The New York Aquarium is inviting families and animal lovers to its first-ever Shark Party, a multi-day celebration that puts these misunderstood ocean inhabitants in the spotlight. Running from July ...
A Brooklyn man known for creating a makeshift aquarium under a leaking fire hydrant on a Bedford-Stuyvesant sidewalk was sentenced Friday for a 2023 shooting that took place just steps from where ...
The Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce convened in Coney Island on Wednesday, July 15 to celebrate the New York Aquarium – and its latest venture, a $157 million, three-story exhibit called Ocean Wonders: ...
NEW YORK − A tiny, makeshift fish pond fed by a leaky fire hydrant thrived for weeks on a Brooklyn sidewalk while drawing intense social media buzz only to be unceremoniously paved over by the city.
$100 million is a lot of clams, but that’s how much the New York Aquarium figures it needs to keep up with the Joneses in Coney Island. The Wildlife Conservation Society, along with Mayor Mike ...
As the city gradually recovers from the worst of the coronavirus pandemic, two of Brooklyn’s greatest cultural and scientific institutions, well-known to borough residents and tourists alike, are ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. NEW YORK (AP) — A makeshift aquarium that ...
The bizarre but beloved Bedford-Stuyvesant street aquarium born in the summer was wrecked during an FDNY hydrant inspection on Tuesday — but locals are already picking up the pieces. Nickel-sized ...
NEW YORK -- It's the end of the line for a makeshift aquarium in Brooklyn. The small attraction on the sidewalk in Bedford-Stuyvesant is now paved over and surrounded by candles, flowers and pumpkins.
An urban pond where goldfish used to swim beneath a leaky New York City fire hydrant has been replaced by a new makeshift aquarium, days after the city unceremoniously paved over the old one due to ...
This isn’t my style at all (minimalism all the way), but seeing this makes me feel lucky to live in a place where architecture like this still exists. We’re so lucky in Brooklyn, with everything from ...