Este artículo proporciona una lista (con descripciones simples, cuando sea posible) de las calles del distrito de Brooklyn , en la ciudad de Nueva York , incluido Fort Hamilton , el último puesto militar en servicio activo en la ciudad de Nueva York.
Aparte de la parte de las avenidas 3.ª a 7.ª más allá de la calle 86, las avenidas numeradas corren aproximadamente 40 grados al oeste del sur, pero según la costumbre local se las llama Norte-Sur.
Las calles de este a oeste en Greenpoint están en orden alfabético de norte a sur. Originalmente, estas calles simplemente tenían nombres con letras como "Calle A" y "Calle B", pero a mediados del siglo XIX, las calles recibieron nombres más largos. [8] [9] Este sistema persiste hoy en día con algunas excepciones: Ash, Box, Clay, Dupont, Eagle, Freeman, Greene, Huron, India, Java, Kent, Greenpoint Avenue (antes Lincoln Street) , Milton, Noble, Oak y Quay. [10] Greenpoint Avenue antes se llamaba Lincoln Street. Habría habido una calle que comenzara con la letra "P" entre Oak y Quay Streets, pero se llamó Calyer Street al principio de la historia de Greenpoint, en honor al patriarca de una familia cercana. [8] [9]
El siguiente cuadro enumera y describe las calles numeradas etiquetadas direccionalmente como 'Norte', delimitadas por Grand Street en Williamsburg .
El siguiente cuadro enumera y describe las calles numeradas etiquetadas direccionalmente como "Sur", delimitadas por Grand Street en Williamsburg .
Hay calles que se designan como "West #" Street. Estas calles están orientadas de norte a sur y se encuentran al oeste de Dahill Road/West Street (Gravesend). Hay dos calles llamadas West 9th Street: una en Carroll Gardens y Red Hook al oeste de 9th Street, y la otra en Gravesend y Coney Island entre West 8th y West 10th Streets. Solo West 9th Street en Coney Island es parte del sistema de numeración general de "West Street".
También hay calles designadas como "East X". Van desde East 1st Street hasta East 108th Street. Estas calles están orientadas de norte a sur y generalmente se encuentran al este de Dahill Road/West Street (Gravesend), que forma el borde occidental del casco antiguo de Flatbush. Muchas de las calles "orientales" se extienden hasta Prospect Lefferts Gardens . [ cita requerida ]
Brooklyn no tiene calles "Este" con los siguientes números:
Some of the "East Streets" do nominally exist, but for the most part, are replaced by named roads. These include:
There are 28 "Bay Streets" in Bath Beach numbered Bay 7th Street through Bay 50th Street. Every third street (Bay 9th Street, Bay 12th Street, etc.) does not exist, and a numbered avenue takes its place. Most of them run between 86th Street and Belt Parkway.
There are 16 "Brighton Streets" in Brighton Beach, although Brighton 1st and Brighton 9th Street do not exist, while Brighton 1st Road, Brighton 1st Place, and Brighton 8th Court do.
West Brighton Avenue leads to Brighton Beach Avenue at the intersection of Ocean Parkway. After, the streets begin numerically, beginning at Brighton 1st Road, Brighton 1st Place, Brighton 2nd Street, Brighton 3rd Street, Brighton 4th Street, Brighton 5th Street, Brighton 6th Street, Brighton 7th Street before hitting Coney Island Avenue, which runs perpendicular. Then, Brighton 8th Street, Brighton 8th Court, Brighton 10th Street (which has a small cul-de-sac of small side streets named Brighton 10th Court, Brighton 10th Path, Brighton Terrace, and Brighton 10th Lane), Brighton 11th Street, Brighton 12th Street, Brighton 13th Street, Brighton 14th Street, Brighton 15th Street, ending at Corbin Place, where Manhattan Beach begins.
There are 10 "Flatlands Streets" in eastern Canarsie. Unlike the Bay Streets, they alternate with the lettered Avenues. (e.g. Flatlands 3rd Street is not replaced by Avenue K, etc.) Each street is one block long.
There are 15 streets, numbered Paerdegat 1st Street through Paerdegat 15th Street, in Paerdegat, Brooklyn. They each run one block between Paerdegat Avenue North (East 76th Street) and East 80th Street.[11]
There are three streets, Plumb 1st Street and Plumb 2nd Street, in the Plumb Beach section of Brooklyn. These streets are both very short, with Plumb 1st Street being 3 blocks long and Plumb 2nd and 3rd Street being 2 blocks long.
The following thoroughfares are located inside Fort Hamilton, the last active-duty military post in New York City, and are under federal jurisdiction: Roosevelt Avenue, Schum Avenue, Walke Avenue, Warren Avenue (formerly General Lee Avenue), White Avenue (also N. White Avenue), Marshall Drive, Sterling Drive, Stonewall Jackson Drive, Wainwright Drive, Washington Drive, Pershing Loop North/South, Sheridan Loop, Grimes Road, MacArthur (or Macarthur) Road, Schum Road, Washington Road, Pence Street (partially), and 101st Street (partially).[12]