In Red Hook
Brooklyn Cruise Terminal The Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook is now the largest cruise ship facility in New York City, at least until renovations are completed on the Manhattan terminal, at West 46th Street. The Red Hook terminal is the first cruise port in the city that is long enough and deep enough for the extra-large ships. The Brooklyn terminal will accommodate 192,000 passengers from 38 ships in its first year of operation, eventually accounting for about one-fifth of the roughly one million passengers who will pass through New York City this year. [caption id="attachment_145" align="alignnone" width="600" caption="The Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook, with Queen Mary 2"][/caption] Ikea in Red Hook IKEA is opening its store in Red Hook on 18 June 2008. Fairway Market A 45,000-square-foot Fairway Market opened on Van Brunt Street in 2006. Red Hook Hotels The new 115-room Holiday Inn Express Brooklyn opened in 2006. See also New York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge. Red Hook pictures on Flickr For more pictures of Red Hook, see Flickr group Red Hook, Brooklyn Map of Red Hook See our Map of Red Hook page Boundaries Red Hook, just across the harbor from Governors Island and the…
[caption id="attachment_150" align="alignnone" width="600" caption="The Queen Mary 2 (QM2) at Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook"][/caption] Brooklyn Cruise Terminal Carnival Corporation, which owns the fleets of the Cunard and Princess Lines, will move the berths of four of its most luxurious ships from the frayed and crowded New York Cruise Terminal to a huge pier being redeveloped in Atlantic Basin, in Red Hook, opposite Governors Island. The shift is expected to advance the city into a new era of passenger ship glory: bringing 250,000 voyagers to town beyond this year’s 900,000; adding dozens of dockings to the schedule; creating thousands of jobs and an array of retail, restaurant, hotel and other traveler-related businesses in Red Hook; and speeding the revival of a once grim industrial-warehouse district. Since the 2006 cruise season, the four ships – Cunard’s Queen Mary 2 and Queen Elizabeth 2 and Princess Line’s Crown Princess and Star Princess – will call about 44 times at Pier 12, a former cargo dock rapidly undergoing transformation, with a rebuilt steel shed, new bollards and fenders, an internal roadway, a 500-car parking area, taxi and bus drop-off areas, and even landscaping. The pier will be big enough to accommodate the…
Directions for Brooklyn Cruise Terminal The entrance to the terminal is at the corner of Bowne and Imlay Streets in Red Hook, Brooklyn Map of Brooklyn Cruise Terminal Map of Brooklyn Cruise Terminal on Windows Live Local Map of Brooklyn Cruise Terminal on Google Local Transportation to/from Brooklyn Cruise Terminal Subway/Bus Take the F train to Smith/9th Street Train station and change for the B77 Bus. Get off bus at Conover Street and Dikeman Street. The walk is then approximately 6 long blocks to the terminal entrance. Take 2/3/4/5/N/R Train to Borough Hall and change for B61 bus on Joralemon Street. Get off bus at Pioneer Street and Van Brunt Street. The walk is then approximately 4 long blocks to the terminal entrance. Yellow cab From Manhattan, take a cab to the corner of Bowne and Imlay Streets in Red Hook, Brooklyn Car service is located outside the terminal Pictures of Brooklyn Cruise Terminal [caption id="attachment_153" align="alignnone" width="600" caption="The entrance to Brooklyn Cruise Terminal at the corner of Bowne and Imlay Streets in Red Hook"][/caption] [caption id="attachment_154" align="alignnone" width="600" caption="Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook, Brooklyn"][/caption]
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In Red Hook, Brooklyn