Good Place for a Haunting #2

1305 Albemarle Road

This is 1305 Albemarle Road in the landmarked district of Prospect Park South. The ground floor alone has the square footage of our entire house. It’s the largest house in a neighborhood of huge homes. That alone qualifies it as a “monster house.”

But my favorite feature, for this post: check out the windows on the second floor balcony and dormer:

SPIDER WEBS

I’m out of town this week, so I’m “phoning it in”. If I was home, I would get some detail shots of the 2nd floor and dormer windows. Instead, here are a couple of other views. Visit the Flickr photo pages where you can view these images at their largest sizes and see the windows more clearly.

1305 Albemarle Road

1305 Albemarle Road

1305 Albemarle Road

[where: 1305 Albemarle Road, Brooklyn, NY, 11226]

“Wherefore art thou, Romeo?” (Lost Cat)

Romeo, a Cat
Romeo, a Cat

A neighbor is on the lookout for their cat, Romeo:

Romeo, our much loved small (only 8-9lbs.) male gray and white cat is
missing–now over 2 days. He has no collar and frequents the backyards
between Albemarle/Church and Westminster/Argyle…any sightings?
– message posted to Flatbush Family Network


We’ve been trying to socialize a litter of three kittens that appeared in our backyard over the summer. So we’ve been on the lookout for strange cats. We think we’ve seen this little guy on our property, a block away. We’ll keep a special lookout for him.

Tornado Damage in Prospect Park South, Caton Park and Beverley Square West

Update 2007.08.09: The National Weather Service says that this was the strongest tornado on record to hit New York City.

Evening update: By the afternoon, the National Weather Service (NWS) confirmed that there had been an EF2 tornado, but only in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn. They also reported that it traveled northeast, which would have placed it in the path of Sunset Park, Kensington, and Flatbush.

Update 16:30 EDT: I’ve got the Flickr set up, and I’m uploading the remainder of the photos as I type.


Totalled. This was on Rugby Road, north of Church Avenue in Caton Park.
Totalled

I just got back a half-hour ago from my tornado walking tour of my neighborhood, Beverley Square West, the adjoining Prospect Park South Historic District, and Caton Park. I’m home today because none of the subways were running this morning, and our local line, the B/Q train, is down due to trees on the tracks near the Church Avenue station, around the corner from Prospect Park South, which sustained heavy damage.

Cortelyou Road Station (Q Line), closed
Cortelyou Road Station, Closed

Chainsaws will be serenading us for the next several days. I have lots of photos to upload, once I can clear enough space on my hard drive to accommodate them. I should have plenty by the end of the day, so check back later.

The National Weather Service hasn’t made the determination, but from the reports, and from the damage I saw, I think it must have been a tornado that tore through Brooklyn this morning. When I went out this morning, the local news channels were only covering the neighborhood of Bay Ridge. But later reports include Sunset Park and Kensington. There’s still been no mention of Flatbush on the news, but these neighborhoods form a rough path through central Brooklyn. There’s a track of damage through Brooklyn, not just localized damage, which is just what one would expect to see from a tornado.

Marlborough Road, south of Albemarle Road. Note the two trunks left standing in front of the house on the right; they were both snapped off.
Marlborough Road, south of Albemarle Road

The damage I saw, especially in Prospect Park South, just looked odd. It wasn’t any one thing. There were trees, such as the one at the top of this post, which clearly had problems before they were blown down. Those we would expect to be fall in heavy winds. But there were many trees with clear, clean wood, with no signs of disease or other problems.

Twisted and split limb of Norway maple, 125 Argyle Road
Twisted and split limb of Norway maple, 125 Argyle Road

Every kind of tree was affected. Most of the smaller trees were simply blown over, snapped at the root flare, separated from the roots. Some of the larger trees were also toppled, their roots pushing up sidewalks. But many were snapped off at the trunk, or their upper limbs and branches seemed to have been shredded off. I saw large limbs whose damage could only have been caused by twisting. Upper limbs of trees didn’t just fall onto rooftops, they were blown up onto them.

Parks Department beginning to remove a toppled street tree in Beverley Square West.


Parks Department beginning to remove a toppled street tree.


[bit.ly]

Links

An EF-2 Tornado Strikes Brooklyn on the Central New York Weather Blog of WKTV in upstate New York has some great radar images and the complete text of the National Weather Service’s statement confirming the tornado.
August 16, Brooklyn Eagle: While Bay Ridge Captured Attention, Flatbush Areas Also Suffered from Brooklyn Tornado
August 10, Brooklyn Eagle: The Path of The Brooklyn Twister; Heroic Efforts Help Affected Brooklyn Areas Recover from Tornado Damage includes an excellent map of the path of the tornado

A Tree Blows Down in Brooklyn, photos of damage in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn Row House blog

NYC Hazards: Tornadoes, NYC Office of Emergency Management (OEM)

Another reason to loathe real estate brokers …

Trying to locate their recent report on sales figures, I idly browsed the Corcoran (“Live Who You Are”! Be All That You Can Be!) Web site for my neighborhood. I don’t expect to find Beverley Square West. I would hope to find Victorian Flatbush. They’d don’t even list Flatbush. I found what I expected:

Ditmas Park: Runs from Parkside Avenue to the north, Ditmas Avenue to the south, Ocean Avenue to the east and Coney Island Avenue to the west.
Corcoran Neighborhood Guide to Ditmas Park

Lest one quibble “Oh, it’s just a real estate name,” they continue in the second paragraph:

… This landmarked district …

WRONG! The landmarked Ditmas Park Historic District lies only within the boundaries of Dorchester and Newkirk Avenues, and Ocean Avenue and the B/Q line. The only other landmarked area within the boundaries they describe is Prospect Park South. The rest of their “Ditmas Park” is not landmarked.

It’s worse than that. They have no idea where they are.

Their descriptions conflate several neighborhoods – some landmarked, most not – and get basic information wrong. They provide the wrong school number for P.S. 139. There’s this:

These homes were originally built for the likes of the Guggenheims and films stars like Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks.

Again, not in Ditmas Park. The Guggenheim Honeymoon Cottage is in Beverley Square West, my neighborhood. The Pickford/Fairbanks House is in Ditmas Park West.

And there’s this:

Many have porches and garages and sit on wide tree-lined streets with English sounding names like Argyle and Rugby.

Only the streets between Coney Island Avenue and the B/Q lines – half the area they claim to describe – carry these names, borrowed from the status of Prospect Park South. Four different neighborhoods span those streets from Parkside to Ditmas, and none of them are Ditmas Park.

The boundaries they give describe only part of greater Victorian Flatbush; they omit half the neighborhoods. Extending the southern boundary from Ditmas Avenue to Avenue H, between Coney Island Avenue Ocean Avenue lie West Midwood, Midwood Park, and Fiske Terrace. The latter two are proposed Historic Districts and are on track to become landmarked. Extending the eastern boundary to Flatbush Avenue, the Albemarle-Kenmore Terraces Historic District lies east of Prospect Park South, between Ocean and Flatbush Avenues, and South Midwood lies between Ocean and Bedford Avenues, and Foster Avenue south to Brooklyn College.

I’ve never had any dealings with Corcoran. We tried working with them when we were shopping for our home three years ago. They had yet to “discover” this area, and so had nothing to show us. Their reach had only extended to Windsor Terrace at that point, and we went to one open house there.

And, don’t bother trying to find a house a house on their Web site. You won’t find any. They only have “townhouses” …

Fall Color along Buckingham Road in Prospect Park South

More fall color from Prospect Park South, this time from Buckingham Road. The planted median which runs down the middle of both this streets and Albemarle Road comprise part of Flatbush Malls, which is managed by the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation.
143 Buckingham Road
Each photo in this post links to its photo page in Flickr, where you can view it at several different resolutions.

The photos are organized so you can take your own walking tour. In the Flickr set, the photos are ordered by descending street address; the street addresses increase going south from Church Avenue to Albemarle Road. All the photos are also geotagged on Flickr, so you can see where each photo was taken. Look for the “map” link on the individual photo pages.

143 Buckingham Road131 Buckingham Road131 Buckingham Road100 Buckingham Road100 Buckingham Road

Architectural Detail, 131 Buckingham Road131 Buckingham RoadOak Tree, Flatbush Malls, Buckingham RoadBuckingham Road and Flatbush Malls

Related content

Buckingham Road, Prospect Park South (Flickr set)

Fall Color along Albemarle Road in Prospect Park South

Possibly the most photogenic block in all of Brooklyn. I took most of these photos this season, in September, October and this month.
1203 Albemarle Road
The title of this posting links to the Flickr set of these photos: Albemarle Road, Prospect Park South. Each photo in this post links to its photo page in Flickr, where you can view it at several different resolutions.

The photos are organized so you can take your own walking tour. In the Flickr set, the photos are ordered by street address; the street addresses increase going east from Coney Island Avenue. All the photos are also geotagged on Flickr, so you can see where each photo was taken. Look for the “map” link on the individual photo pages.

Garden in front yard of side house on Albemarle RoadGarden in front yard of side house on Albemarle Road941 Albemarle Road1203 Albemarle Road1314 Albemarle Road1314 Albemarle Road1314 Albemarle RoadHouse on Albemarle Road1406 Albemarle Road1406 Albemarle Road1409 Albemarle Road1409 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road

941 Albemarle Road1203 Albemarle Road1203 Albemarle Road1306 Albemarle Road1314 Albemarle Road1314 Albemarle Road1314 Albemarle Road1314 Albemarle RoadHouse on Albemarle Road1406 Albemarle Road1406 Albemarle Road1406 Albemarle Road1409 Albemarle Road1409 Albemarle Road1409 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road1510 Albemarle Road

Matthews Park

Our house was built in Matthews Park. Don’t look for it on any current maps of Brooklyn. Beverly Square West, the neighborhood where we live, was originally known as Matthews Park from at least 1900, the same year our house was built, to 1902. Two articles from the Brooklyn Eagle document the boundaries of Matthews Park, which exactly coincide with those of what is today called Beverly Square West.

A March 30, 1900 article, Attempt to Rob Bolles’ Home, is a report on burglaries in the area:

Mr. Bolles is one of a committee of three of the Matthews Park Association, appointed to visit the Police Board to find out why there are so few policeman in that section. Matthews Park extends from Beverley road to Avenue C, and from Coney Island avenue to Fifteenth street.

A March 5, 1902 article, Sign Posts for Matthews Park, describes the submission of “a design for cast iron sign posts to be placed on all corners of Beverley and Cortelyou Roads, from East Eleventh to East Fifteenth Streets, inclusive.” The same article also mentions that “it is intended to adopt on these blocks the same names at present in vogue for the same streets in Prospect Park South,” which is today a landmarked Historic District just up the block from us. So the numbered streets – East 11th through 15th Streets – became named Streets: Stratford, Westminster, Argyle, Rugby and Marlborough. Tony sounding, eh? Or, if you prefer, the acronym SWARM.

Links

Conservatory Envy

I volunteered this past week at our neighborhood association meeting to photograph houses at risk due to inappropriate zoning in our area. So today I walked around my neck of the woods in Victorian Flatbush in Brooklyn with my camera and two lenses: my standard lens, a 28-85mm zoom, and my wide angle 20mm lens.

Of course, I took some photos for my own enjoyment as well, especially because I got to walk through the landmark district of Prospect Park South. I thought I’d share this house in particular with my gardening buddies out there.

1510 Albemarle Road

How do you like this two-story conservatory? It’s hard to see unless you look at the full size picture, but those are leaded glass sunburst fanlight windows above the regular windows on the second story, and the same with diamond-pane leaded glass windows above on the first floor.

1510 Albemarle Road

If that’s not enough, you could always expand into the attached greenhouse in the back of the house.

1510 Albemarle Road

Here’s a view of the facade of the house. You can see the conservatory on the right side. I think we can devise more creative plantings than clipped yews to complement the two-story fluted corinthian columns gracing the front of the house.

What do you think, readers? Does this look like an opportunity? A diamond in the rough? Or is it a gigantic, multi-thousand square foot, white elephant?

Discuss amongst yourselves …

Related content

1510 Albemarle Road, Prospect Park South (Flickr photo set)