Want to know what it’s like walking around Bushwick here in Brooklyn? For today’s video, we go through Myrtle Avenue here in Bushwick, Brooklyn! In this Vlog style tour of the area, we see how the area's changed, amazing buildings and wonderful restaurants as well!
Queens
Myrtle Avenue has been a major thoroughfare since the early 19th century, named after the myrtle trees that were plentiful in the area. Most likely, Myrtle Avenue began in Queens and was a plank road that charged a toll. The road eventually hosted the Knickerbocker Stage Coach Line, that ran stagecoach and omnibus services. After World War I, Myrtle Avenue in Glendale was a popular destination for picnickers. With a steam trolley running on the avenue, and its ample adjacent beer gardens and park space, people from as far as Eastern Brooklyn came to Myrtle. In the mid-1920s, the parks closed as a result of Prohibition. Ultimately, the parks became incorporated by the city into what is known today as Forest Park.[2]
Currently, Myrtle Avenue is one of the primary shopping strips of Ridgewood, along with Fresh Pond Road whose south end is at Myrtle Avenue. It is also the primary shopping strip in nearby Glendale, although this stretch of Myrtle Avenue isn't as busy as the Ridgewood stretch. It was also home to the Ridgewood Theatre, which was the longest continuously operated theater in the United States, having operated for 91 years before its closure in March 2008.[3]
Myrtle Avenue is the starting point for several major thoroughfares in Queens that were built later. This includes Union Turnpike, whose west end is in Glendale just west of Woodhaven Boulevard, and Hillside Avenue, which starts off from Myrtle Avenue in Richmond Hill near Lefferts Boulevard.
Brooklyn
In the neighborhoods of Fort Greene and Clinton Hill, the development of Myrtle Avenue was directly related to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, built in 1801. In 1847 Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn's first park, was built on the south side of western Myrtle Avenue. During World War II, the Navy Yard employed more than 71,000 people, many of them African American shipbuilders. As a result, the demand for housing in the area increased, prompting the New York City Housing Authority to build the Walt Whitman and Raymond Ingersoll public housing on Myrtle Avenue in 1944.
In the 1990s the western end of Myrtle Avenue was closed from Jay Street to Flatbush Avenue Extension to create the pedestrian-only MetroTech Center. Adding to the MetroTech Center's revitalization of the neighborhood, a modern revitalization movement is in effect by a collaboration of community organizations like the Myrtle Avenue Revitalization Project LDC (MARP), the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn Improvement district BID, and the Myrtle Avenue Merchants Association. Some parts of Myrtle Avenue, for example around Pratt Institute, have become a main street of commerce with many trendy restaurants and boutique retail shops.
Transportation
See also: BMT Myrtle Avenue Line
The M train currently runs above Myrtle Avenue through Bushwick and a small stretch through Bedford-Stuyvesant. Formerly, the Myrtle Avenue El was an elevated railroad line that ran along Myrtle Avenue. The completed line ran from Middle Village to Downtown Brooklyn and Park Row, Manhattan, using the avenue for most of its route. Since 1969, the portion of the line west of the Myrtle Avenue - Broadway station was demolished, while the rest of the line east of the Myrtle Avenue - Broadway station remains.
Myrtle Avenue is currently served by the following subway stations, west to east:
Myrtle-Willoughby Avenues (G train)
Myrtle Avenue (J, M, and Z trains)
Central Avenue (M train)
Knickerbocker Avenue (M train)
Myrtle-Wyckoff Avenues; a station complex consisting of:
Myrtle-Wyckoff Avenues (L train)
Myrtle-Wyckoff Avenues (M train)
Also, DeKalb Avenue (B, D, N, Q, R, and W trains) and 121st Street (J and Z trains) are stations near the avenue. There is an abandoned subway station on the BMT Brighton Line directly under Myrtle Avenue; it was closed in 1957 due to a track reconfiguration north of DeKalb Avenue.[5]
Two bus routes primarily serve the avenue. The Queens stretch of Myrtle Avenue is served by the Q55 bus line. The Brooklyn stretch of Myrtle Avenue is served by the B54 bus line. In addition, several bus routes serve the avenue at the Ridgewood Intermodal Terminal near Myrtle-Wyckoff Avenues subway station.
Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myrtle_...
Thanks so much for watching and see you in the next one!
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Негізгі бет Another afternoon in Bushwick Brooklyn
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