Flatbush Malls, Sea Gate
Facts and practical information
The Flatbush Malls are a series of tree-lined landscaped medians along several roads in the Victorian Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City. An architecture critic has written that the malls "give the streets an uncommon spaciousness, if not grandeur". The first series was built in the northern part of the neighborhood along Albemarle Road, and extending one block north on Buckingham Road, in the Prospect Park South development of 1899, east of Coney Island Avenue and west of the BMT Brighton Line. This was modeled by the Scottish landscape architect John Aiken on Commonwealth Avenue Mall in Boston, with a design that originally included shrubbery but not trees, and in turn likely inspired the other neighborhood series. The second series, also known as the Midwood Malls, was built in the southern part of the neighborhood along both Glenwood Road, east of Coney Island Avenue and west of Delamere Place, as well as the intersecting East 17th Street, north of the Long Island Railroad cut of the Bay Ridge Branch and south of Foster Avenue, in the Fiske Terrace-Midwood Park developments of 1905. ()
Central Brooklyn (Flatbush)Sea Gate
Flatbush Malls – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Prospect Park, Willink Plaza, Concert Grove, Nostrand Playground.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Which popular attractions are close to Flatbush Malls?
How to get to Flatbush Malls by public transport?
Metro
- Beverley Road • Lines: Q (7 min walk)
- Church Avenue • Lines: B, Q (9 min walk)
Bus
- Prospect Park West & Bartel Pritchard Square • Lines: B61 (31 min walk)