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I was in a similar situation 2 years ago...moved to NY to study on a tight budget.
What I would suggest to you and daughter .. although commute time is important that it may
be better to look further out maybe 45 mins to 1 hour commute and be safe and comfortable.
Just have to organize your time well and it can work.
The area you mention is not the best area for single young females to be
travelling alone. Check out mill basin area and marine park also I heard Bay ridge
is a safe neighborhood but not for blacks.(feel free to comment or correct)
Have they consider looking into Queens? Commute times not so bad (30 - 45 mins) from places
like Woodside, Sunnyside, Astoria, Jackson Heights, Forest Hills to mention a few.
I also looking to return to NY and asking the same questions....good luck!
2.) they want to be able to get into lower Manhattan within a 30 minute commute,
Like I suspected. Your daughter and her friends want to be able to drink after work and not have a long commute home. Why doesn't everybody just admit that this is the reason why they want a short commute.
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"The man who sleeps on the floor, can never fall out of bed." -Martin Lawrence
Yes,I have.I've been there a couple of times in the last 6 months . That the area "is nothing like what it was 10 years ago"( can be said about virtually every neighborhood in NYC) still doesn't make it a neighborhood I would live in today.
I have to cosign this, not in a personal sense since living anywhere in CH would be very comfortable for me, but in the way people use this as a reason to justify living in places that they know they wouldn't feel comfortable in, despite the gentrification that's been going on.
And Seventh Floor, I agree that shouldn't feel bad or ashamed to admit that being near Manhattan is a bigger priority than living in a neighborhood where they feel safe. There's thousands of people in NYC who have the same priorities as them. Not good or bad; it just is.
I have to cosign this, not in a personal sense since living anywhere in CH would be very comfortable for me, but in the way people use this as a reason to justify living in places that they know they wouldn't feel comfortable in, despite the gentrification that's been going on.
And Seventh Floor, I agree that shouldn't feel bad or ashamed to admit that being near Manhattan is a bigger priority than living in a neighborhood where they feel safe. There's thousands of people in NYC who have the same priorities as them. Not good or bad; it just is.
We would be able to assist much better if they were honest with us.
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"The man who sleeps on the floor, can never fall out of bed." -Martin Lawrence
Have you been to NW Crown Heights any this past year? The area is nothing like what it was 10 years ago.
Quote:
Originally Posted by makossa
So, tell us how it was ten years ago.
Yes! If you're going to make a statement comparing the Crown Heights of ten years ago to the Crown Heights of today, please describe what year you're talking about that you were there around 10 years ago, and what the vibe was at that time.
That is... unless you were never actually there 10 years ago and are just going by photos, what you read online and what other people have told you. In that case, it's fine, but it would be better to say something like, "I have HEARD the area is nothing like what it was 10 years ago."
RE: why Crown Heights -- it's not my first choice of neighborhood for them but they are dealing with the dynamic of 1.)having a modest rent budget which prices them out of many neighborhoods,2.) they want to be able to get into lower Manhattan within a 30 minute commute, 3.) finding an apartment they all like in an area they feel comfortable 4.) finding a landlord willing to rent to 4 young women two of whom are students and have no employment at present (have already been turned down for one place they liked in another neighborhood) and 5.) due to school starting have to find someplace quickly. So, their options are somewhat limited.
Since she has to be dressed nicely (business casual) for school would that make her more of a target in CH? Should she consider waiting to change into her nicer clothes in Manhattan and then changing again before getting on the subway? Would be glad to hear any other tips on how to be "street smart".
Nah, they will be fine. If they are out late at night, it would be wise to walk with someone, but again, they will be fine in that area. The neighborhood still scares some New Yorkers, which you can see here, but if they feel fine there, then there is no reason not to live there.
Yes! If you're going to make a statement comparing the Crown Heights of ten years ago to the Crown Heights of today, please describe what year you're talking about that you were there around 10 years ago, and what the vibe was at that time.
That is... unless you were never actually there 10 years ago and are just going by photos, what you read online and what other people have told you. In that case, it's fine, but it would be better to say something like, "I have HEARD the area is nothing like what it was 10 years ago."
Well you weren't here 100 years ago, yet there is plenty of information about this city. Obviously you are looking to fight over pointless details. If you were here 10 years ago or lived in Crown Heights 10 years ago, then feel free to share your input to the OP, if not then feel free to create a thread about what you have and haven't done and how many years you have and haven't lived in NYC.
I suggest you stick to the OP topic and not stray into these pointless arguments.
idk why people try to claim franklin ave as the only crown heights street.
overall crown heights is the ghetto. i guess franklin is now the spot. But anything east of brooklyn ave is GHETTO.
I keep hearing positive things about Franklin and west of there but keep hearing a lot of very negative things about the eastern part of CH. My husband was actually with the girls when they were apartment hunting in CH on a couple different days and then made a trip with them at around midnight to check out the neighborhood at night. His impressions were that the Rogers/Bedford/Franklin area seemed fine - lots of people out and about jogging, walking the dog, etc. but that when they walked toward the east it seemed to start changing after Nostrand.
So he advised them to stay west of there.
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