Kensington, Brooklyn

Coordinates: 40°38′19″N 73°58′23″W / 40.638528°N 73.973167°W

Kensington American Foursquare Houses
Kensington Post Office (NRHP)

Kensington is a neighborhood in the center of the New York City borough of Brooklyn. It is the area south of Prospect Park and the Green-Wood Cemetery. It is bordered by Coney Island Avenue to the east, Fort Hamilton Parkway and Caton Avenue to the north, McDonald Avenue to the west, and Foster Avenue to the south.The neighborhoods that border it are Ditmas Park and Prospect Park South to the east (both of which are parts of Flatbush), Windsor Terrace to the north, Borough Park to the west, and Midwood to the south.

Kensington is a predominantly residential area that consists of housing types that run the gamut from brick rowhouses to detached one-family Victorians to apartment buildings. Pre-war brick apartment buildings dominate the Ocean Parkway and Coney Island Avenue frontage, including many that operate as co-ops. The main commercial streets are Coney Island Avenue, Church Avenue, Ditmas Avenue and McDonald Avenue. Ocean Parkway bisects the neighborhood east-west. Kensington is served by the NYPD's 66th Precinct.[1]

Kensington is a very diverse neighborhood, containing Ukrainian, South Asian (Bangladeshi and Pakistani), Chinese, Orthodox Jewish, Hasidic, Irish, Polish, Italian, Albanian, Russian, Latino, Mexican, Australian and Caribbean communities.[2] More than 300 immigrants from Darfur have also settled in Kensington as of 2010.[3]

History

The land where Kensington now sits was first colonized by Dutch farmers during the seventeenth century. It was re-settled by British colonists in 1737. Developed in 1885 after the completion of Ocean Parkway, the neighborhood was named after the place and borough in West London, at the turn of the century.[4]

Ocean Parkway, which starts in Kensington, was finished in 1880; it features about five miles (8 km) of landscaped malls, benches, chess tables and walking and bike paths, linking Prospect Park to Coney Island, and is now part of the Brooklyn-Queens Greenway. Homebuilding began in earnest in the 1920s and attracted Italian and Irish immigrants to the neighborhood. Brick and brownstone townhouses coexist with single- and two-family homes with yards and garages. Five- and six-story pre- and post-war apartment buildings and co-ops are also common.

Transportation

The Culver Ramp takes the IND Culver Line from a tunnel to an elevated structure.

The New York City Subway's IND Culver Line (F G trains) runs along the western part of the neighborhood and stops underground at Fort Hamilton Parkway and at Church Avenue. The line rises above ground to an elevated structure (F train) to serve the Ditmas Avenue and 18th Avenue stations.[5] In addition, Kensington is served by the B8, B16, B35, B67, B68, B69, B70, and B103 local buses, as well as the BM1, BM2, BM3, and BM4 express buses to Manhattan.[6]

Library

18th Avenue library
St. Rose of Lima Church on Parkville Avenue

Founded as a deposit station in 1908 by the Mothers' Kindergarten Club of P.S. 134 (18th Avenue and East 5th Street) and the Kensington Improvement League, Kensington's branch library quickly outgrew two locations before becoming a full-fledged branch at 770 McDonald Avenue (near Ditmas Avenue) in 1912. When it again needed more space in 1960, it moved to 410 Ditmas Ave., between East 4th & East 5th Streets, a former catering hall known as Ditmas Gardens, Savoy Garden, and The Manor, that was leased and renovated, arousing national media interest. The Branch moved again in 2012, opening on Thursday, November 15, 2012 at its newly built facilities located at 4207 18th Avenue. [7]

Public Schools

New York City Public Schools in Kensington include: three public primary schools: PS130, PS 230 and PS179. There are two middle schools: Junior High School 62, J.H.S. 23, The area has no public high schools.[8]

Notable residents

References

  1. 66th Precinct, NYPD.
  2. "Little Bangledesh". All City New York. Retrieved February 28, 2009.
  3. "From Darfur to a Corner of Brooklyn". New York Times. April 10, 2010. Retrieved August 18, 2010.
  4. "Ask the Historian". WNYC. Retrieved July 31, 2010. When the developers were buying up the farmland at the end of the 19th and the early 20th centuries, they wanted to attract the wealthy to buy their new homes. Giving English-sounding names made it an attraction. Kensington is a suburb of London.
  5. http://web.mta.info/nyct/maps/subwaymap.pdf
  6. http://web.mta.info/nyct/maps/busbkln.pdf
  7. Official Webpage of the Kensington Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library
  8. Mooney, Jake (May 25, 2008). "Living in Kensington, Brooklyn Name From London, People From Everywhere". New York Times. Retrieved April 10, 2015.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kensington, Brooklyn.