On the top level of Brooklyn Crab, you don’t notice the phone wires; all you see is the view. The food is nothing special, but the breeze is nice and the beer is cool. How did the Krusty Krab get an outpost in Red Hook? No matter; you’ll probably be back this summer.
Posts Tagged ‘brooklyn waterfront’
Krabby View Restaurant
Posted in Food, Misc, tagged brooklyn, brooklyn crab, brooklyn restaurant, brooklyn waterfront, photography, red hook on June 28, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Cobblestones, DUMBO
Posted in Misc, tagged brooklyn, brooklyn waterfront, cobblestones brooklyn, dumbo, historic brooklyn, photography on May 14, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Drivers hate them, as do people wearing heels, but those in need of some ye-olde can come to DUMBO and walk all over the cobblestones.
Fake rocks
Posted in Misc, tagged brick rocks, brooklyn, brooklyn waterfront, coffey street pier, nyc waterfront, photography, red hook on March 25, 2012| Leave a Comment »
When pieces of bricks get worn down from being in the water, they turn into rock-like objects. These were found at the small beach by the Coffey Street Pier in Red Hook.
Emergency doors at the Navy Yard
Posted in Misc, tagged brooklyn, brooklyn navy yard, brooklyn waterfront, emergency exit, old doors, photography, rusty patina on October 22, 2010| 1 Comment »
It’s remarkable that the door’s glass panes are mostly still intact. The Brooklyn Navy Yard is an enclosed and secured environment, though, free of bored kids with rocks.
Falling down @ Brooklyn Navy Yard
Posted in Misc, tagged brooklyn, brooklyn navy yard, brooklyn waterfront, cumberland st, industrial brooklyn, photography on October 10, 2010| 1 Comment »
Went to an art show at the Brooklyn Navy Yard because I’d never been there before. It’s not open to the public, and the space is used for a variety of commercial purposes. (The Navy sold the land to NYC in the 1960’s.) The place is huge, and mostly deserted on a Sunday, but cars zipped around and security guards screamed at the art show visitors intrigued by a falling-down building: “Don’t stand too close! It’s dangerous!”