
Click HERE to view a 15 minute video uploaded to YouTube a year ago to try and explain how a complicated situation arose and might be resolved by digging into some long-forgotten history. The NYC Department of Transportation refuses to include the Plaza in its plaza maintenance program because…well, they claim it’s not the City’s responsibility (except for the bridges over the railroad). And the MTA views their responsibility as just a narrow strip of the deck. As a result the Newkirk merchants suffer from a poorly maintained, disheveled, unattractive atmosphere. A recent grant won by the FDC (Flatbush Development Corporation) with the assistance of Congresswoman Yvette Clarke for storefront refurbishment will help, but the MTA and DOT need to step up and take ownership for a long-term sustainable solution.
More details on this controversy can be found on Community Board 14’s site at https://cb14brooklyn.com/newkirk-plaza-video/
Here’s how I described the video last year:
A history told with images, many buried in New York City’s Municipal Archives…59 slides with explanatory text explain how Newkirk Plaza came to be: A corporate railroad negotiated easements with landowners adjoining their tracks to expand from a 50 foot, 2 track right-of-way to a 75 foot 4 track station with two island platforms. In exchange for their land the owners — all save one were realtors — had the railroad deck-over the donated 25 feet, creating a sidewalk that shrewd businessmen turned into the first open air shopping plaza AND the railroad also agreed to maintain the deck. Today, that railroad is operated by the Transit Authority per a lease agreement with the City. The TA owns the deck and the station; the Department of Transportation owns the bridges at either end spanning Foster and Newkirk Avenues, and the stores and buildings on the Plaza are privately owned. What could possibly go wrong?
Thanks to Erik Seims, a superb transit analyst whose writings first turned me on to the hidden history of the Plaza and to Greg Alvarez, whose land-use legal acumen and interest in this topic inspired me to dig deeper. Finally, Shawn Campbell of CB14 and FDC (Robin Redmond, Lupe Ramsey & Nina Leonard) have been tireless advocates for reviving the Plaza.
For more Brooklyn history, see https://argyleheights.blogspot.com
The URL for the video is https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LT_tLQP73s



lived across the street from the Plaza from 1939 to 1952 on Newkirk Ave looking down on the subway. Then on to the Ave H station right over the candy store. During the late 1940s/ 50s had a Brooklyn Eagle paper routes.
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Thanx for the
Historical story.
Sent from my iPhone
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Joe,
*I’m glad to see you’re resuming after your loss. *
Last week I visited my gym and saw a group of FireFighters working out. I remembered passing the test and going for the Physical, which I believed I passed. But I never heard from them again.
I then thought of 911. I considered not being called might have been providence? Who knows. I think I remembered you losing a brother or brother in law on 911?
Leaving DC today. Visited Ian and family. My granddaughter seems to be precocious. She’s a friendly and happy child.
*Ian is now working for Bloom Health Centers and seeing the fall out of DOGE RIfs! *
Steve
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