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Barclays Center (/ ˈ b ɑːr k l i z / BAR-kleez) [9] is a multi-purpose indoor arena in the New York City borough of Brooklyn.The arena is home to the Brooklyn Nets of the National Basketball Association and the New York Liberty of the Women's National Basketball Association. [10]
The Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center station is one of three express stations in the New York City Subway system to have side platforms for local services and a center island platform for express services. [191] The other two are the 34th Street–Penn Station stops on the IND Eighth Avenue Line and on the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line.
The Barclays Center-bound B37 runs from Third to Fourth Avenues. [12] The Q41 runs between 127th Street and Van Wyck Expressway, with Jamaica trips continuing on the one-way section to the avenue’s eastern end. The B12 deadheads on Atlantic Avenue from Mary Warren Place to Alabama Avenue to change direction. [13]
at Atlantic Avenue–Barclays Center NYCT Bus: B41, B45, B63, B65, B67, B103 ... West of East New York, the tracks were taken over by horse car lines. ... Google Maps ...
Atlantic Center has 3 retail levels and 2 underground parking levels, with Stop and Shop and Old Navy on the first floor, Best Buy, Marshalls, and the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles on the second floor in addition to a few smaller retail outlets, and a Burlington Coat Factory and Dave & Busters on the third floor, in addition a ...
In sports, basketball's Brooklyn Nets, and New York Liberty play at the Barclays Center. In the first decades of the 21st century, Brooklyn has experienced a renaissance as a destination for hipsters, [13] with concomitant gentrification, dramatic house-price increases, and a decrease in housing affordability. [14]
In April 2015, LIU announced a 49-year lease of the Paramount to a company controlled by Bruce Ratner and Mikhail Prokhorov, owners of the Barclays Center and the Brooklyn Nets. They planned an extensive renovation costing about $50 million, overseen by the firm of Hugh Hardy, to convert the auditorium back to a theater for live events.
After September 2009, the design for what became Barclays Center became a collaboration between Ellerbe Becket and the Manhattan architectural firm SHoP Architects. [12] Pacific Park, overseen by the Empire State Development Corporation, [1] is supposed to be a public-private project, Bruce Ratner told Crain's New York Business in November 2009 ...