Thanks to the Five Boro Bike Tour, I
can count on biking in Brooklyn at least once a year. This past
Sunday I visited it bikeless, which enabled me to move slowly enough
to really see Brooklyn. In all of its Brooklyn.
The people of Brooklyn are usually
friendly and have their own style; think Holly Golightly from
Breakfast at Tiffany's crossed
with Lisbeth Salander from The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.
There are many cyclists, but there is nary a spandex-shorts wearing
one to be found. From what I could tell by keen observation, there is
a bizzare bandit on the loose in Brooklyn – one who only appears
to steal front and rear derailleurs – so if you ride there with
anything that has shifters, keep a sharp eye.
It was my wife's idea to head to Dekalb Market in Brooklyn, a collection of refurbished shipping containers
showcasing the act of retailing and the practice of selling food as
an art form. It's on 138 Willoughby Street, a convenient subway ride
on the 4 train from Grand Central Terminal. The whole place initially
reminded me of Bartertown, except without Thunderdome, Tina Turner, or Master Blaster.
Though the retail shop part of the
market isn't open on Mondays, Dekalb is open seven days a week and
there is a large open space in the middle for events, such as bike-in
movies (don't take the tall bike from Joy Machines). The day I went there I was reminded
about just how good Brooklyn can be. Picture a great food truck in
your head. Now picture a dozen or so other great food trucks. Take
away the trucks and put them all in a row under tents and in shipping
containers and you've got Dekalb. Tacos for $3 each was what I went
for and they did not disappoint. Neither did the lemonade topped with
a scoop of strawberry rhubarb sorbet. Trust me: it is a summer drink
for heads of state.
Strolling around the market, one can
visit Far Far Away Toys, a fun vintage toy shop containing all of the
toys, action figures, lunch boxes, and other childhood goodies that
you went-all-'Sid'-from-Toy-Story on more than a quarter of a century
ago. There's little to no chance I'll whisper 'Greedo!' as I utter my
last breath and drop a Hoth snow globe on the floor, but if you or
any of your friends mourns the toys of yesterday and want them back
today, that's the place in Brooklyn to go.
Not far from Far Far Away is Love of Pretty (I only went in there to see what was taking my wife so long)
which mostly has handmade jewelry, but I still saw something I liked.
The place has a very well edited
selection, and it's actually quite nice to visit a bike shop that
knows what it is instead of piling random goods everywhere. If you
want a basket, a wine rack that attaches to your top tube, or you
want to buy a handmade bicycle skirt garter clip so your wife or
girlfriend can ride in a skirt with confidence, this is the place to
go.
I did not get to visit Velo City (the
cool-sounding organization that provides cycling-based urban planning
programs for youth) as they are probably attending the Velo City Global 2012 conference in Vancouver this week and didn't bring their
container.
So Dekalb Market is a nice way to visit
Brooklyn, and if you want to go I suggest you get a move on: the
landlord is planning to develop the land and the market, containers and all, will move to
a yet-unknown location in a few months. Now, if the mayor of
Stamford, Michael Pavia, wants to sew up his reelection right now, he
would engineer a way to move Dekalb to Stamford and put it in the
huge vacant lot across from the mall, but a small part of me hopes
this place will stay a destination in Brooklyn. Thanks for reading.
^ What a comment that one is! Seems like a pretty neat place I've never, ever heard of....
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