dumbo
What’s it going to be like for the artists and bankers who call Dumbo home when the four towers are built at 85 Jay Street and 1,600 or so Jehovah’s Witnesses move in? Hard to say. For one thing, they won’t have to worry about a spike in crime: “You’re going to know for a fact that you’re going to have good neighbors who are going to be honest, they’re not going to try to break into where you are or start a petition against you,” says the group’s national spokesman. “But we’re going to pursue our mission.” Of course, the Witnesses were there first, but at that time there weren’t really any other residents to speak of. The Times points to the group’s insularity and lack of integration into the community as a negative. The fact that none of the new buildings will have any commercial/retail space in an area that’s in the process of becoming the new Soho is also ticking off some people in the area. One Witness doesn’t think the influx of religious types will make a dent: “By the time the Witnesses get down here,” Jamie Jared said, “there’s already going to have been a cultural shift that’s going to have happened, from all the Manhattanites moving in.”
Side by Side [NY Times]


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  1. I am a resident that will be greatly affected by this project. I don’t mind the JWs as neighbors but am concerned about the volume of traffic that they bring while not contributing to the community. No public spaces, no retail spaces, no taxes to help deal with the physical impact their presence will have on the nabe.

  2. I don’t mind living with the JW’s as long as they don’t come knocking on my door! At least they will be “good” neighbors. If Jews and hipsters can co-exist in Williamsburg… no reason why the same melting pot situation can’t occur in dumbo. If they do eventually build, I do wish that they would reconsider and have retail space at least along the Jay street corridor.

  3. I’m a new Dumbo resident with deep historical roots in the neighborhood — my ancestors lived in the area from the 1830s through the 1860s. With almost nothing left of early 19th Century working class Brooklyn, particularly in what were then known as the Navy Yard neighborhoods, it is distressing to learn that there were indeed some remaining structures until as recently as 10 years ago. The JW presence in the nabe is a mixed blessing; it would be nice if they could embrace the new appreciation of their area history. I also agree with 10:13 — the less like SoHo the better.

  4. Thank you gidget for reminding everyone of the wonderful buildings that were destroyed to create the present parking lot.The 19th cent.victorian brick school building,the civil war era loft buildings and all the others.The Jehovas went in with thier deep(tax free)pockets and bought every single building on that block and leveled them.Those buildings housed buisnesses(including the Bourum and Pease co.,up to then the oldest company in Brooklyn)and employed people and paid taxes.