Category Archives: Public Space

Myrtle Avenue Holiday Guide

There’s no place better to celebrate the holiday season then here in Fort Greene & Clinton Hill on Myrtle Avenue. Here’s your guide on where to find the best gifts at local shops, enjoy free holiday events with family and neighbors, reward yourself with FREE hot chocolate, find the best backdrops for your holiday pics, and how to give back for the season!

QUICK LINKS

Read the Holiday Guide

Clink to enlarge

The 2023 Myrtle Ave Holiday Guide was mailed to neighbors across Fort Greene & Clinton Hill. If you haven’t received your copy in the mail just yet, look for one at a Myrtle Ave shop or at the Fort Greene Tree Lighting on Sunday, Dec 10.


Shop Local For the Holidays

The best gifts are the ones found at local shops. If you need some help on your search, visit the 2023 Myrtle Holiday Gift Guide for great finds from the neighborhood’s locally-owned shops.


Free Holiday Events

Find full event listings and details in the Myrtle Avenue Events Calendar.

  • Fort Greene Tree Lighting: the 9th annual lighting will be on Sunday, December 10, 4-5pm at Myrtle Ave & St. Edwards in Fort Greene Park. Come by free hot cocoa, write your letter to Santa, live holiday music, and lighting of the tree! We will also be accepting new, unwrapped toys for our annual toy drive benefiting families with kids of all ages living in NYCHA’s Ingersoll and Whitman Houses.
  • Menorah Lighting & Outdoor Chanukah Celebration: Come celebrate on Sunday, December 10, 5:30-6:30pm, with Chabad of Clinton Hill & Pratt Institute, and enjoy music, donuts (sufganiyot), dreidels, latkes and fun for the entire family on the Myrtle Plaza (at Myrtle & Steuben). 5:30pm – 8′ Menorah chiseled out of ice with music; 6:00pm – Grand Menorah Menorah Lighting.

TB Coffee House

Shop Local, Get FREE Cocoa ☕️ !

Now through 12/24, you can earn a FREE cup of hot chocolate by simply spending $25 or more in-store at Jill Lindsey, Green in BKLYN, & Indulge Kitchen Supplies. You’ll then receive a ticket redeemable at the shops below. It’s really that simple.

  • 📍Green in BKLYN – 432 Myrtle / $25 or more
  • 📍Indulge Kitchen Supplies – 469 Myrtle / $25 or more
  • 📍Jill Lindsey – 370 Myrtle / $25 or more, Redeem for ☕️
  • 📍Peck’s – 455a Myrtle / Redeem for ☕️
  • 📍TB Coffee House – 578 Myrtle / Redeem for ☕️

Myrtle Ave Toy Drive

2023 Myrtle Avenue Toy Donation

The annual Myrtle Avenue Toy Drive serves families with kids of all ages living in NYCHA’s Ingersoll and Whitman Houses. Donate new, unwrapped toys between November 25 – December 14 at these businesses and the Fort Greene Tree Lighting on Sunday, December 3!

  • 🪁 21 Tara – 388 Myrtle
  • Apple Bank – 418 Myrtle
  • 🪀 DC Optics – 390 Myrtle
  • Corkscrew – 489 Myrtle
  • 📚Green in BKLYN – 432 Myrtle
  • Hair &Co. Salon – 487 Myrtle
  • 🏈 Just Because Salon – 141 Carlton
  • Mint Heights – 368 Myrtle
  • 🧩Putnam’s – 419 Myrtle
  • [salon] 718 – 456 Myrtle
  • 🥁TB Coffee – 578 Myrtle
  • Tipsy – 584 Myrtle

Summer Nights is back!

We are so excited to announce that Myrtle Avenue Summer Nights is back! One Friday a month join us along the Avenue for free activities for kids and adults!  Many activities will be centered in the Myrtle Avenue Plaza but enjoyment runs all along Myrtle Avenue.  The fun includes crafts, games, caricature drawing, tarot card reading, wine tastings, raffles, and a DJ playing a different decade of your favorite hits each night.

Each month, we’ll put out a special map so you can find all the night’s activities!

Here’s the map for August 18

Come out to Myrtle Avenue each of the following Friday Nights

5-8pm

May 19

June 23

July 21

August 18

Don’t forget to stop by one of our many local restaurants or bars to enjoy their outdoor dining or find a happy hour special!

In case of rain, activities will either move indoors or the evening will be canceled.  Check our social media for the latest.

Putting the Green in Fort Greene

You know we love a Spring moment and this year we really leaned into green!

If our annual District Satisfaction Survey taught us anything, it’s that you all love plants, and so do we – so we put in over 1,400 plants across the district this season!

Looking to the future, our plans include planting more perennials that will live in place, and bloom throughout the year, to create a more sustainable landscape throughout the whole district. We will begin this transition in stages and have started with 15 tree pits on Myrtle Avenue from Hall to Classon. You can find 920 new annuals dotting the pits on the northside of Myrtle, and they are stunning if we do say so ourselves 🙂 Year over year, we will continue to plant annuals until all 61 of Myrtle Avenue’s planted tree pits are filled with these beauties.

As we do every year, we partnered with The Horticulture Society of New York to plant the perennials and over 900 annuals in the tree pits between Flatbush Ave Ext and Hall.

Another exciting addition came to the Greenstreet triangle at Carlton and Myrtle. Known as Person’s Square, we wanted to bring even more life to this corner of the district and planted almost 300 new native plants in the two gardens there. Putting the green in Fort Greene!

Spring is also the time we bring back the furniture in the Myrtle Avenue Plaza, including our bright orange umbrellas that never cease to bring smiles as they brighten the space. As soon as the furniture came out we saw friends, classmates, co-workers, couples, and kids taking advantage by settling in for meals and cups of coffee from local businesses. 

We continued to spark joy by cleaning up all the furniture and sidewalks with a good power washing, and clearing out any graffiti that popped up. 

Now all that’s left to do is enjoy! 🍃

Are you ready for the monster mash, a graveyard smash, ready for the monster mash?

For the third Halloween – the Myrtle Avenue Plaza will become a dance floor for a Monster Mash!

Featuring Thriller dance class and open dance battle led by PS20 Dancers and Mr. Chung, starting at 4:45 PM.

What: Myrtle Monster Mash Dance Party on Myrtle Avenue

When: Thursday, October 31st, 4pm – 6pm

Where: Myrtle Avenue Plaza (at Myrtle Ave and Emerson Pl) in Clinton Hill

Kids and adults welcome! Costumes are encouraged, but not required. Kids 12 and under must be accompanied by an adult guardian. Call (718) 230-1689 for more information.

Sign The Petition for a Crosswalk at Grand Avenue

Over 500 people have signed the petition calling for a safe crosswalk at Myrtle Grand. Sign your name and help us reach our goal of 1,000 signatures!

On Myrtle Avenue, we have started to make our New Year’s resolutions and at the top of our list is a crosswalk at Myrtle and Grand Avenues.

We have launched a petition to install a crosswalk on Myrtle Avenue at Grand Avenue. You can read the petition below, but please sign it here to tell the NYC Department of Transportation that a crosswalk at Grand Avenue will make Myrtle Avenue safer for everyone.

We ask that the NYC Department of Transportation install a crosswalk on Myrtle Avenue at Grand Avenue. Currently, there is no crosswalk on Myrtle Avenue between Hall Street and Emerson Place, a four block stretch of a busy commercial corridor. Without a crosswalk, Myrtle Avenue is often difficult and dangerous to cross.

The everyday things people do on Myrtle Avenue – buy groceries, catch the bus, grab a meal or drink with friends – all require walking blocks out of the way or taking your chance dodging traffic. Meanwhile, Myrtle Avenue Plaza, a large public space on the south side, has plenty of seating but no crosswalk access for four blocks. These conditions are especially problematic given the large number of senior citizens that live and shop nearby.

Adding a crosswalk signal to Myrtle Avenue at Grand Avenue will make Myrtle Avenue safer. Please sign this petition to let the NYC Department of Transportation know that four blocks is too far without a pedestrian crossing signal.

Dec 16: Merry on Myrtle Holiday Event

Join us for Merry on Myrtle. We’re hosting our very first holiday event in the new Myrtle Avenue Plaza on Saturday, December 16th, from 12pm to 3pm.  Join us!

FREE activities include:

  • Musical duo singing holiday music
  • A kissing photo booth complete with mistletoe
  • Ice sculpting live demo (12-2pm)
  • Holiday crafting (1-3pm)
  • Hot chocolate!

The Myrtle Avenue Plaza is located on Myrtle between Steuben and Emerson.
For more info contact (718) 230-1689 ext 3# or email hello@myrtleavenue.org.

Myrtle Avenue Plaza Gets Some Green

The Myrtle Avenue Plaza continues to take shape, with the recent addition of hundreds of plants to its planters and tree beds. More than 30 trees – a mix of Honeylocust, Zelkova, and Pin Oak – were planted throughout the 25,000 sq ft space over the past month. Supplementing the trees are five varieties of shrubs like Ann Bidwell Summersweet and Virginia Sweetspire.

Other plantings include an assortment of ornamental grasses like Scottish Tufted Grass and Dwarf Fountain Grass. These thick grasses are starting relatively small but will fill out, developing into lush ground coverings as they mature. Also new in the plaza’s planters are a number of perennials that’ll bring pops of color come spring. Among these flowers are Black Eyed Susan, Purple Coneflower, and Sunny Border Blue Veronica.

The plants round out other new touches like a new art installation, bike racks, and additional seating. More features are still to come, including more lighting, moveable seats and tables, and community events in the spring.

Myrtle Avenue Street Furniture Gets a Refresh

We recently dedicated some time to removing graffiti from street furniture along Myrtle Avenue, and what a difference it made! Streetscape Inspector Raome Quinones, pictured, walked Myrtle Avenue to note graffiti locations and returned with the right tools for each job.

Myrtle Avenue street furniture like mailboxes, fire call boxes, and light poles look their best when free of stickers, spray paint, and other graffiti. Maintaining a graffiti-free streetscape requires ongoing efforts, and we aim to keep up with the graffiti as it crops up. In the meantime, enjoy the fruits of our labor: less graffiti on Myrtle Avenue street furniture.

Final Fort Greene Park Public Input Meeting

The final opportunity for public input is fast approaching. Fort Greene Park is receiving $7M in funding to improve the park’s connection to Myrtle Ave, and we need to your input to make this project the best that it can be.

Join us, NYC Parks, and the Fort Greene Park ConservancyThursday, February 16, 6:30-8:00 p.m. at the Ingersoll Community Center. At this meeting, NYC Parks will present new design ideas, other updates, and solicit your feedback.

The Parks Without Borders competitive grant process began in late 2015. Fort Greene Park was seen as a natural fit for the program, particularly with the walled off northern border. Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership then teamed with the Fort Greene Park Conservancy to reimagine parks connectivity with the sidewalk and surrounding streetscape, outlining several possibilities in this document.

The meeting is free and open to the public. We’re excited about this opportunity for Fort Greene Park and hope to see you there.

Just the 411:
Fort Greene Park, Parks Without Borders Final Public Input Session
Thursday, February 16, 6:30-8:00 p.m.
Ingersoll Community Center

For live updates during the event follow our Twitter, @MyrtleAveBklyn.

Concerns Voiced to City Over Plaza Construction

plaza constructionOn Monday evening, over 100 people gathered for the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Business Improvement District (BID) 12th Annual Meeting at Cultura Pan Latin Cooking in Clinton Hill. The event provides an opportunity for BID Members – property owners, merchants, and residents within the district – to review the BID’s work over the past year.  The meeting closed with a forum for sharing the concerns of merchants who have been impacted by the prolonged construction of the new Myrtle Avenue Plaza.  Representatives from various city agencies and elected offices were on hand to listen to community members, pledge action for improving the construction process, and provide updates on the remaining construction activity.

Following invitations from the BID, staff from the NYC Department of Design and Construction (DDC) and the Department of Transportation (DOT) were on hand to outline remaining construction schedules and to address long periods of inactivity occurred throughout 2016.  Additionally, representatives from the NYC Department of Small Business Services, Comptroller Scott Stringer’s office, and Councilmember Laurie A. Cumbo were present and advocated for the impacted small business community.

The NYC Department of Design and Construction, who is responsible for managing the construction of the project, stated that the plaza will be fully finished by May 2017.  Additionally, concrete work is on schedule to be complete by December 25, 2017; with plantings and furniture installation occurring in early 2017.

Several small business owners whose businesses face the plaza construction addressed the city’s representatives, citing the work’s impacts on their ability to conduct business.  Representatives from Liberty Pizza, Salon 718, Bergen Bagels, Key Food, Tipsy Wine, TD Bank and the former Pushkin Creperie all shared hardships caused by lack of communication, miscommunication, extensive construction delays, and the prolonged impact of construction on the community.

The discussion around plaza construction followed the official business portion of the BID’s Annual Meeting, in which several directors of the board were renominated.  The four directors who were reinstated include Doug Bowen, Kevin Shirley of Apple Bank for Savings, John Dew, and Larry Hoy.  Additionally, board officers were re-elected: Dr. Thomas F. Schutte as chair, John Dew as vice-chair, and Larry Esposito as treasurer. Kevin Shirley was newly elected to the position of secretary.

 

Fort Greene Park Tree Lighting Sunday 12/4

tree-lighting-photo

Save the Date on Sunday, December 4th for the 3rd Annual Fort Greene Park Tree Lighting, sponsored by Apple Bank. Join us at the community event which will feature FREE cookies, hot chocolate, live holiday music performed by the Dr. Susan McKinney Secondary School of the Arts choir, a toy drive and Santa Claus!

Enjoy all of the fun happenings beginning at 4:30pm, and see the lighting of the tree at 5pm. Please bring new, unwrapped toys to be collected and donated to neighborhood holiday toy drives held by Fort Greene SNAP and the Whitman Resident Association.

FREE Hot Cocoa and Cookies are being served from Brooklyn Sweet Spot and Castro’s.

The event is presented by the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Partnership and Fort Greene Park Conservancy.

Myrtle Avenue Plaza Work Resumes

myrtle-plaza-constructionAfter a long hiatus on the Myrtle Avenue Plaza construction project – being managed by the NYC Department of Design & Construction (DDC) – crews have returned to Myrtle Avenue in Clinton Hill to continue work on the forthcoming plaza.

During the week of November 14, crews will be excavating and laying framework for the small plaza area at the corner of Hall Street and Myrtle Avenue.  Once completed, this pedestrian space, directly in front of TD Bank, will include a raised planting area with two trees, six fixed benches and a number of bike racks.  The seating area – just outside of Key Food, Liberty Pizza, John’s Diner, and so many other eateries – may be a favorite new lunch spot for the neighborhood.

The city’s construction management agency, DDC, is projecting that plaza construction will be complete by mid-December 2016.

Parks Without Borders Community Meeting 11/2

static1-squarespace

This past spring we reported on the NYC Parks Department Parks Without Borders program and their selection of Fort Greene Park as one of the finalists. Fort Greene Park will receive a share of $40M for the redesign of its entrances, edges and underused park spaces. The Parks Without Borders initiative is a new design approach to connecting open spaces to neighborhoods across the city.

NYC Parks Department needs to hear from you as they engage community in conversation on the redesign. Please join in on the conversation as Parks hosts a discussion with refreshments:

Where: Fort Greene Park Visitors Center Willoughby Avenue and Washington Park
When: Wednesday, Nov. 2, 6pm – 7:30pm
Children are welcome!

Can’t make the meeting?
You can share your ideas online at nyc.gov/parks/pwb for two weeks after the meeting.
For more information or to get involved, call (718) 965-6991.

Win $100 For Your Thoughts

Fort Greene & Clinton Hill SurveyDo you have ideas on how to make Myrtle Avenue in Fort Greene and Clinton Hill an even better shopping and dining district?  Share your thoughts on what types of new businesses you want to see or how you think the area could be cleaner or safer through our 2016 Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn District Survey.

Respondents to the survey will be entered to win one of four $100 gift certificates to a Myrtle Avenue of their choice (dependent on the availability of gift cards or certificates from the chosen business).  Hurry, the survey closes November 13!

CLICK HERE to take the short survey.

Myrtle Ave Plaza Fence Art

plaza-fence-wrap_-myrtle-ave-plaza_2016-7

As the summer rolls into autumn, and construction on the Myrtle Avenue Plaza continues, we welcome the work of artist Nami Yamamoto that dresses the construction fence near the southwest corner of Myrtle Avenue and Emerson Place. The piece,  entitled Hakoniwa, is a wonderful use of construction landscape. Here is a bit of what Nami has to say about her work:

The word Hakoniwa translates from Japanese as “miniature garden”, manifested as small, tabletop trays filled with sand and used by people to play out imaginative story lines tapping into inner feelings, thoughts, and unconscious insights. Borrowing from this idea, this piece takes the form of temporary banners used to cover the construction site along Myrtle Avenue and consist of arrangements of many motifs, creating different visual narratives based on the disparate yet orderly groupings of shapes of varying degrees of tangibility. These colorful, oversize silhouettes are drawn from a diversity of objects collected from the neighborhood, such as: a fragment from a plastic toy, leaves from sidewalk trees, crushed tin cups, plastic combs, a bicycle gear, oyster shells from a local business, and unidentifiable detritus. With these magnified collections of shapes, I invite pedestrians to engage in a visual dialogue of free association and reflect upon their relationship with the experience of identifying with a place.”

While you’re here please remember to stop and support the amazing restaurants, bars and shops in this area between Washington & Classon. They are all open for business and welcome you! Help us ensure that the 60 business impacted by construction continue to thrive by continuing to patronize your favorite businesses that have served the neighborhood for years.

Here’s how you can support businesses impacted by construction:

  • Choose a favorite business to support consistently until the end of construction.
  • Pick a business category (restaurants, salons or delis), and make an effort to visit every one of these in this particular area!
  • Order food by phone instead of using online services, when possible. Restaurants sometimes pay a significant portion of their sales (sometimes between 12.5-20%) in fees when customers order their meals via online platforms. Ordering by phone helps keep all of your money in the neighborhood and fully supports our independently owned restaurants.
  • Pick up an Eating & Drinking guide to see all of the restaurants and bars that are offering special discounts every Tuesday! Check out Tasty Tuesdays’ promotion.
  • If you are a construction worker, check out our Hard Hat Specials.

Two -Way Traffic Returns to Myrtle Avenue

Two-way traffic returns to Myrtle Ave.

As construction on Myrtle Avenue, between Hall Street and Emerson Place, continues, vehicular as well as B54 bus traffic has resumed in both directions. The next phase of construction work includes curb work in the aforementioned area, site maintenance and touch-up work on the asphalt in the area.

Parking will return to this section of the district. Please continue to support the businesses in this area by visiting the amazing restaurants, bars and shops between Washington & Classon. They are all open for business and welcome you! Help us ensure that the 60 business impacted by construction continue to thrive by continuing to patronize your favorite businesses that have served the neighborhood for years.

Here’s how you can support businesses impacted by construction:

  • Choose a favorite business to support consistently until the end of construction.
  • Pick a business category (restaurants, salons or delis), and make an effort to visit every one of these in this particular area!
  • Order food by phone instead of using online services, when possible. Restaurants sometimes pay a significant portion of their sales (sometimes between 12.5-20%) in fees when customers order their meals via online platforms. Ordering by phone helps keep all of your money in the neighborhood and fully supports our independently owned restaurants.
  • Pick up an Eating & Drinking guide to see all of the restaurants and bars that are offering special discounts every Tuesday! Check out Tasty Tuesdays’ promotion.
  • If you are a construction worker, check out our Hard Hat Specials.

Plaza Construction to Resume on Tuesday

East bound traffic detour on Myrtle Avenue between Hall Street And Emerson Place starting Tuesday, September 6th.

East bound traffic detour on Myrtle Avenue between Hall Street and Emerson Place starting Tuesday, September 6th.

The construction of the Myrtle Avenue Plaza will resume after Labor Day, on Tuesday, September 6th.  Due to resurfacing of Myrtle Avenue, all eastbound traffic (including the B54 bus) will detour at Washington Avenue.  Eastbound traffic will then head east on Willoughby Avenue, before turning onto Classon Avenue to reconnect with Myrtle Avenue. In the weeks during the detour, construction crews will also continue sidewalk work.

Access to all businesses will remain open at all times, so please continue to EAT DRINK SHOP HERE in the construction area between Washington and Classon Avenues. Click HERE to see how you can help our small businesses who have served the neighborhood for years thrive.

If you have any questions or concerns about the project please reach out to Christopher Fields via e-mail at myrtleplazaccl@gmail.com; otherwise, stay tuned for any updates.

And the Greenest Block in Brooklyn is…

IMG_1382[1]…25th Street between Clarendon Road and Avenue D in Flatbush. We spent time there this morning in celebration of the 1st place Greenest Block in Brooklyn winners, the 300 East 25th Street Block Association. The 22nd Annual Greenest Block in Brooklyn contest, sponsored in part by National Grid, recognized green-space stewards from across the borough (including Myrtle Avenue). Congratulations to all of this year’s winners and thank you to all of the Myrtle Avenue merchants and partners that made our honorable mention possible!

New Chocolate Benches on the Avenue

IMG_1335[1]

The custom street tree guards and benches on Myrtle Avenue have taken quite a beating over course of the last few years. Cars, skateboarders, people with gum and heavy use have all played a role. This week we will be installing new chocolate colored bench boards at every bench on the avenue, as well as fixing some of the benches and guards that have been severely damaged. We hope you all enjoy the upgrade!

TreEd on Myrtle: The Sidewalk as a Micro-Classroom

IMG_1234[1]

Here’s how public space can engage us and, at times, teach us a lesson or two: Over the course of the last six months we have been working together with key community partners towards a sustainable approach to ornamental plantings in street tree-beds. The plants are being watered multiple times per week, and we’ve begun to place our informational decals at those tree beds housing native plants. Take time to stroll Myrtle Avenue as summer cools off to autumn and try to find some of the species of plants that are described on each decal. You can even take note of the soil conditions and watch as the conditions change in 1, 2, 3 years’ time. We’ve learned a lot from this entire process and are now planning for additional plants this fall. We hope to see you out on the Avenue, learning together with us.

Take a Myrtle Avenue “Hard Hat” Tour

IMG_7558Sign-up to take a guided “hard hat*” tour along Myrtle Avenue in Clinton Hill on Saturday, August 6.  Hear about the area’s evolution beginning 175 years ago, ending with present day and construction to the future Myrtle Avenue Plaza.  Attendees will get insider knowledge about four new construction projects underway, and learn about some of the history (with photos!) of this rapidly transforming area along Myrtle Avenue between Classon Avenue and Hall Street.

The tour will begin at 11am on Saturday, August 6, at Brewklyn Grind (557 Myrtle Avenue) and last 90 minutes.  Registration is required and capacity is limited.  Reserve your spot by clicking here.

*Note: Actual safety gear is not required for this tour. The tour won’t enter active construction sites and will remain on Myrtle Avenue. Attendees will receive a fun “Myrtle Avenue Hard Hat.”

Cool Off in Fort Greene & Clinton Hill

IMG_0970[1]

With the first day of summer behind us, and the school year coming to a close, families may be looking for a few public places to cool off this summer in the Fort Greene & Clinton Hill sections of Brooklyn; lucky for you, we have a list of all of the sprinkler parks and outdoor pools for your family to enjoy as the temperatures rise in New York City. Here is what’s in the neighborhood:

Outdoor Pools

 Albert J. Parham Playground

Commodore Barry Park

Sprinkler Parks

Pratt Playground

Underwood Park

Cuyler Gore Park

Fort Greene Park

Greene Playground

Oxport Playground

Classon Playground

Washington Hall Park

Edmonds Playground

Commodore Barry Park

Albert J. Parham Playground

Two-Way Traffic Returns on June 30th

IMG_0939[1]

On Thursday, June 30th the Department of Design and Construction (DDC) will return two-way traffic to Myrtle Avenue between Hall and Emerson Streets, including the B 54 bus route. Please note that one-way traffic will be reintroduced at some point in the future so that Myrtle Avenue can be re-paved; DDC will distribute notification prior to any future work that requires a change in the traffic pattern. The roads are not leveled so please drive carefully.

Updates on Public Space

IMG_4034

There is a lot happening on Myrtle Avenue this spring; here is a look at a few projects that are under way:

  • Each year, and sometimes twice a year, we engage in planting annuals and perennials in the tree beds along the business corridor. This spring, with funds from the TD Bank Foundation, we were able to implement a program called TreEd on Myrtle; planting native plants in tree beds with the help of quite a few community partners including Benjamin Banneker High School.
  • If you noticed, our tree guards (and benches) are a lot different than those in other parts of the city; they were custom designed with your help, and celebrate local art history. This spring we are sprucing them up with a special coat of paint (see the image above) that will mitigate rusting over time. Last week we also made final orders towards the installment of sixteen new benches and tree guards along the north side of Myrtle between Hall and Emerson.
  • Over the years our benches, which have been a favorite among senior residents, have taken a bit of a beating over the years. We are wrapping up an order for new bench boards that are more durable, and look forward to them continuing to space for rest and relaxation on the avenue.

So, now that we have passed the official (unofficial) start of summer, and it’s safe to wear your white pants, please come out and enjoy your Fort Greene and Clinton Hill public spaces. And, while it is difficult to maneuver through the construction project taking place on the east end of the district at this time, please continue to support those businesses between Hall Street and Emerson Place. See you on the avenue!!!