Brooklyn's Bed-Stuy community rallied to restore their local fishpond with new features after city authorities filled the ...
At one point, a local, Roey Rozen, was given a warning by cops after the 26-year-old stopped to scrawl “Fishpond” in the wet ...
NEW YORK -- It's the end of the line for a makeshift aquarium in Brooklyn. The small attraction on the sidewalk in ...
Commissioners and members of the public said a proposed design for infill should be reduced in size to defer to existing landmarked buildings on an architecturally distinguished block.
The Bed-Stuy Aquarium, the divisive sidewalk puddle full of goldfish near a leaky hydrant that has alternately been destroyed — and resurrected as a neighborhood icon — is no more, forever this time.
The New York City Department of Environmental Protection poured concrete over a community-built goldfish pond, citing safety ...
A Georgian hotelier made Hancock home for a group of rotating artists and family members, who live there rent-free ...
The neighborhood’s beloved sidewalk fish pond was resurrected this week — in an act of defiance that comes just five days ...
DEP officials fixed the leak by pouring cement around the hydrant, permanently eliminating the makeshift pond.
Tang Clan District” sign on Staten Island, where the group was formed in 1992, were gone in less than two hours.