
Friday, February 26, 2010
Thursday, February 25, 2010
1158 Dean - New Arts Space Opening this Weekend
1158 Dean, a new events space and art gallery from the ArtGroupieNation that will showcase "the very best of contemporary African arts from continental African and its Diaspora," opens its doors this weekend with two great events (thanks to NostrandPark for the tip, who profiled the gallery awhile back). From their press release:Our opening weekend will begin with a fundraising screening on Saturday February 27th from 7:00PM to 9:00PM of "Taboo Yardies" (trailer here), a provocative film by Jamaican filmmaker Selena Blake, that delves into the controversial world of homosexuality in Jamaican culture. This event will feature a silent auction and Q&A with Selena Blake.
On Sunday from 5:00PM to 9:00PM we will introduce Haitian artist Baruti Tucker's "Soulah Sista" - a vibrant series of works celebrating the female form in honor of Women's History Month. A portion of sales from this event will benefit earthquake relief efforts in Haiti.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Just in case you haven't heard . . . Pencil Party!

One of the perks of keeping a local blog is getting the occasional tip about an upcoming event. Usually I'll get an email from the organizer, or maybe read about it on Brooklynian's message board, but in the case of the upcoming Pencil Party at LaunchPad on March 6th, I've been hearing about it absolutely everywhere. It's on Facebook, Nostrand Park, and Brooklynian, and I've received no fewer than 4 emails about it this week, from organizers, neighbors, and community groups, including Masai Marketing (who organized "Experience the Heights" a few weeks back). In short, this party is not to missed.In case you haven't heard about them, LaunchPad is a new community arts space opening up on Franklin Avenue, and they're using Kickstarter to raise 6,000 bucks by March 8th. Check them out online, and mark your calendars for March 6th (details in the flyer above)!
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Lookin' Tough, Billy C

Monday, February 22, 2010
Train News
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Winter Work Bearing Fruit - Update


(Updated 2/22): The awning is up at Dutch Boy Burger, the soon-to-open burger joint from Franklin Park's owners. The retro-looking signage advertises "Burgers, Fries, Root Beer Floats." (I hope they'll let me bring a scoop of ice cream down the hall to the bar for a Guinness Float, too). While I'm at it, a project that's not as far along but will hopefully one day be putting paint on walls, the Lefferts Farm Food Cooperative, has another meeting this Tuesday, February 23rd, at the Maple Street School in PLG.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
I Love Franklin Ave's Readers
And now, it's time for the ultimate act of self-reference in the self-referential world of blogging: the comment review! Ego-stroking aside, 2010 has been a very fruitful year of keyboard-tapping for I Love Franklin Ave: readership is up, and comments are on the rise as well. I'm always psyched that people read the blog, but when soliloquy turns into dialogue, it's a special thrill. So, without further ado, here's a round-up of some of my favorite responses, many from individuals who would be far more qualified to write a Franklin Avenue blog than yours truly.Thanks to everyone who offered their take in the past month, and please, keep the comments coming!
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Church of St. Joseph - Towers Coming Down
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Filming on Franklin: Native Networks

Monday, February 15, 2010
Celebrate Black History Month on Franklin

BLACK HISTORY MONTH FAMILY FUN DAY
AT NAIROBI'S KNAPSACK
JUST IN TIME FOR THE MIDWINTER BREAK!!
WHAT: Black History Month Family Fun Day! Nairobi's Knapsack Toy and Play Gallery is celebrating the great contributions of African Americans throughout history during an afternoon of drop-in play. Just in time for NYC schools' Midwinter Break, you and your children will have an opportunity to learn, laugh and create. Stop by for some inspirational fun, historical arts & crafts, and dramatic storytelling. Light snacks will also be provided.
Event is included with drop-in play admission: $5 per child, $3 per sibling, $10 per family of three or more. Please RSVP to info@nairobisknapsack.com with parent name and child(ren)'s age(s).
WHERE: Nairobi's Knapsack Toy and Play Gallery
744 Franklin Avenue (between Sterling and St. Johns)
Brookl
(347) 295-2011
**Take 2,3,4,5 to Franklin Avenue; store is three blocks down.
WHEN: Wednesday, Feb. 17
12:30 - 3 pm
12:30 p.m. - Historical Board Games
1 p.m. - Dramatic Storytelling
1:30-
WHO: Created to inspire and cultivate learning, Nairobi's Knapsack Toy and Play Gallery is the quintessential toy boutique, combining carefully selected books and toys with a multitude of children's novelties that reflect our culturally diverse world. In addition to being a premiere children's toy store, Nairobi's Knapsack incites creativity with our spacious play gallery for parents or caregivers who want to use the space for free play, birthday parties or other events. For more information, please check out the website at www.nairobisknapsack.com.
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Brooklyn Foreclosures Rise in January

Friday, February 12, 2010
The Snow is ON FIRE!
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Let it Snow, Let it Snow . . .



Snow (but not really that much of it)!
Hailing, as I do, from points north of New York City, I thought today's snowstorm, with two inches of accumulation and a few swirling flakes, was pretty weak sauce, but it proved enough to strand a city bus just below the crest of the hill on Sterling west of Franklin. I suppose it's still snowing--maybe our blizzard is just a late bloomer. Tuesday, February 09, 2010
. . . And Down Come the Projects



will help to set a precedent for future developments in this area."
Thursday, February 04, 2010
Three Great Local Events This Weekend


Alright, clear you schedule, because I Love Franklin Ave has your weekend all laid out.FRIDAY NIGHT - Swing by the Breukelen Coffee House between 8pm -12 midnight for Spread Love, It's the Brooklyn (Breukelen) Way, their first-ever art opening, featuring (and curated by) local artists. Watch this if you're not getting the reference.
SATURDAY (DAY AND NIGHT) - Experience the Heights! Swing by local businesses and mention "Experience the Heights" for a 20% discount from 2-4pm (there's a list of participants at the above link) and then hit up Five Myles from 4-9pm for music, art, food & wine. It's a First Saturday, too, and the Heart of Brooklyn Shuttle will be running, so you can't use the snow as an excuse to stay in.
I'll give you Sunday to recuperate, but Monday night it's on again as the Franklin Park Reading Series returns with "Desperate New Yorker Night." With $1.35 in my checking account as of this evening, I can relate, and no doubt you can too, so come by Franklin Park at 8pm for some fascinating stories of the myriad ways this overgrown metropolis can alter the human psyche.
Featuring:
JOHN WRAY is the author of three critically acclaimed novels: Lowboy, The Right Hand of Sleep and Canaan’s Tongue. He was named one of Granta magazine’s Best of Young American Novelists in 2007. The recipient of a Whiting Award, he lives in Brooklyn.
MASHA HAMILTON, whose most recent book is 31 Hours, is the author of three other highly praised novels, including The Camel Bookmobile and The Distance Between Us. She is also a journalist who has reported from Afghanistan and the Middle East, Russia and Africa and is the founder of the Afghan Women's Writing Project, a literacy program that fosters creative and intellectual exchange between Afghan women writers and American women authors and teachers
MELISSA FEBOS is the author of the debut memoir Whip Smart, which will be published by St. Martin's Press in March. She is also co-curator and host of the Mixer Reading and Music Series. She received an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College and teaches at SUNY Purchase College and The Gotham Writers’ Workshop.
Wednesday, February 03, 2010
Crown Heights Links - Love from Marty
- The Daily News reports that Borough President (and Crown Heights-born) Marty Markowitz plans to promise $1 million from his capital budget in a speech tonight to convert the notorious Bedford-Atlantic Armory into a neighborhood rec center modeled on the recently-opened Park Slope Armory (Markowitz also wants to target the Sumner Armory in Bed-Stuy). Councilwoman Tish James, who has been a vocal supporter of such a plan for some time now, has said she can raise another $10 million from local, city, state, and federal funds for the project, which the Department of Homeless Services estimates would cost $20 million in total.Update: I spent an evening thinking about this, and while the successful Armory Track and Field Center and the Park Slope Armory share their buildings with shelters, the Bedford-Atlantic Armory is a different beast. As the comment below notes, people steer clear of the Armory now with good reason, and the intake project plan would only increase the numbers of people going to and from the site. I would love to have an a great recreation center with all the amenities Markowitz describes (workout gyms, indoor track, art galleries, etc), but for expensive projects like this to succeed, they have to draw significant numbers, and I don't see that happening right now. Would parents send their kids to the Armory? Would single women work out there during the evening if it meant walking home alone? Unless the city really committed to making neighborhood residents feel safe and secure in the presence of increase inflow (something the Bloomberg administration has failed to do so far), I could see a pristine rec center sitting underused and idle while a busy intake center operates below.
Monday, February 01, 2010
When's the next train?
The digital displays in the Franklin Avenue 2-3-4-5 station were "under test" last week and over the weekend, leading this blogger and a few companions to speculate: Are the long-promised digital train-information displays that, until recently, could only be found on the L Train (which the MTA uses as a guinea pig on account of its stand-alone nature), making their debut on Franklin? Timing trains in a busy, express-and-local stop that serves four lines is certainly a challenge, but as the Post reported before Xmas, the MTA is determined, despite budget cuts, to make good on its promise to roll the technology out in all 152 stations by the end of 2011. 


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