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13th Street 60th Street Residential building on 4th avenue & 85th Street, in Brooklyn, NY. Fourth Avenue is a major thoroughfare in the New York City borough of Brooklyn.It stretches for 6 miles (9.7 km) south from Times Plaza, which is the triangle intersection created by Atlantic and Flatbush Avenues in Downtown Brooklyn, to Shore Road and the Belt Parkway in Bay Ridge.
6th Street and Avenue B Garden 1984 Member-run, originally via a 1-year lease from Green Thumb, and later via a license by the City of New York. [15] 6th Street & Avenue B Garden 84 Avenue B Albert's Garden [16] 16-18 East 2nd Street Manhattan Land Trust 1971– [17] Named after Albert Eisenlau, an antiques dealer and a local resident.
Carroll Gardens was settled in the 19th century by immigrants from Ireland, [3] followed in the middle of the century by Norwegian immigrants, [11] who founded two churches, the Norwegian Seaman's Church (formerly the Westminster Presbyterian Church), now apartments, and the Norwegian Methodist Episcopal Church (formerly the Carroll Park Methodist Episcopal Church, no longer extant).
L&B Spumoni Gardens is an Italian-American pizzeria-restaurant in the Gravesend neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City. [1] [2] [3] [4] Originally conceived as an ...
Lefferts Manor Historic District is a national historic district in Prospect Lefferts Gardens, Brooklyn, New York City.It consists of 667 contributing buildings and one contributing site (the elaborate garden at 95 Maple), which were built between 1896 and 1935 on the subdivision established by James Lefferts in 1896.
FORT PIERCE − Breaking News Reporter Olivia Franklin recommends Happy Garden Cafe in Fort Pierce. It opened in July 2024 and it is located next door to the Sunrise Theatre on Second Street.
Patricia Murphy (1905–1979) was a restaurateur who operated nine Patricia Murphy Candlelight restaurants in New York and Florida over the course of half a century. [1] Shortly after the Wall Street Crash of 1929, she invested her last $60 in a small Brooklyn restaurant.
The homes are set farther back from the street than is common in Brooklyn, and the large gardens became an iconic depiction of the neighborhood. [5] All the houses in the district, which is afforded a degree of privacy by the street pattern that discourages through traffic on Carroll and President Streets, were built between 1869 and 1884.