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That’s what one Marine Park resident confided to the NY Times this weekend, in their weekly Living In section. The former Sloper said Marine Park, “reminds me of what neighborhoods used to be like before they became advertisements for themselves. The subway stop-less neighborhood is filled with “police officers, firefighters, postal workers and city employees,” many of whom are second or third generation Marine Park-ers (Park-ites?) and purchase homes nearby those in which they were reared; the civic association’s motto is “Improve, Don’t Move.” The homes, many of them semi-attached or semi-detached (we believe the difference has something to do with where and how much of the homes are connected; architecture buffs, please inform), start in the $350,000 range and easily climb to $750,000. One-bedroom rentals can start in the $1,000 range. Among the neighborhood’s treasures are Marine Park itself (Brooklyn’s largest) and the Hendrik I. Lott House, an 1800’s Dutch farmhouse on East 36th Street filled with “clues into a vanished way of life,” with “wells, privies and a stone kitchen between the house and the street.”
Isolation Is Pretty Splendid [NY Times]
Photo by Stu_Jo.


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  1. jebby, i actually find it depressing to think that people live in this area all their lives. continuity has its merits, but so does the rejuvenation that new blood brings to a neighborhood. and brooklyn hasn’t “lost its narrative”; its narrative is just different from what you think it should be.

  2. that house in the photo looks like the house in The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane (great movie btw from the late 70s with jodie foster trying to survive as a 13 year old oprhan in new england)

    -Rob

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