Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Downtown Brooklyn"


11 mentions found


A man was in critical condition Thursday night after being shot in the head on a subway train as it arrived at the Hoyt-Schermerhorn station in Downtown Brooklyn during the Thursday evening rush hour, the authorities said. The shooting occurred after a 32-year-old man boarded a northbound A train at the Nostrand Avenue stop at about 4:45 p.m., Michael Kemper, the Police Department’s Chief of Transit, said at a news conferenceAs the train left the station, the man was confronted by a 36-year-old man who witnesses described as acting in an “aggressive and provocative” manner, Chief Kemper said. What started as a verbal confrontation quickly become a physical fight, the chief said, with the 36-year-old man displaying either a knife or razor blade at one point. Eventually, he pulled out a gun, Chief Kemper said.
Persons: Hoyt, Michael Kemper, Kemper Organizations: Nostrand, Police Locations: Downtown Brooklyn
Apple's Vision Pro officially launched in stores on Friday. The Vision Pro felt heavy after a while, but one immersive feature blew me away. AdvertisementI stood outside in the rain with about 10 others to test Apple's new Vision Pro headset for free. But, I didn't expect the Vision Pro to feel like it would seamlessly fit into the way I use technology in my daily life. Toward the end of my session, I was adjusting the Vision Pro for some relief on my face.
Persons: , Jordan Hart, Mario Organizations: Vision Pro, Downtown, Downtown Brooklyn Apple, Service, Apple, Mario Bros Locations: Downtown Brooklyn
Since then, Fenley has returned to working quietly on new material, building on her nearly 50 years of making dances as the founder of Molissa Fenley and Company. Opening night, on Wednesday, felt like a private glimpse into her choreographic mind: no splashes, just a steady, rigorous exploration of movement to music. The program’s greatest force is Fenley herself, who, at 69, dances with a searing clarity and equanimity, no matter the limitations that naturally come with age. This is not one of those shows in which a veteran artist makes a cameo to be momentarily revered. The recurring themes are the lines and curves of Fenley’s limpid movement vocabulary, based in ballet and reminiscent of the Merce Cunningham technique, but developed, as she has said, around the idiosyncrasies of her own body.
Persons: Molissa Fenley, , Fenley, Christiana Axelsen, Justin Lynch, Timothy Ward, Michael Ferrara, Enriqueta, Merce Cunningham Locations: Downtown Brooklyn
But prices are shooting up in Jersey City as its neighbors refuse to build. AdvertisementAdvertisementNew Yorkers have been taking notice of Jersey City real estate for years, and its popularity as an alternative to the ever-less-affordable housing market in the city is growing. Between 2010 and 2018, Hudson County, which includes Jersey City, built housing at more than twice the rate that New York City did. New housing in Jersey City is overwhelmingly market rate rather than being explicitly built as affordable housing for lower- and middle-income residents. "The issues facing Jersey City tenants are multifaceted, but the primary concern is to guarantee housing stability."
Persons: , Steven Fulop, Alex Armlovich, Armlovich, Noah Sheidlower, Amy Klein, Klein, Isaac Jiménez, It's, Goldman Sachs, Abdul Rehman Khan, Jiménez, Fulop, That's, Rich Boggiano, Khan Organizations: Apple, Service, Jersey, Jersey City, New, Niskanen, realtors, Big Apple, Research, Jersey City . Financial, Seton Hall Law's Center for Social Justice Locations: Jersey City, The North Jersey, Jersey, Hudson County, York City, New York, North New Jersey, Newark, Elizabeth, Manhattan, Brooklyn, New York City, Hudson, New York City , Westchester, Long, New Jersey
Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare, the iconic three-Michelin-star tasting restaurant by chef César Ramirez, quietly ceased operations in July. Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare is one of New York's most hallowed culinary institutions. A former employee at Chef's Table at Brooklyn FareBut beneath the restaurant's pristine stainless-steel surface, chaos was brewing. By 2011, Chef's Table had become one of only 138 restaurants worldwide to boast three Michelin stars. This year, Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare was the highest-ranked US restaurant on the 2023 World's 50 Best Restaurants' list.
Persons: César Ramirez, hasn't, Ramirez, Moneer, Moe, Issa, I'd, Ramirez's, Conti, David Bouley's, Le Bernardin, Per, Chef César Ramirez, Jamie McCarthy, WireImage, Joshua David Stein, Grub, Ramirez freaked, he'd, didn't, Pete Wells, Issa didn't, Adriana, Issa's, Heidi, , Domaine, disrespected, Spencer Platt, Cesar, Issa wouldn't, commenter Organizations: Brooklyn, Brooklyn Fare, Manhattan Fare Corp, Chef's, Pepsi, GQ, Michelin, Madison, New York Press, Guardian, Staff, New York Times, York, Madison Park Locations: Hokkaido, Los Angeles, New York, Brooklyn, Burgundy, Israeli, Hill, Mexican, Chicago, West, Madison, Masa, Kaluga Queen, Russia, Asia, Kings County, Clinton Hill, Taiwan, York
Brooklyn’s latest addition to the New York City skyline, the Brooklyn Tower, is offering its residents those bragging rights. “We took advantage (of the space).”The Sky Park will also include a playground and dog park. Gabriel SaundersSince the Sky Park is a covered, open-air facility, it will likely be best enjoyed outside of the coldest, windiest days of the year. In the Sky Park, residents will be able to relax, walk their dogs, or dunk against a backdrop of New York City landmarks from sunrise to sunset. Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated the floor number of the Sky Park in Brooklyn Tower.
Persons: , Gregg Pasquarelli, , Gabriel Saunders, Pasquarelli, ” It’s, , ” Pasquarelli, Evan Joseph JDS, Sauron, you’re Organizations: CNN, New, , JDS, Barclays Center, Brooklyn Nets, Savings Bank, Evan Joseph JDS Development Group, Brooklyn, New York Post, Sky Locations: New York City, Brooklyn, Downtown Brooklyn, Manhattan, Brooklyn Tower
Don Harold, a subway aficionado who sometimes used subterfuge to save vintage train cars from the junkyard — cars that are now among the star attractions of the New York Transit Museum in Downtown Brooklyn — died on June 14 in a nursing home in Bayside, Queens. Mr. Harold, whose maternal grandfather was a Brooklyn trolley motorman and inspector, adored the hulking relics that once rumbled and screeched on subway and elevated tracks. “When she was falling apart, they fixed her,” he said in an interview with The New York Times in 2003. “You don’t sell her for scrap.”He got his chance to save train cars when he was hired in 1965 in the public affairs office of the city’s Transit Authority. His supervisor already knew about his passion for the old rolling stock and felt that he could be an effective preservationist.
Persons: Don Harold, Downtown Brooklyn —, Thomas Jablonski, Harold, Organizations: New York Transit Museum, The New York Times, city’s Transit Authority Locations: Downtown Brooklyn, Bayside , Queens, Brooklyn, of
The title of this new documentary about the artist David Hammons is a mouthful: “The Melt Goes On Forever: The Art & Times of David Hammons.” It’s playing at Film Forum, and I don’t envy whoever has to make it fit the marquee. But they should figure that out because the title feels crucial to the aim of this movie, a sly, toasty, piquant consideration of Hammons’s conceptual art, the way it mocks and eludes easy ownership. Which is to say: the way his art is aware of — the way it’s often about — the stakes for Black people navigating the straits of the market. That piece is like a lot of Hammons’s work: tragicomic. It would have been enough to behold the assortment of thrilling footage of Hammons at work, in conversation and, in one contentious encounter, under interrogation by a group of students.
The first time Jenn Leyva moved to New York, it was to start college at Columbia University. She took Zoom calls in a corner of the communal living room and made sure to always wash her dishes. Email: thehunt@nytimes.com]She was pleasantly surprised by the options she found online: a handful of studios for less than $400,000, just south of the Brooklyn Bridge, in the corner of the borough where leafy Brooklyn Heights meets Dumbo and Downtown Brooklyn. “Studios were cheap, because everyone was still working from home and wanted a one-bedroom with a separate sleeping space and work space,” Ms. Leyva said. “But my work space is in Manhattan.”She teamed up with Leora Blumberg Rubinstein, a realtor with Douglas Elliman, who approved of her strategy.
Just a few years ago, the conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas had no idea he would be instrumental in commemorating the lives of Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King. It really has been my mission over the past several years.”Workers stand beneath "The Embrace" sculpture in Boston Common, waiting for concrete to be poured, on Dec. 14, 2022. John Tlumacki / Boston Globe via Getty Images fileAiming to both inspire visitors and honor the Kings’ legacy, Thomas’ work will be revealed Friday at Boston Common, America’s oldest city park, in downtown Boston. Bettmann ArchiveKing dedicated his life to the civil rights movement, fighting for racial equality and economic justice. A man reaches to touch a detail of the 20-foot-high bronze sculpture "The Embrace," a memorial to Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, in the Boston Common on Jan. 10, 2023, in Boston.
I subscribe to its Alamo Season Pass, a subscription that lets you see a movie a day for $30 a month. The Alamo Season Pass lets me see one movie a day for $30 per month. Alamo DrafthouseI subscribe to its Alamo Season Pass, a membership that lets me see one movie a day for $30 a month. I chose Alamo Season Pass last year, after realizing I was going there quite a bit for all the reasons I mentioned and would save money that way. For instance, you can only get a ticket with your Season Pass within seven days of your screening.
Total: 11