prizes, trophies, plaques, and medals by showcasing their individual shooting skills. Over the years many lasting friendships have been formed at the “Schützenfest” with the schützenbrothers here in America as well as those who may be visiting from Germany. Several of the club’s members visit “Schützenfests” and other Schützen groups in Germany, where the members are always well-received.

The club also hosts several German Schützen Clubs annually who come here to take part in the German-American Steuben Parade, held every September, in midtown Manhattan. It is the hard work and participation of the club’s members that make these events a memorable success for all attendees.

Objective

The club’s membership consists of people that have a strong sense of commitment who are willing to be active and give the club 110%. For any organization to flourish and remain strong, it requires the effort and input of its membership through their continued support, participation, and initiative. The reward, as members of the Brooklyn Schützen Corps, is an appreciation of their German Heritage, it’s traditions, fun, fellowship and “Gut Schuß!”

In all of the club’s undertakings, they always have the full support of the Brooklyn Schützen Damen (Ladies Society), which is also a most successful club at the Plattdütsche Park. Although they have their own officers and have their own agenda, their objectives mirror those of the BSC.

Brooklyn Schützen Damen

Founded 1932

In 1932 on one cold December night, a handful of ladies were waiting for their husbands in a Plattduetsche German Restaurant, where the men of “The Brooklyn Schützen Corps” held their monthly meetings.

While the ladies were waiting, one made a comment, “What denks ji dorvon, wenn wir unsern eegenen Vereen gruendn? dat hebt veele Doerper in Duetschland ja ok!” (What do you think about founding our own club? There are many towns in Germany where the women have done this). All the ladies were very excited about the idea. In short order, with help of the Schützen men, a new Club called “The Brooklyn Schützen Damen” was formed.

The first President Frieda Wendland and perspective officers were voted in by the new membership. Frieda faithfully held her reign way into the war years. German clubs were not very active during those years. However a few years later, it took a little courage of six ladies to start holding meetings again. The Club continued to grow. It will always be their goal to further the old German Club traditions here in the USA.

In time the Damen decided to have uniforms made in the same traditional Schützen colors that the men used. They decided on grey Vests with green trim and green skirts. (Today the skirts have been changed to black). The 50th Anniversary of the Brooklyn Schützen Damen was well celebrated with huge membership and guest attendance.

The Lady’s Club has a strong membership and the Club continues to thrive. Even today, the Brooklyn Schützen Damen and the Brooklyn Schützen Men have many beautiful parties together. The main event is the September Schuetzenfest with competition shooting and the German traditional shooting for King and Queen. Highest score wins. The annual Christmas Party hosted by the Damen is also one of the highlights. The women also participate in the men’s traditional Jägerball that takes place in Mid Winter.

Brooklyn Acting School Courses

Brooklyn Acting School offers interesting programs for kids of all ages. The programs are focusing on the art of acting and playmaking for children 4-16. Kids will learn basic acting skills as well as what it takes to tell a story on stage.

Students will devise a piece of theatre from creating characters, devising a setting, to inventing dramatic twists and stage-worthy endings over the course of the semester. They will be encouraged to dream up using their imagination guided from idea to inception by their teacher.

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A Brooklyn Family Place

Family Support and Tutoring Services for Strong Brooklyn Neighborhoods

A Brooklyn Family Place provides tutoring, counseling, and support services for many Brooklyn families-in-need.  The organization helps parents and children navigate the public education system and offers programs that help families – and communities – to be healthier and more economically stable.

The agency’s paramount aim is to empower all of their clients, regardless of gender, racial, economic, or social disadvantage.  A Brooklyn Family Place believes that to overcome inequalities and adversities, individuals must have a strong sense of self-worth and self-ability.

To this end, they focus upon education in family-based programs to strengthen academic, social, and economic accomplishment for the overall health of the Brooklyn neighborhoods.

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