Archive | November, 2009

Norah Jones to change windows, make enemies

Norah Jones obtained approval from the Landmarks Preservation Commission to install ten windows to a windowless brick wall of her brownstone on Amity Street, which has the Cobble Hill Association furious, as they claim that the windows are inconsistent with the building’s 19th-century, Greek revival architecture. The CHA insists that a decision of this caliber should have required a public hearing with the LPC, not the quite approval that Jones seemingly achieved.

NY Post: The group has asked Jones to delay construction and meet with them to try reaching a resolution. It also wants the commission to reopen the case with a public review.

The commission declined comment, but Jones isn’t backing down.

The 30-year-old, Brooklyn-born beauty fired an e-mail back to Sloane, saying, “With respect to the Cobble Hill Association, my windows went through the approvals process with Landmarks” and are not “out of character” with the neighborhood.

Jones’ contractors did go before Landmarks commissioners in June – but over less controversial renovations to the home’s interior that were swiftly approved without objections from neighbors.
But months later, her contractors submitted an amended plan to construct the 10 windows. Landmarks staff approved it Oct. 22 without a public hearing before commissioners.

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Cubana Cafe open in Park Slope

cubana-cafe-park-slopeCubana Cafe, one of my favorite cheap eats in the nabe, is now open in Park Slope on the corner of Sixth Avenue and St. Marks Place. Pretty much the same menu, gratis plantain chips, and tasty drinks as the Smith Street location. If you’re looking for a change in scenery, check it out.

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Last chance for Brooklyn Navy Yard Tour

Sunday, November 22, will be the last Brooklyn Navy Yard Bus Tour of the spring season. The tour, run by Urban Oyster in partnership with the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation and the Brooklyn Historical Society, includes stops where passengers get off the bus to get a closer look at some of the Navy Yard’s most intriguing sites, including a dry dock that’s been used since before the Civil War, the former Navy hospital campus that is virtually frozen in time, and the nation’s first multi-story LEED-certified industrial building. The tour will run from 1:30-4:00 pm, and advance ticket purchase is required ($30, or $25 for Brooklyn Historical Society members). For more information on Urban Oyster and other Brooklyn tours, visit Brooklyn Heights Blog’s walking tour page.

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Sesame Street Family Day this Saturday

Celebrate Sesame Street’s 40th birthday (which was this past Tuesday) with the Brooklyn Public Library with  Sesame Street-inspired crafts and reading activities, balloon animals, a screening of The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland, and an appearance by Elmo to meet kids and take pictures. Saturday also marks the first day that limited edition Sesame Street library cards will be available. The fun takes place this Saturday, November 14, from 11 am to 4 pm at the Central Library, Grand Army Plaza.

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Lost City walking tours

Lost City will host its first-ever walking tour of Carroll Gardens on Sunday, November 22. That tour filled up so quickly that a second date has been announced for Sunday, December 6. If you’re interested in joining the tour, please make a reservation by emailing lostcitybrooks@gmail.com. The cost is $20.

Lost City: I’m going to try to keep these tours the walking, talking equivalent of the blog. It will not be the history you find in books. Nothing about the Battle of Brooklyn or Peter Stuyvesant. Historians have done that to death and much better, too, than I could. The tour will cover hidden history, maybe some stuff you’ve heard of somewhere, but hopefully a lot of things you’ve never heard of before or even suspected. It will by hyper-local, idiosyncratic, with a light patina of Big Picture, and I will try to include as much living history as I can (though that choice commodity becomes harder and harder to come by as the years progress).

The tour will last roughly 90 minutes. (I don’t think people really want to be on their feet much longer than that.) The cost will be $20. Yours truly, Brooks, will be the host. And the meeting place will by the southwest corner of Henry and Sackett Streets, in front of Naidre’s cafe. (The best way to get there, if you don’t live in the area, is to take the F train to the Carroll Street stop. Walk north on Smith to Sackett, turn left, and walk three blocks to Henry.)

Check out our guide to Brooklyn Walking Tours

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Restaurant openings/closing

Time Out reports that Cafe Mei Mei will open this week:

Chef Robert Ribant (River Café) opens a seasonal American restaurant with a modern design that includes floor tiles patterned after a Mondrian painting. Market-driven specials will feature dry-aged prime steak, foie gras and other delicacies. Wines and beers are planned, but until the license clears, expect free pours on Fridays and Saturdays. 231 Court St between Baltic and Warren Sts, Cobble Hill, Brooklyn (718-852-8571)

and Lost City reports that Bistro 4 Kids will replace Pit Stop:

Whassup with Pit Stop, the French bistro that has anchored a bit of Columbia Street these past several years? Is it going away?

There’s a sign in the window of the joint that says a new restaurant called New Formulae, “Bistro 4 Kids,” is opening soon in the space.

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Happy Veterans Day!

us-flagThank you to all the men and women who have served or are currently serving as members of the United States Military. Your service is remembered everyday, but on this day, we recognize you as a nation.

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Brooklyn Celebrates “Five Dutch Days”

Read about it on BHB.

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Denis Hamill Pans LICH/SUNY Deal

Denis Hamill, writing in today’s Daily News, detects something rotten about the proposed takeover of LICH by SUNY Downstate Medical Center:

NY Daily News: A smelly political back room merger of LICH with SUNY Downstate Medical Center is imminent, unless state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo steps in…”In September, the LICH medical staff submitted an alternative restructuring plan to the state Department of Health that we believe would make this private hospital profitable again,” says Dr. John Romanelli, head of the LICH medical staff. “We’ve received no response. Nothing. Instead they seem ready to approve the Downstate takeover, making it a public hospital, without even consulting the medical staff.”

In his column, Hamill alleges that Continuum Health Partners, LICH’s present manager, has “cannibalized LICH for the benefit of the network’s Manhattan mother ship, Beth Israel” and, according to Dr. Romanelli, “they are trying to bury the body with this deal with Downstate.”

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Maclaren stroller recall

picture-12Maclaren has issued a recall of its umbrella stroller, after discovering that the stroller’s hinge mechanism poses a “fingertip amputation and laceration hazard” to the child when the stroller is being unfolded or opened. The recalled models include Volo, Triumph, Quest Sport, Quest Mod, Techno XT, Techno XLR, Twin Triumph, Twin Techno and Easy Traveller. Maclaren is providing a kit to cover the stroller’s hinge mechanism to all affected consumers and retailers. The Maclaren umbrella stroller is one of the most popular strollers used in the wider Cobble Hill area.

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