Before...
Now..
A view from First Place
(photo credit: Tim)
Reader Tim posted the two photos above of Bill Stein's 360 Smith Street development on Pardon Me For Asking's Facebook page.
He writes:
He writes:
Related reading:
Construction Incident At 360 Smith Street Yesterday
Did You See This Happen? Man Injured By Falling Construction Fence At 360 Smith Street2nd Place Subway Station Now History
Last Glance At Old Carroll Gardens Subway Plaza on Second Place
Boom, Boom...Construction Resumes At 360 Smith StreetFor Home Page, click Pardon Me For Asking
6 comments:
I feel Tim's pain too. Living next to a large construction project is supposed to be one of those "most stressful" things in life. It is hard to believe that until it happens literally in front of your face.
Maybe when 360 starts marketing the units Tim and his neighbor can aim some telescopes at the windows.
I noticed the same thing this past Sunday.
I was standing in front of Vinatge Cellars waiting for my wife and our Sunday bottle of red, when I sadly saw the "progress" of the construction.
Ironically, that site is one of the highest in what we call Carroll Gardens. As you come towards it from Atlantic Avenue you're walking 'up hill' - and this hill crests at P.S. 58 and stays level until just past that train station.
I'm all for growth, but why isn't there any "Happy Medium" any more? Why can't builders and thier clients learn to compromise?
This building is the wall of shame
It's sad to see this happen in CG but I wouldn't say it's the 'most stessful' thing in life. To aim telescopes at windows? What's wrong with people? I hope they're not serious.
I think stressful is not an inappropriate word to use when you see your neighborhood being marred by such an out of scale assertion into your skyscape. Why do you think people leave Manhattan for Brooklyn? Manhattan density is stressful -even if just subliminally, you feel it. When I get out of the subway, back to Brooklyn, and see the skies again, I breathe a sigh of relief. That's a visceral feeling - my brain doesn't control it, I'm not making it up. Yes, Scarano was barred just last week from filing any more plans because of his shady practices. But he has left his mark with 333 Carroll Street (that shoud come down!) and that ugly Sartori on Bond Street.
One of the things you can't help to feel after spending a day in Manhattan and returning to Carroll Gardens on the F train, is that strong sense of breath and the sky above your head. You can feel the difference day or night--especially on full moon nights. It's a strong sense of relief, of being home here in Brooklyn. It is truly a loss to all of us that the sky over this subway stop has been taken away form all of us, forever.
This building makes it more critical that the corner garden lots, like that on Smith and 1st street, are not built upon. The density ration along Smith Street needs to be kept in line with the nature of this community. After all it is this essence of Carroll Gardens that these developers are trying to sell off to the new buyers of these condo units. Even the developers have an interest in not destroying what brings value to their Carroll Garden's development projects.
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