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 reviews here pretty much sum it up for me:
http://www.yelp.com/biz/union-hall-brooklyn
Union Hall is a frat scene, generally filled with monumental assholes, not from the neighborhood. My objection to the place isn’t that it’s loud, but that it is crass.
I wouldn’t mind another Southpaw in that space, or a club that was all about interesting and truly cool music by indy/local bands. In other words, a place that was an extension of the tastes of this neighborhood.
But Union Hall isn’t about that. It’s a drink/money machine. I hope it goes.
10 years ago, these people were waking up to the sound of gunfire.
I think they should be thankful.
It’s not blown out of proportion. The main board has to listen to the advice of this advisory committee. They can vote against it but it rarely happens. Then the State liquor authority has to at least take into consideration what they voted on. There is a chance that the damage has been done and Union Hall will loose their liquor license.
If this comes because a fellow bar owner made the motion and then went on to talk the rest of the board into it because of some bitterness held against their other bar… Well that just sucks.
The other thing young people need to do is find better arguments other than “move to the suburbs if you don’t like it.” This blog likes to flame people for feeling entitled, but there is nothing more entitled than the “move” response to a genuine desire for improvement. Respect people’s commitment to their neighborhood and desire for a little sleep at night. Try not yelling at night when you leave a bar or even asking your friends to keep it down. Don’t shout down the street to your pals or shout into your cell phone. I think Union Hall should stay open – if it closes, loud people will drink elsewhere and they’ll still yell on Union on their way to the bus or the subway. Or they’ll be on someone else’s block. I live on Dean near Smith and on weekends, we get woken up regularly at 2 when the first wave of bars closes and again at 4 when the last bars close. I would never advocate closing these bars – I remember what woke me up in the middle of the night 10 years ago and it was fights and car alarms. I welcome a more lively neighborhood, but most of these people know to behave better. While noise is part of the city, no one has a right to be loud and obnoxious in the middle of the night. And no one is right to tell me to move if I don’t like being woken up by rude, drunken behaviour.
9:56 – that bus outside union hall stops running before 9pm, so you’re point on that is moot. seriously though, i can’t believe the local morons are trying to shut the place down. makes me want to start a petition to extend the hours…they should be serving booze until 6am, or hell, 24/7! remember when nyc was a 24/7 town?
This is NYC… it’s going to be loud at night occasionally. While I can see how it would be annoying a few nights a week I also know that there are really good white noise machines on the market that block out about 95% of the noise. Why? Because I bought one for similar reasons.
ANYWAY… we ALL KNOW that the people complaining about the noise are the same jerky parents who were asked -quite kindly, might I add- to please not bring strollers into a BAR. SO childish of these parents to try to shut down a fabulous bar just because they’re not getting their own way with stroller allowance.
Hey, Union Hall owners- if they make you shut down your bar come and reopen in Fort Greene/ Clinton Hill!
They have it in for this one bar, plain and simple. Union Street is MIXED commercial and residential. All up and down. It is also lined with large rent-control buildings where people hang outside on the stoops at night in Summer. Doesn’t really matter how much some newcomers in other buildings paid for their coops because the reality is it’s not a quiet picturesque idyllic little residential street.
Union Street is the loudest East/West street in all of Park Slope. Buses, trucks, cars, very congested. Two grocery markets in a two-block stretch. Several restaurants. Tons of delivery trucks as someone pointed out. Also hi, has nobody seen the crowds that hang outside Luigi’s gelato across the street from Union Hall? That is where the noise from loiterers comes from because it’ll be kids too not just adults there. Note the several benches set up outside Luigi’s. Clearly placed in plain sight. Whereas I too have never seen anybody hanging out on the sidewalks outside Union Hall, nor heard the noise of the bar until I got inside.
lol @ 10:05 suggesting people get involved in the community boards. You do know that the instant you get on a community board you become a soulless douchebag who ruins everyone’s fun out of spite and malice, right?
Someone please tell me one good thing any Manhattan or Brooklyn community board has done in the last ten years.
This is such a terrible precedent if it gets set. I truly hope this whole thing is as blown out of proportion as everyone says it is.
9:12am Are you trying to say cojones..
I LOVE UNION HALL!!!