Off-Topic: Wilco at SummerStage
Wilco played the first (and driest) of its two shows at Central Park SummerStage last night. Since the Brooklyn Flea handles the food and beer concessions, we get to watch things from up close. Here’s a fun clip from the band’s opening number “Art of Almost.” We’re going back tonight, but with foul weather gear in hand!
Closing Bell: “Brooklyn Eats Manhattan”

This morning Jeremiah’s Vanishing New York wondered about the increasing “Brooklynization of Manhattan” and lists a few prime examples of Brooklyn finding its way over the river. (See: The Brooklyneer, Pop’s of Brooklyn at NYU and the “Brooklyn takeover” at the LES Ideas Fest.) Says VNY:
“It’s a kind of reverse gentrification, but more twisted, a sort of Mobius Strip of gentrification in which the New Brooklyn, which exists because it was priced out of Manhattan 10 years ago, and which sort of (but not really) resembles the old Manhattan, is coming back to Manhattan, extruded through the New Brooklyn ringer, like artisanal sausage, a kind of monster-mash of flavors, so that it feels nothing quite like Manhattan ever did and only like parts of Brooklyn have come to be in recent years. Which is to say–it feels like somewhere not New York at all.”
As FNY concludes, “Manhattan’s cast-off children are getting big enough to eat the mother that rejected them.” So is it only a matter of time before Brooklyn outright devours Manhattan?
Brooklyn Eats Manhattan [VNY]
Photo via The L
Squadron Helps Drivers Get Off (The FDR)

Most Brooklynites are familiar with what a mess it can be to take the Brooklyn Bridge exit from the southbound FDR drive. Well, State Senator Squadron just worked out a deal with State DOT to make some changes, including new painted lines and EXIT ONLY signs, by the end of the year. Think it’ll help?
Manhattan vs. Brooklyn, Boom and Bust

Jonathan Miller posted a neat little graph over at Curbed on Friday, which attempts to show the savings of living in Brooklyn vs. Manhattan over the past seven years. Mr. Miller acknowledges that the graph is “simplistic and fraught with problems,” but it gives an approximated view of how much buyers save by living in Brooklyn, and that saving’s relationship to the boom and bust years. Using median sales price data (of condos? co-ops? houses? all available residential sales?), Mr. Miller concludes that the peak time of Brooklyn savings relative to Manhattan was the second quarter of 2008. Again, it’s an approximation, but an interesting one. Take a look at the original article for more details.
Three Cents Worth: Manhattan to Brooklyn Value Proposition [Curbed]
The Return of the Rooming Houses?

A neighborhood in Harlem expressed concern to The New York Times over developer Gerald Migdol’s attempt to convert an 18-foot-wide brick row house back into a rooming house. The neighbors are worried that the conversion of 228 West 132nd Street will decrease the quality of the neighborhood. Mr. Migdol told the Times that the conversion, which will have nine single rooms with bathrooms, two two-bedroom apartments, and a communal kitchen, is legal: even though the city forbids new rooming houses, it allows an owner to restore previous rooming-house units, as is the case at 228. Has anyone heard of this happening in Brooklyn? We’ve seen luxury condo developments here in Brooklyn go rental instead of keeping units on the market and there’s lots of talk about turning other failed luxury condo projects into affordable housing, but has anyone heard of conversions back to rooming houses?
Rooming House Returns [NY Times]
229 North 8th Goes Rental [Brownstoner]
Brokers Find a Silver Lining in Autumn Data
Real estate analysts and brokers are still looking for a silver lining—a sign that the profitability of the boom years hasn’t completely vanished—and they are currently looking at inventory data as a sign of hope. The week after Labor Day is a common milestone for the real estate business: the summer season has ended, vacationers are returning, and usually there is a small increase in the number of listings. This year, the number of post-Labor-Day listings on the market in Manhattan were similar to last year’s, reports The New York Times. Even though prices are still dropping, companies like Miller Samuel and StreetEasy say this could mean that transaction activity and inventory are stabilizing, which might indicate an end to the downward spiral. As for prices, the median asking price after Labor Day in 2007 was $1,050,000; it was $1,100,000 in 2008; and it dropped to $860,750 this year. Or, breaking it down, studios went from $525,000 in 2007 to $429,000 in 2008 to $399,000 in 2009; one-bedrooms went from $785,000 to $775,000 to $675,000; and two-bedrooms went from $1,412,500 to $1,599,500 to $1,250,000. Hall Willkie, the president of Brown Harris Stevens, gave the Times a less broker-centric view of the numbers: In many ways, it’s going to be a healthier market … It will be more affordable to more people, which is more sustainable. A lot of money was made during the boom years, but I don’t know if it’s such a great world when people with good jobs and a good income can’t buy a home.
Looking for the Bottom [Brownstoner]
The Look of Autumn [NY Times]
No Love for Manhattan from Bushwick Artists
Manhattan, says Iris Lasson, a sculptor. The strange place across the water.
I don’t like going there unless I have to pick up a check, says Doyle.
Arielle Bier stirs a pot of soup. I go to Manhattan, and money falls out of my pockets, she says.
Is Bruce Ratner Out of Cash?
Looks like Brooklyn isn’t the only borough seeing a stalled project care of our pals at Forest City Ratner. Apparently an ambitious FCR-developed 75-story tower planned for 8 Spruce Street, near City Hall, is going nowhere fast. This wouldn’t necessarily be news except for the fact that part of the Frank Gehry-designed building is supposed to include a public school, and the local community board down there is starting to get a wee bit skeptical about the school being ready for action in ’09, as promised. Downtown Express reports:
When Noah Pfefferblit, C.B. 1′s district manager, asked Ratner and the S.C.A. why no work has happened on the project in six months, he got two different answers. The School Construction Authority said there was a delay in delivering a shipment of steel, but that the steel would arrive soon. After that, work will begin on an expedited schedule to get the school open by fall 2009, the authority said. Ratner gave an entirely different explanation, after canceling an appearance at the community board to discuss the project. They said they’re having issues with their financing, Pfefferblit told the Youth and Education Committee Tuesday. Frank Gehry, known for complicated and whimsical buildings, designed the tower that will house the school. Paul Hovitz, a committee member, provided further evidence of funding troubles, which have been rumored for months. He was recently discussing the project with another board member in public, when a man overheard him. Ratner is having problems financing the project, said the man, who added that he worked for a company doing the financing, Hovitz said.
Join the club, Manhattan.
Delay? Count the Ways {Downtown Express]
Endangered AY [Brownstoner]
Photo by threecee.
May 21, 2012 | 02:16 PM