A Bunch Of Random Updates (Read: Catching Up)

Posted: March 28th, 2012 | Filed under: Brooklyn, Out Of Town, Queens

First part of 2011 . . . I’m caught up to about May now . . .

We saw the Supermoon on March 19, 2011 from the Westfield New Jersey Transit station:

Westfield New Jersey Transit Station, Westfield, New Jersey, March 19, 2011

Westfield New Jersey Transit Station, Westfield, New Jersey, March 19, 2011

Hard to believe how little snow there was this year, especially compared to last year:

49th Avenue Between Vernon Boulevard and Jackson Avenue, Hunters Point, Long Island City, Queens, February 15, 2011

One thing I’ll miss/won’t miss about our old neighborhood is how many film shoots there were there:

San Remo Pizza, 48-20 Vernon Boulevard, Hunters Point, Long Island City, Queens, February 25, 2011

There’s a sort of park/playground in the old neighborhood that was created from a sliver of land leftover from the Queens-Midtown Tunnel called Old Hickory Park, which the Parks Department seems to have disowned, at least judging by the fact that it’s somehow disappeared from their website. The name is a goof on Jackson Avenue, “Old Hickory” being Andrew Jackson’s nickname. Stupidly esoteric:

Old Hickory Park, Jackson Avenue and 51st Avenue, Hunters Point, Long Island City, Queens, January 11, 2010

Robert Moses did a lot of neat things in the New York City area. He also oversaw a bunch of ridiculous orphan roads. The Prospect Expressway, for example:

Prospect Expressway Near 10th Avenue, Brooklyn, February 27, 2011

Blockbuster closed and some guys eventually took away the sign:

21-61 31st Street, Astoria, Queens, April 14, 2011

Back when we lived in Astoria we called this passage to the municipal parking lot “Deuce Alley” because it smelled like people took shits back there. Now it’s gussied up all fancy and such:

Astoria Walk, Astoria, Queens, April 10, 2011

I love the fact that there are public restrooms at the end of the subway lines. This is graffiti from the Ditmars Boulevard Station on the N/Q line in Queens. The idea of having sex in one of these restrooms boggles my mind; I can’t think of a worse place to do it:

Ditmars Boulevard Subway Station, Astoria, Queens, December 11, 2010

On the other end of the spectrum, Michael Bolton graffiti at Sweet Afton, which is where we celebrated Kawama:

Sweet Afton, 30-09 34th Street, Astoria, Queens, April 8, 2011

50,000 Lights In Canarsie

Posted: December 27th, 2011 | Filed under: Brooklyn

The Seddio Christmas House in Canarsie, Brooklyn at the Southwest corner of Flatlands Avenue and East 93rd Street features 50,000 lights and can be seen from planes landing at Kennedy:

Seddio Christmas House 2011, Flatlands Avenue and East 93rd Street, Canarsie, Brooklyn, December 23, 2011

Seddio Christmas House 2011, Flatlands Avenue and East 93rd Street, Canarsie, Brooklyn, December 23, 2011

Seddio Christmas House 2011, Flatlands Avenue and East 93rd Street, Canarsie, Brooklyn, December 23, 2011

Clearly there was some hubbub going on between the Seddios and the Department of Sanitation; not sure if it stretches all the way back to 2003, but here’s some evidence of that:

Seddio Christmas House 2011, Flatlands Avenue and East 93rd Street, Canarsie, Brooklyn, December 23, 2011

In all, quite a display and worth the trip if you can make it out there!

April 2-3, 2011

Posted: April 6th, 2011 | Filed under: Brooklyn, Queens

Saturday we took the 7 train out to Corona . . .

Eastbound 7 Train, Queens, April 2, 2011, 11:30 a.m.

. . . to the New York Hall of Science, which I had never been to. I love the quirky architecture of the Great Hall, which was originally built as a pavilion for the 1964-65 World’s Fair and which was designed by Wallace K. Harrison (who also designed the Rockefeller Apartments on 54th Street, the Time-Life Building on Sixth Avenue and the master plan for Lincoln Center, and was the lead architect for the United Nations complex):

New York Hall of Science, 47-01 111th Street, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens

This is one of the blocks up close:

Great Hall, New York Hall of Science, 47-01 111th Street, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens

The Mathematica exhibit (background here) is vintage 1960s — and as quirky and retro as the dioramas at the Museum of Natural History. A really cool treasure:

Mathematica Exhibit, New York Hall of Science, 47-01 111th Street, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens

Cube of Lights Multiplication Machine, Mathematica Exhibit, New York Hall of Science, 47-01 111th Street, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens

We also played miniature golf at the Rocket Park Mini Golf course, next to the Mercury-Atlas and Gemini-Titan rockets that were also from the ’64-’65 Fair:

Rocket Park Mini Golf, New York Hall of Science, 47-01 111th Street, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens

At least one of us loved the cow eye dissection demonstration:

Cow Eye Dissection Demonstration, New York Hall of Science, 47-01 111th Street, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens

Took the train back via the 103 Street-Corona Plaza Station (with a pit stop for a Mama’s Special).

Sunday we went to Williamsburg to visit the Brooklyn Flea:

Brooklyn Flea, East River Waterfront Between North 6th and North 7th Streets, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, April 3, 2011

Brooklyn Flea, East River Waterfront Between North 6th and North 7th Streets, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, April 3, 2011

Brooklyn Flea, East River Waterfront Between North 6th and North 7th Streets, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, April 3, 2011

Brooklyn Flea, East River Waterfront Between North 6th and North 7th Streets, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, April 3, 2011

Here are some new pages for Bushwick Inlet Park (“inlet” is a horrible sounding word), the Citistorage Records Center (which will have to move if plans for the waterfront move forward), and the Williamsburg Edge (which doesn’t actually have any pictures of the buildings themselves . . . whoops!).

On the way back, we walked by the furrier on Manhattan Avenue, which we had read is going to close soon:

685 Manhattan Avenue, Greenpoint, Brooklyn, April 3, 2011

And back over the Pulaski Bridge:

Pulaski Bridge, Greenpoint, Brooklyn-Long Island City, Queens, April 3, 2011