Walking Brooklyn: 30 walking tours exploring historical legacies, neighborhood culture, side streets, and waterways
The Guide that Shows You Around All of Brooklyn

The new second edition of the popular book Walking Brooklyn: 30 Tours Exploring Historical Legacies, Neighborhood Culture, Side Streets, and Waterways provides a unique guide to Brooklyn’s diverse communities, notable sights, and ever-evolving streetscape. Author Adrienne Onofri has crafted 30 exceptional tours showcasing the borough’s history, architecture, parks, arts venues, college campuses, places made famous by pop culture, and more.

Each chapter of Walking Brooklyn features a DIY tour route, with step-by-step directions, an area map, photographs, and public transportation information. Every tour tells the story of a neighborhood’s past, present, and future, shedding light on its buildings and landmarks, community life, ethnic heritage, cultural and retail scene, and role in Brooklyn’s renaissance. Readers will discover revitalized districts and state-of-the-art new developments; stroll along the river, bay, or ocean; visit galleries, performance spaces, and artists’ workshops; and see residences ranging from the iconic brownstones to Victorian houses to contemporary high-rises.

This fully revised and updated book now comes in color and includes places that were opened or revived since the first edition was published in 2007, such as the Kings Theatre, Barclays Center, Brooklyn Navy Yard, Prospect Park’s LeFrak Center at Lakeside, City Point, Brooklyn Bridge Park, East River State Park, and Industry City. New routes have been created in neighborhoods that have undergone significant changes, like Downtown, Dumbo, Gowanus, Red Hook, Coney Island, and Bushwick.

Walking Brooklyn is the most comprehensive guidebook available to Brooklyn, covering nearly 40 neighborhoods—from those close to Manhattan (like Brooklyn Heights and Williamsburg) through Park Slope, Fort Greene, Crown Heights, and the rest of the brownstone belt and out to the neighborhoods east of Prospect Park as well as the traditional communities of southern Brooklyn such as Gravesend, Sheepshead Bay, and Gerritsen Beach. Entire walks are devoted to Prospect Park and Green-Wood Cemetery, while many other green spaces are featured on neighborhood tours. Brooklyn’s waterfront is also well-represented, including on a walk that crosses both the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges.

Walking Brooklyn is the only book you need if you want to explore—or reminisce about—this historic, dynamic place that everybody’s talking about!

1126411860
Walking Brooklyn: 30 walking tours exploring historical legacies, neighborhood culture, side streets, and waterways
The Guide that Shows You Around All of Brooklyn

The new second edition of the popular book Walking Brooklyn: 30 Tours Exploring Historical Legacies, Neighborhood Culture, Side Streets, and Waterways provides a unique guide to Brooklyn’s diverse communities, notable sights, and ever-evolving streetscape. Author Adrienne Onofri has crafted 30 exceptional tours showcasing the borough’s history, architecture, parks, arts venues, college campuses, places made famous by pop culture, and more.

Each chapter of Walking Brooklyn features a DIY tour route, with step-by-step directions, an area map, photographs, and public transportation information. Every tour tells the story of a neighborhood’s past, present, and future, shedding light on its buildings and landmarks, community life, ethnic heritage, cultural and retail scene, and role in Brooklyn’s renaissance. Readers will discover revitalized districts and state-of-the-art new developments; stroll along the river, bay, or ocean; visit galleries, performance spaces, and artists’ workshops; and see residences ranging from the iconic brownstones to Victorian houses to contemporary high-rises.

This fully revised and updated book now comes in color and includes places that were opened or revived since the first edition was published in 2007, such as the Kings Theatre, Barclays Center, Brooklyn Navy Yard, Prospect Park’s LeFrak Center at Lakeside, City Point, Brooklyn Bridge Park, East River State Park, and Industry City. New routes have been created in neighborhoods that have undergone significant changes, like Downtown, Dumbo, Gowanus, Red Hook, Coney Island, and Bushwick.

Walking Brooklyn is the most comprehensive guidebook available to Brooklyn, covering nearly 40 neighborhoods—from those close to Manhattan (like Brooklyn Heights and Williamsburg) through Park Slope, Fort Greene, Crown Heights, and the rest of the brownstone belt and out to the neighborhoods east of Prospect Park as well as the traditional communities of southern Brooklyn such as Gravesend, Sheepshead Bay, and Gerritsen Beach. Entire walks are devoted to Prospect Park and Green-Wood Cemetery, while many other green spaces are featured on neighborhood tours. Brooklyn’s waterfront is also well-represented, including on a walk that crosses both the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges.

Walking Brooklyn is the only book you need if you want to explore—or reminisce about—this historic, dynamic place that everybody’s talking about!

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Walking Brooklyn: 30 walking tours exploring historical legacies, neighborhood culture, side streets, and waterways

Walking Brooklyn: 30 walking tours exploring historical legacies, neighborhood culture, side streets, and waterways

by Adrienne Onofri
Walking Brooklyn: 30 walking tours exploring historical legacies, neighborhood culture, side streets, and waterways

Walking Brooklyn: 30 walking tours exploring historical legacies, neighborhood culture, side streets, and waterways

by Adrienne Onofri

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Overview

The Guide that Shows You Around All of Brooklyn

The new second edition of the popular book Walking Brooklyn: 30 Tours Exploring Historical Legacies, Neighborhood Culture, Side Streets, and Waterways provides a unique guide to Brooklyn’s diverse communities, notable sights, and ever-evolving streetscape. Author Adrienne Onofri has crafted 30 exceptional tours showcasing the borough’s history, architecture, parks, arts venues, college campuses, places made famous by pop culture, and more.

Each chapter of Walking Brooklyn features a DIY tour route, with step-by-step directions, an area map, photographs, and public transportation information. Every tour tells the story of a neighborhood’s past, present, and future, shedding light on its buildings and landmarks, community life, ethnic heritage, cultural and retail scene, and role in Brooklyn’s renaissance. Readers will discover revitalized districts and state-of-the-art new developments; stroll along the river, bay, or ocean; visit galleries, performance spaces, and artists’ workshops; and see residences ranging from the iconic brownstones to Victorian houses to contemporary high-rises.

This fully revised and updated book now comes in color and includes places that were opened or revived since the first edition was published in 2007, such as the Kings Theatre, Barclays Center, Brooklyn Navy Yard, Prospect Park’s LeFrak Center at Lakeside, City Point, Brooklyn Bridge Park, East River State Park, and Industry City. New routes have been created in neighborhoods that have undergone significant changes, like Downtown, Dumbo, Gowanus, Red Hook, Coney Island, and Bushwick.

Walking Brooklyn is the most comprehensive guidebook available to Brooklyn, covering nearly 40 neighborhoods—from those close to Manhattan (like Brooklyn Heights and Williamsburg) through Park Slope, Fort Greene, Crown Heights, and the rest of the brownstone belt and out to the neighborhoods east of Prospect Park as well as the traditional communities of southern Brooklyn such as Gravesend, Sheepshead Bay, and Gerritsen Beach. Entire walks are devoted to Prospect Park and Green-Wood Cemetery, while many other green spaces are featured on neighborhood tours. Brooklyn’s waterfront is also well-represented, including on a walk that crosses both the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges.

Walking Brooklyn is the only book you need if you want to explore—or reminisce about—this historic, dynamic place that everybody’s talking about!


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780899978031
Publisher: Wilderness Press
Publication date: 11/14/2017
Series: Walking Series
Edition description: Revised
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 264,375
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 7.40(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Adrienne Onofri is a native New Yorker, a journalist, and a licensed sightseeing guide. For Wilderness Press, she has also written Walking Queens: 30 Tours for Discovering the Diverse Communities, Historic Places, and Natural Treasures of New York City’s Largest Borough and edited Walking Manhattan: 30 Strolls Exploring Cultural Treasures, Entertainment Centers, and Historical Sites in the Heart of New York City. She has been a copy editor for Entertainment Weekly and written about theater, the arts, and travel for various publications. As a guide, Adrienne has led tours in Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens by foot, bus, car, and trolley.

Read an Excerpt

In the 21st century, Brooklyn has experienced a transformation unprecedented in modern urban history. Regarded as a homier, more affordable alternative to Manhattan just a decade ago, it has become a highly coveted, pricey address—a worldwide locus of trendy, artisanal cool and a wellspring of artistic, culinary and technological creativity. While this renaissance has renewed hometown pride, it also has perpetuated a disconnect between today’s Brooklyn and the Brooklyn of so many cherished 20th-century memories. Many newer Brooklynites grew up far from Kings County. They may not even know they’re supposed to hate Walter O’Malley for banishing the Dodgers to California, or Robert Moses for bulldozing a highway through their streets. So we have a place defined by both the past and the future, a personality both nostalgic and on the cutting edge.

Of course, many other events have left their mark on Brooklyn through the years—the devastating assault by the King’s army during the Revolutionary War, the high-bourgeois Victorian age, the lurid decline of the 1970s, to name just a few. Brooklyn can also boast of the great outdoors, with three parks of 450-plus acres and a shoreline that stretches from river to bay to ocean. With all this diversity in its history, its geography, its very essence, Brooklyn is a most exciting place to explore up close and personal...the kind of exploring done best on foot.

Table of Contents


1. In One Bridge (Manhattan Bridge), Out the Other (Brooklyn Bridge)

2. Dumbo and Vinegar Hill

3. Downtown

4. Brooklyn Heights

5. Barclays Center, BAM and Boerum Hill

6. Carroll Gardens and Cobble Hill

7. Gowanus

8. Red Hook

9. Park Slope

10. Prospect Park

11. Prospect Heights

12. Around the Park

13. Victorian Flatbush

14. Midwood and Flatbush

15. Crown Heights

16. Bedford-Stuyvesant

17. Fort Greene

18. Clinton Hill and Wallabout

19. Bushwick

20. Williamsburg: Southside, Northside

21. Williamsburg: McCarren Park and the Waterfront

22. Greenpoint

23. Green-Wood Cemetery

24. Sunset Park

25. Bay Ridge, with Fort Hamilton sidebar

26. Gravesend

27. Coney Island and Brighton Beach

28. Manhattan Beach and Sheepshead Bay

29. Gerritsen Beach, with Marine Park sidebar

30. Mill Basin/Paerdegat Basin/Canarsie Pier

31. East New York and Cypress Hills (including Highland Park)

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