Dumbo is wedged between and under two mighty bridges like a piece of cake. Nevertheless, the “New York Times” calls it “the most instagrammable neighborhood in America”. That may be true – and is by no means everything.
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The prettiest way to approach Dumbo is via the East River. On foot. Which bridge? Good question! While Dumbo stands for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass, the historic Brooklyn Bridge, completed in 1883, also has a pedestrian walkway that makes for a wonderful stroll.
If you cross the latter, you will reach the exact spot where the first ferry that connected Manhattan and Brooklyn docked in 1642. The Fulton Ferry Landing Pier is long gone, but little by little the docks squeezed between the two bridges and buried under thunderous traffic from cars and trains fell into oblivion. Just 50 years ago it was a dingy, nameless no-man’s-land of abandoned industrial buildings and warehouses used illegally as studios and sometimes homes by artists.
Directly across from Manhattan
Then David Walentas discovers the quarter. The American billionaire and real estate tycoon quickly recognized its advantages: the location directly across from Manhattan, the great view and the perfect connection. In the late 1970s, he bought 11 run-down warehouses for $12 million and began transforming the area—opposed and hampered by a city government delaying work and community groups fearing gentrification.
But David Walentas and his wife Jane are not out to turn the real estate into as much cash as possible as quickly as possible. Their vision envisages a culturally lively quarter, they support creative artists and carefully select who they will let larger areas – initially in some cases free of charge.
A new Instagram hotspot is born
Today Dumbo is a very expensive, very popular and completely gentrified residential area with cool cafes, chic restaurants, trendy shops and hip art galleries. There’s a mini-beach, a nostalgic carousel and cobbled streets where tall old brick buildings stand alongside new steel and glass towers. The district has become the favorite address of digital start-ups, advertising agencies and creative companies, whose employees shape the streetscape and the atmosphere in the bars.
The completely renovated and landscaped waterfront is considered an open-air highlight. Schoolchildren and housewives, web designers and tourists abound here, as well as countless amateur photographers capturing the spectacular view of Manhattan’s Financial District. The Instagram hotspot is on the corner of Water and Washington Streets. Especially on weekends, New Yorkers and visitors strike a pose in front of the Brooklyn Bridge and Manhattan skyline. The thunderous traffic noise doesn’t bother her – the main thing is that the selfie turns out well.
Brooklyn Bridge Park