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Saratoga Library 8 Thomas S. Boyland Street The branch is a Carnegie library that opened in 1909. [56] Sheepshead Bay Library 2636 East 14th Street The branch has occupied four buildings since it was founded in 1903. The current 7,475-square-foot (694.5 m 2) building opened in 1963. [57] Spring Creek Library 12143 Flatlands Avenue
Adams Street library branch. The Brooklyn Public Library (BPL)'s Adams Street branch is located at 9 Adams Street, between John and Plymouth Streets. [61] The 6,000-square-foot (560 m 2) Adams Street branch, designed by WORKac, occupies a former factory. [62] The branch started construction in 2020 and cost $7 million to build. [63]
Adams Street Branch, 690 Adams Street, Dorchester. Library service in the Adams Street neighborhood began in 1875 with the implementation of a delivery station on Walnut street, followed by a reading room on Neponset Avenue in 1907. It moved to its current location in 1951. [62] The 1951 building was replaced by a new, larger building in 2021. [63]
Adams Street: 10 West Adams Street Fyfe Building: Apartment Building 1919 Gothic Revival 14 ... Library: 1921, 1963 Renaissance Revival, International 5 Kirby Street:
Storytimes at the Central Library, 10:30 a.m. Fridays Feb. 2, 9, 16 and 23. Kids ages 2-5, with an adult, are invited to join for stories, songs, rhymes and more.
115–119 Eighth Avenue, also known as the Adams House, is a historic house at Eighth Avenue and Carroll Street in Park Slope, Brooklyn, New York City.It was built in 1888 as a double house, and was commissioned by Thomas Adams Jr., who invented the Adams Chiclets automatic vending machine.
Drag performer Maxi Glamour reads “Leonardo the Terrible Monster,” a book about friendship, to a group of more than 20 children during the drag queen storytime event June 21, 2022, at the Glen ...
The Adams Street station was a station on the demolished BMT Myrtle Avenue Line and BMT Lexington Avenue Line in Brooklyn, New York City. It had 2 tracks and 2 side platforms. It was opened on February 13, 1888, as "City Hall Station" and closed on March 5, 1944. The next stop to the south was Bridge–Jay Streets.