Community Board Moving to Nuke Union Hall
Last night Community Board 6’s landmarks/land-use committee dealt a harsh (albeit symbolic) blow to local watering hole and performance space Union Hall. After a lengthy and often rancorous public hearing about renewing the Park Slope bar and venue’s liquor license, the committee voted 6 to 2 in favor of a motion that denies Union Hall…

Last night Community Board 6’s landmarks/land-use committee dealt a harsh (albeit symbolic) blow to local watering hole and performance space Union Hall. After a lengthy and often rancorous public hearing about renewing the Park Slope bar and venue’s liquor license, the committee voted 6 to 2 in favor of a motion that denies Union Hall a renewal unless the business’s owners sign a contract stipulating that they will take measures to ameliorate noise, such as stopping the sale of alcohol after midnight. Although the motion is ultimately only advisory, the committee member who introduced it—Lou Sones, who himself owns a bar, The Brazen Head on Atlantic Avenue—described it as the community board’s “nuclear weapon” in terms of being a powerful indication to the State Liquor Authority that Union Hall is disturbing the lives of nearby residents. The motion was introduced after a two-hour-long pubic hearing in which many supporters of Union Hall, which is on Union Street between 5th and 6th avenues, spoke about how much they appreciated the business. A good number of residents who live near the establishment, meanwhile, described how noise from the business and its patrons was negatively affecting their quality of life. More people at the hearing, in fact, spoke out in support of Union Hall than against it. Find out what they had to say, and read the anti-UH faction’s claims, on the jump…
The business’s boosters said Union Hall is a great deal more than just a bar or rock venue. One of the people who runs the club’s Secret Science Club, for example, noted that his group has brought three Nobel Laureates to speak at the venue, and comedian Eugene Mirman talked about how his comedy night at the venue has been called one of the best in the city. Union Hall co-owner Jim Carden described how many Brooklyn organizations have held fundraisers at the space and detailed the many ways he and his partners have tried to address noise concerns, from soundproofing to putting up signs like the one at right to trying to hold meetings with block residents who say they’ve been disturbed by the bar’s noise. Some of those residents, who have been complaining about Union Hall for many months now, described not being able to sleep because their street is constantly filled with drunken revelers at all hours of the night and morning. Most dramatically, one Union Street resident said she’d been dealing with auto-immune problems that were directly linked to sleep deprivation. The struggle between Union Hall and its neighbors is one that’s currently being played out all around the city, and community boards have become battlegrounds where the fight between people who want to preserve their residential streets and businesses that want to operate on those streets is played out. A somewhat similar liquor license battle was recently fought over an oyster bar that’s opening on Hoyt Street. The committee’s recommendation on Union Hall will be voted on by all of Community Board 6 next week, and if the full board also backs the motion, the State Liquor Authority will have to weigh the decision when it decides on whether to renew Union Hall’s license at the end of this month.
Neighbors to Union Hall: Shut Up! [Brownstoner]
Shucks! Oyster Bar Dredges Up Controversy on Hoyt [Brownstoner]
The drunk lesbians leaving Cattyshack are MUCH louder than the closeted fratboys at Union Hall.
i don’t think your lover in philadelphia would be happy to hear you calling yourself single, dave…
classic 12:48 but some of us owners are single and stay out too late and make too much noise.
you need to see someone, 12:48 #2
seriously lady.
you’re in trouble.
12;47…That’s fine but Mr. B is going to have to filter out all the frat boys who will be secretly logged in….as well as all the straight men who get drunk at UH and can’t get what they think is their first choice
Yeah, a separate section for renters would be a great idea!
In fact, maybe we could ship them all out to Bushwick in cattle cars so those of us fighting the good fight (owning property, growing crotch-fruit, spending our husbands’ Wall Street money) can have some peace and quiet when we’re getting ready for bed at 8:30pm, sedating our kids, unwinding to “Touched By an Angel” re-runs on the WE network.
it’s unbelievable. this is one of the most neighborhoody places i’ve ever been to. families feel comfortable and so do young crazy hipsters or whatever they call them these days.
this is new york city. it’s loud. if you dont like it, you should live somewhere else. don’t turn one of the most interesting places on earth into a sleepy suburban town. and let me drink my beer.
I say a separate section for gays is the best idea I’ve heard ALL day!!!
I live at Union and 5th Avenue, one block away from said Union Hall.
I can vouch for the noise levels… at 3 AM on Friday and Saturday nights. At no other times during the week is noise an issue any more than the wonderful people who insist on honking their horns and blasting their radios for passers-by at that same early hour. And yes, there are plenty of those, perhaps even more often than revelers leaving the bar.
And in my experience, there are louder folks coming more reliably from the direction of 200 Fifth on Fifth Avenue.
I understand why there is concern over this issue. Having increased levels of noise where there was previously none can be disorienting and disheartening, but the bottom line is that the entire 5th Avenue area in the northern Slope is developing some semblance of a social scene. And I, for one, have no problem with that.
Park Slope is not suddenly going to become the East Village. I can all but guarantee that there is no risk for that. But bars and restaurants will come along that attract attention, and it’s a boon to the neighborhood to have one as well-respected and as heavily trafficked as Union Hall.
I’m all for having a quiet street, too, but one bar is not the single cause.