The Word On The Street: Poop + Butt
Filed under: 11222, Greenpoint, Greenpoint Brooklyn, Greenpoint Magic, The Word On The Street
From Meserole Avenue.
Miss Heather
Urban Fur: Waiting
I recently happened up this rather despondent-looking fellow waiting for his best friend at the local post office. I took a moment to console him. I assured him it was much worse inside this building than outside of it And to be patient because his master may very be in this rather disorienting no-man’s land for a very, VERY long time. So help me, but I think this pup understood.
Miss Heather
New York Shitty Photos Du Jour: Whoopsy Daisy!
Filed under: Area 51
Taken January 27, 2011.
Miss Heather
Greenpoint Snowman Watch, Part II: Snow T*ts
This ahem lass hails from Meserole Avenue and comes courtesy of algul siento. Nice find!
Miss Heather
From The New York Shitty Inbox, Part III: TOMORROW
This item comes courtesy of Luna Park. She writes:
could be of interest to your readers, should you not already know about it…
What’s this about, you ask? Here’s an excerpt from (v)vital(ny)’s web site:
IN HONOR OF: MESEROLE
On McGuin(n)ess Boulevard at Meserole Ave, Brooklyn.
starting
Saturday, November 6, 2010[v]vital[ny] is pleased to introduce the first installment of a new public art project, 03_In Honor Of, a series of monuments created in honor of local heroes. This first installment, 03_i_In Honor Of: Meserole, is an homage to the Meseroles, one of Greenpoint’s original farming families, whose name graces streets in both Greenpoint and Bushwick. The installation will appear on McGuinness Boulevard at Meserole Ave, in Brooklyn, on Saturday, November 6, 2010.
Greenpoint in the 1700s was a small farming community, verdant with jack pines and oak forests. The Meserole Brothers, Abraham and Jacob, lived and worked between present day India and Java Streets, and farmed the entire south end of the neighborhood. The quiet farms were isolated from the rest of the city, until industrialization began in the 19th century, transforming the landscape from farms to factories. Greenpoint became a center of shipping and warehouse commerce, and home to generations of Polish immigrants. In the late 1990s, lured by cheaper rents and quiet blocks, a new generation moved into the neighborhood. The locavore movement inspired some of them to return to Greenpoint’s (and Meserole’s) roots. Today’s generation of urban farmers are creating a new kind of farm, on rooftops and basketball courts, in factories that once made everything from ship parts to bagels, reviving a neighborhood tradition, and creating new, sustainable food sources for the city…
You can (and should) get the full 411 here. This sounds really neat!
Miss Heather
Greenpoint Street Seating Du Jour: Sectional
Filed under: 11222, Greenpoint, Greenpoint Brooklyn, Greenpoint Magic, Street Furniture
From Meserole Avenue.
Miss Heather
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