The citywide project is estimated to capture 55 million gallons of stormwater each year.
“STILL WATERS, by award-winning director Peter Gordon and Producer Ann Lalic is a documentary about the joy of learning, one man’s singular vision of what education could be.”
It’s better than a juice cleanse, cheaper than therapy, and almost on par with the best yoga class you’ve ever taken: go hang out with some kids at Still Waters in a Storm, on Stanhope Ave
Instagram Takeover – photo by Katarina Hyvenova – art by Julia Sinelnikova We at Bushwick Daily lived and breathed Bushwick Open Studios throughout the weekend (let’s face it, we’d been living and breathing #NoBSBOS prep for weeks before that!) and now it’s over. So what else is there to do? Reflect on all the awesome things […]
Apparently there’s some huge snowstorm heading our way, but don’t let that stop you from trudging through the snow to see some great shows this weekend
If you want to do something really special for this neighborhood and for its kids, you should absolutely attend
Being bored at home will hopefully be your only problem today, dear Bushwickians
A self-proclaimed “dyke bar for the queers” opens in Bushwick
Scenes among “a discoherent group of young people making a discoherent collection of art”
Plans unveiled for a community garden at a vacant lot near Grover Cleveland Park
The popular record store moves down a few blocks
Looking to get your children involved in extracurricular activities? Need somewhere for them to be while you’re at work?
49 years ago today, four young men entered a sporting goods store for a robbery that would soon escalate into a fatal shootout and hostage situation. With a new documentary film on the subject scheduled to come out later this year, Bushwick Daily takes a look back at the event.
The deadline to apply for the program is now Jan. 4.
The festival will feature student artwork and performances, a Thanksgiving dinner and a tour of Meryl Meisler’s “Paradise Lost & Found: Bushwick” installation.
“Great news! Cleaner streets and sidewalks are on the way,” said Antonio Reynoso, City Council District 34 representative and candidate for Brooklyn borough president.
Twenty of Meryl Meisler’s photos of Bushwick in the 1980s and 1990s are installed on fence outside of the Roland Hayes schoolyard.
Nicole De Santis, co-founder of Clean Bushwick Initiative, has a solution.
Nearly a month after the storm, Hurricane Ida relief has been made available for undocumented New Yorkers who do not qualify for FEMA assistance.
Compared to Tropical Storm Henri, water leak complaints approximately doubled both in Bushwick and citywide. There were nearly eight times as many calls as there were that same day the previous year.
On Tuesday evening, the New York City Board of Elections stated there had been an error in calculating preliminary voting results for citywide primaries.
Police are ramping up audio speaker busts but some locals say: ‘it’s a form of celebration”
Calvin Z. Heyward, a local writer and educator, echoes some of the struggles Black fathers endure and overcome.
Picking up a new chef from the shuttered Spotted Pig, a decade-old Troutman street haunt reopens its doors
A Czech-by-way-of-Texas brunch stop is the latest to open at 321 Starr.
When a blizzard struck, a burlesque regular at the House of Yes built a snowcat
On the heels of this singularly terrible year, Bushwick Daily needs your help
This column’s opening entry profiles two business owners – a distiller and a sake brewer – and their navigation through the treacherous COVID waters of New York City.