Dailyheights.com is a community website for the Prospect Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. Most of the interesting stories start on the Prospect Heights Message Board. There is also an active Park Slope Message Board. Both are part of Brooklynian.com. Questions, comments, tips? Contact whatsnew@dailyheights.com.

What to Do if Your Car Gets Towed in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn

Posted by dailyheights on Friday 18 March 2005 at 10:51 pm

stand behind the T-tn.jpgLocate your car. If the towing occurred in Prospect Heights, Park Slope or anywhere thereabouts, they probably took it to the Brooklyn Navy Yard (unless it was towed for unpaid parking tickets, in which case it may be at a lot in Red Hook). You can use this Find Towed Vehicle Search on the official New York City website (third link in the first pull-down menu) but they will tell you to confirm anyway by calling the tow pound. The number for the Brooklyn Navy Yard is 718-694-0696.

Gather your documents. Bring your drivers license and registration (and title, just to be safe). Bring a printout of the Vehicle Search results (above). Bring a checkbook, credit card or cash to pay the fine of $185. Be prepared to see one or more parking tickets on your windshield, which could make your total fine more than $400 (but you don’t have to pay the parking tickets until later).

Get to the Navy Yard. It’s open from 8 AM - 9 PM Mon-Fri; 8 AM - 4 PM Sat; and 12 PM - 8 PM Sun. A cab from Flatbush to Brooklyn will cost about $8, or you can take the 2 train from Grand Army Plaza to Hoyt St., get out and walk 2 blocks to the A, and take the A to the High St. station, and walk dow Sands St. toward the Navy Yard. It’s not as complicated as it sounds–go to HopStop to get a route plan (this is an amazing site: how could you have missed it?). The entrance to the Navy Yards is at the corner of Sands St. and Navy St.

Stand in line. Line up behind the T. Don’t get uptight if people appear to waltz right in and cut in front of you. They were probably told to go get documents out of their car and bring them back to the counter. Just be patient.

If everything is in order, the ladies at the counter will take your money, give you a green Redemption Fee Receipt (stamped “CLOSED” or “REDEEMED”). Finally, you have to be “escorted,” which means you have to get in the blue police van and be driven 200 feet to your car.

The Manhattan tow pound (212-971-0771 or 212-971-0772) is at Pier 76 at West 38th Street & 12th Avenue. The Bronx pound is at 745 East 141st Street between Bruckner Expressway & East River, and the Queens pound is under the Kosciusko Bridge. Check this site for opening and closing times.

[CAR SERVICE] Listings and Opinions

Posted by dailyheights on Friday 18 March 2005 at 12:03 pm

Here is a listing of car services that will pick you up in Prospect Heights (and some opinions on them).

ProHo car service reviews and war stories are taking place in this discussion thread.

The list so far:

EVELYN CAR SERVICE; 718-230-7800. 587 Vanderbilt Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11238
INTERNATIONAL CAR SERVICE; 718-230-0808. 623 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11238
MONACO LIMO & CAR SERVICES; 718-731-2222. 742 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11238
UNITED EXP C/L SERVICE; 718-452-4000. 1025 Atlantic Ave., 1st Fl., Brooklyn, NY 11238
BROWNSTONE; 718-789-1536. 849 Union St., Brooklyn, NY 11215
SEVENTH AVE CAR SERVICE; 718-965-1616. 307A 7th Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11215.
More information…

IF YOUR IRISH

Posted by dailyheights on Friday 18 March 2005 at 10:54 am

IF YOUR IRISH-tn.jpg
Last night at Amorina: Ruth shows a blatant disregard for grammar while ladling red sauce. In addition to being St. Patrick’s Day, it was also her birthday. Happy Birthday! [Photo: LQ]

Amorina (Cucina Rustica) | 624 Vanderbilt Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11238

Virtual House Tours Peer into Private Lives of ProHo

Posted by dailyheights on Friday 18 March 2005 at 10:09 am

virtual house tour underhill ave.jpg
Here’s the virtual tour for the open house that takes place this weekend on Underhill Ave. (as noted by Stacey yesterday in ProHo Discuss).

The tour should give you a nice glimpse into the lives of the people who live there now: comfy black leather couches, wedding photo on the wall (newlyweds?), American bald eagle figurines, and a decent amount of computer equipment–including what appears to be some sort of undergarment draped across a computer monitor. What are they trying to hide? Were they browsing the Corcoran website when the Foxtons photographer showed up?

This 2 1/2 room cubbyhole is listed at $265,000 and is exceedingly cozy at 478 square feet. Please double-check this with the condo calculation expert, but that looks like it’s coming out to $554.39 per square foot. According to Quig, it’s between St. Marks Ave. and Bergen St., a couple of doors down from his beloved #69, an abandoned building that’s showing no signs of life.

[Photo] Subway at Grand Army Plaza (??) Station

Posted by dailyheights on Friday 18 March 2005 at 9:54 am

(oops. that’s not GAP, is it? Union Square?)

featherrock proho gallery.jpgThis subway shot is by Frederick Nielsen, a photographer with a keen eye for Prospect Heights: I am presently in the midst of an exercise; I must produce 25 images per day.”

He appears to do a lot of his work with a Sony DSC-V1, a point-and-shoot 5-megapixel digital camera introduced in 2003 that apparently you can pick up now for as little as $279.97, if the Internet is to be believed.

Check out the rest of Frederick’s Prospect Heights photo gallery.

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