
Feb. 9, 2024 By Jada Camille
The Center for Fiction is inviting Brooklyn bookworms to write their own love stories at Booking for Love — a new speed dating event for those looking to create their own happily ever after this Valentine’s season.
Feb. 9, 2024 By Jada Camille
The Center for Fiction is inviting Brooklyn bookworms to write their own love stories at Booking for Love — a new speed dating event for those looking to create their own happily ever after this Valentine’s season.
Feb. 8, 2024 By Adam Daly
A worker at a controversial Bay Ridge weed shop was indicted in Brooklyn Supreme Court after he allegedly assaulted a tax department criminal investigator who came to shut down the illegal store, the Brooklyn District Attorney announced Thursday.
Feb. 8, 2024 By Kirstyn Brendlen & Lloyd Mitchell
Nearly two dozen Sunset Park residents were displaced by what appeared to be a lithium-ion battery fire early on Thursday morning.
Feb. 8, 2024 By Anna Bradley-Smith
Work is almost complete on the borough’s first supertall, The Brooklyn Tower, with facade installation wrapping up on the building’s double-height plinth and tenants and homeowners already taking up residence in the skyscraper that towers over it.
Feb. 8, 2024 By Adam Daly
A Downtown Brooklyn tenant was scammed out of a month’s rent by a hacker posing as his landlord last month.
Feb. 7, 2024 By Adam Daly
Two children were recovering in the hospital Wednesday morning after being struck by the driver of a minivan in Bensonhurst, police said.
Feb. 7, 2024 By Jada Camille
One of Coney Island’s oldest residents celebrated her 104th birthday with her friends at JASA’s Luna Park Older Adult Center on Feb. 7.
Feb. 7, 2024 By Jada Camille
Visitation Academy, the all-girls Catholic school in Bay Ridge, will close its doors at the end of this school year.
Feb. 7, 2024 By Isabel Song Beer
The United University Professions (UUP) union was at the state capitol on Tuesday rallying to keep SUNY Downstate Hospital open amid imminent closure.
Feb. 7, 2024 By Khushali Haji
After an Indian buffet, warm chai and a vent about the difficulty of finding space for jamming sessions, 18 Jewish and Muslim musicians in Kensington opened up their instrument cases.