Anything Goes covers the creative endeavors of the arts. Time is an illusion; strap-hangers that text, read their Nooks while drinking lattes. Animation, high boots, dance boots, fashion paparazzi, runways, museums, gleaming labels, star-studded names; typeface, Facebook black to white, graphic to ad design. Global apps, speed-dial; digitizing, iTunes, iPhones, websites, twitter, poetry to computer-dating; Slide-Luck Pot Show to Lady GaGa we have arrived where Anything Goes.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Sunday, November 4, 2012
The Quiet Before the Storm
After listening to the news
for several days, little seems to be said, about two neighborhoods that are an
enclave - neighborhoods so close to Manhattan but are now hours away without
transportation.
Brooklyn Heights, is a
community high above sea level, this neighborhood was lucky and maintained
electrical power. However, Brooklyn Heights is sandwiched between two
neighborhoods built along the waterfront: to the South is Red Hook, and Dumbo
is to the North.(DUMBO - Down Under Brooklyn Manhattan Overpass)
All three neighborhoods
Brooklyn Heights, Red Hook, and Dumbo are generally minutes from the City, but
in actuality are isolated neighborhoods that are working extensions of New York
City’s life.
Red Hook is an older
neighborhood, that began to rise in the last ten to fifteen years bringing in a
more hipster-youth that wanted an opportunity to be near the waterfront, and bring
to it their own flavor of distinction, with new night life, intertwined with the
nostalgia of historic restaurants, deli’s, and bars. Together the neighborhoods began to have an awesome
quaint and savvy hood with Fairway Supermarket, and Ikea moving there and
little stores with their own flare.
Now with the bridge and
tunnel connection from NYC to lower Brooklyn – Red Hook the neighborhood has
been waterlogged.
While
the water level at the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel has receded, there is still
about 86 million gallons of fuel soaked liquid inside which needs to be pumped
out.
The area known as Dumbo (Down Under the Manhattan Brooklyn
Overpass); at the
corner of Main and Water streets suffered about $80,000 worth of damage that is
five feet of water that surged in with Hurricane Sandy…although according to
the news, this wasn’t a hurricane but a tropical storm that obviously has given
more thought to the environment and the weather colliding with warmer cycles.
Weather
patterns will be another topic of controversy; where to reside and how will
insurance companies issue their resources should someone build their home near
a waterfront area.
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