Walking Brooklyn. Adrienne Onofri

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the new 300 Ashland apartment building to your left. On your right is BAM Fisher, a 2012 addition containing a 250-seat theater, rehearsal space, and a rooftop terrace. Then you reach BAM’s main building, and could anything be more welcoming than the musician cherubs around the doorways?

      Go right on Lafayette Avenue to take in BAM in all its glory. This building, its home since 1908, boasts a 2,000-seat opera house whose ceiling is gilded like a Fabergé egg; a ballroom with 24-foot-high windows, now used as a cafe; and a multiscreen cinema. Tantamount to the physical splendor is BAM’s artistic legacy—from one of Enrico Caruso’s final performances to the annual Next Wave Festival.

      With BAM on your left, walk west on Lafayette Avenue and you see BAM’s cultural neighbors. First, at the corner of Ashland Place, look to your right at the dark gray building with a multistory windowed front: Theatre for a New Audience, a classical company that bounced around various locations in Manhattan and Brooklyn for 34 years before opening this building in 2013. Cross Ashland, passing the Mark Morris Dance Center, home of Morris’s world-renowned company, but also a place for people of all ages and abilities to take dance and fitness classes.

      Cross Flatbush Avenue and head toward the school and church buildings across the street from each other. But of course you can’t miss the residential tower just beyond the church to your right: Hub, which topped out at 610 feet to become Brooklyn’s tallest building in 2016.

      Continue on 3rd to Pacific Street, where you can reminisce about the days when people not only read newspapers, but when a newspaper would invest in a building like the green-roofed one on your left, with long windows that allowed passersby to watch the printing, collating, and folding of papers. The New York Times built this printing plant (now a school) in the late 1920s, its marbleized exterior adorned with heads of royalty both human and leonine. Across the street stands Bethlehem Lutheran Church, whose name was preceded by “Swedish Evangelical” when this building was erected in 1894—during an era when Atlantic Avenue was known as Swedish Broadway.

      Walk on Pacific past the church and then past playgrounds on both sides of the street.

      Turn right at Nevins Street, then left on Atlantic Avenue, which slices east–west across the entire borough. The building on the right with arched windows, along with the building adjoining it to the left, was an Anheuser-Busch beer-bottling plant from the 1880s to 1903 and later became part of a factory complex that included the newer, taller building next to them. What else was manufactured there? It still says above the door on that taller building. Given the indelicate nature of the product, you may wonder why they didn’t pry off the Ex-Lax name when the building went co-op. Well, at least they removed the words “The Ideal Laxative”!

      Next you pass the House of the Lord, a Pentecostal church whose building was constructed for a Swedish church in the 1890s. On both sides of the avenue, Victorian storefronts and cast-iron street lamps preserve an old-fashioned ambience even as fashionable new retailers hang out their shingles. The corner on your right has been a church site since the 1850s—since 1957 for St. Cyril’s of Turau, a Belarussian Orthodox church.

      Cross Bond Street and you’re in the midst of Antiques Row, or what’s left of it. Atlantic Avenue had more than 30 antiques shops in the 1970s and ’80s. Now it’s down to a handful, mostly confined to the north (right) side of this block.

      Turn left on Hoyt Street and peek into Hoyt Street Garden on the right. This oasis was created in 1975, when the area—like much of the then financially strapped city—was in shabby condition. The Presbyterian church next door owns the land but has given community volunteers complete control over the space. On your left, Mile End puts a Montreal-inspired spin on one of NYC’s oldest cuisines, Jewish deli food—you can get your smoked brisket on top of poutine. The menu offers a “nibble” of the smoked meat in case you’re not hungry enough for a sandwich or platter.

      Turn left at Pacific Street. Past the nursing home on your right, the yellow-brick Cuyler Church, built in the 1890s, is now residential. In the 1930s and ’40s its congregation included many Mohawk Indians, who had moved from Canada to New York City to work in skyscraper construction. The remainder of the block on that side consists of a variety of houses from either the early 1850s or early 1870s.

      Turn right at Bond Street.

      Make a right on Dean Street. The earliest homes here are the brownstone row about a third of the way down the block on the left side and the six brick rowhouses after it, all built between 1850 and 1852. On your right, the three houses closest to the nursing home also date to about 1850.

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      Dating to 1850, the Brooklyn Inn’s building (right) on Hoyt Street was given a Queen Anne exterior in the 1880s

      Go left (east) on Bergen Street. The entire left side past the corner store–apartment building was built by one developer from 1869 to 1873. By that time, houses were being constructed in larger groups versus singly or just a couple at a time, as you’ve seen on other blocks.

      Turn right on Bond and right again on Wyckoff Street. The first two houses after the community garden were erected in 1854 and set a no-stoop standard that was copied as more homes were built alongside them. Continue across Wyckoff to #108, whose facade, stoop, pavement, and even window bars are covered with a mosaic of tiles, beads, mirrors, and shells. And to think, it once probably looked just like its sedate next-door neighbor.

      Turn right on Smith Street.

      Turn right on Boerum Place, opposite a colorful row of Bergen Street clapboard houses, appearing impeccably maintained yet somewhat misplaced on this primarily commercial and brickfront block.

      Go right

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