7th to Flushing
Bushwick, BK

By f.trainer
7th to 11th to 2nd to 9th to Smith to 4th to the BQE to Flushing…
I miss Bushwick Ave because I’m distracted by a vaguely interesting empty lot - filled with burners, dogs and broken TVs. I don’t stop. Dekalb - I know you, pull the left and follow it out until is ends at a cemetery. I can see the Empire State building off to the left, so it’s another left along Wordward Ave. I’ve found Flushing again, but which way? I should’ve checked that map a bit closer. Right it is. Flushing crosses Metropolitan; I’m in the right area but how much further until I hit Queens?
I should back up here for a moment: it was a chilly day in Brooklyn, the sky was a dull grey and the temperature was hovering just above 30°. I had heard about a REVS/HOPE installation here in Bushwick and I knew that with a bit of luck and some footwork it was mine for the finding.

The street went underground for a bit and I realized I was definitely in Queens. Too far. Turning around in a maze of one way streets was harder than it looked but the process yielded some interesting spots for a future expedition. Back on Flushing, heading south I spot a mural by Robots Will Kill- legally done, but still pretty cool. It covers a couple of sides of an art supply shop / cement factory.

This is about as far as I’m going to get in the car. Parking is easy around here and so I pull up next to a weathered brick building. The Robots Will Kill crew have done a good job with the mural, even if it is oddly reminiscent of Os Gemeos. Wandering, I spot the REVS sculpture a couple of blocks away.


Further down a couple of huge fill-ins run the length of a building: CURTIS, RIP-OFF & STER have been killing north Brooklyn for the past couple of years.

A factory to my right, another to my left and a block long scrap yard / used auto parts depot behind me.



Looking around I can only imagine what this place is like at night. It must be completely desolate. I notice paint splashed 30 feet up on the side of a factory; they must have had some sort of catapult or launcher.


All of a sudden, the hilarious “spring break” graffiti I had been seeing up and down the block seemed justified.

At night, these blocks are a free for all spring break for the art kids living in these (illegal) conversions; real estate is still cheap out here and you can fit a lot of people into a few thousand square feet.



I walked more, found some really amazing walls, Polaroid’ed a bit, and poked around on some freight tracks before heading home.




Despite the numb fingers, I had a good feeling about Bushwick.
Flushing to Navy, to Water and Front, Furman to Columbia and Union to 5th.
Flushing, Queens
Silent Barn, Bushwick
3.23.07
Market Hotel, Bushwick BK
Market Hotel, Bushwick BK
Ridgewood Temple, Bushwick BK
















January 30th, 2008 at 11:59 am
Yeah, that’s a great area. Even better at night, just for the added desolation and atmosphere, but also one of the only places in the city where walking around at night got me questioned by the cops. Probably thought I was painting.