Rego Park, Queens

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Rego Park
Neighborhood in Queens
Rego Park Jewish Center
Nickname(s): Bukharlem/Buharlem,[1] Real Good Park
Map of New York City
Map of New York City
Rego Park
Location in New York City
Coordinates: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Country United States
State New York
County Queens
Settled 1653
Developed 1920s
Founded by English and Dutch settlers
Named for The Real Good Construction Company
Area
 • Total 1.945 sq mi (5.04 km2)
Elevation 91.3 ft (27.8 m)
Population (2000)[2]
 • Total 44,189
 • Estimate (2011) 72,741
Ethnicity
 • White 57.8%
 • Hispanic 23.3%
 • Asian 12.6%
 • Other 4.1%
 • Black 2.2%
Time zone UTC-5
ZIP code 11374
Area code(s) 718

Rego Park is a middle class neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens. Rego Park is bordered to the north by Elmhurst and Corona, the east and south by Forest Hills and the west by Middle Village. Rego Park's boundaries include Queens Boulevard, the Long Island Expressway, Woodhaven Boulevard, and Yellowstone Boulevard.The neighborhood is characterized by its main arteries of Queens Boulevard, Junction Boulevard, 63rd Drive and Woodhaven Boulevard pulsing with retail and culinary activity -- juxtaposed with quiet residential streets featuring picturesque Tudor homes.Located 45 minutes out of midtown Manhattan by train and close to Flushing Meadows-Corona Park and the Queens Center Mall, Rego Park is popular for those raising a family.

Rego Park is represented by Queens Community Board 6 (CB 6).[3]

History

Rego Park is built on a swamp called the Hempstead Swamp, which once extended to St. John's Cemetery in Middle Village. By 1653, though, English and Dutch farmers moved into the area and founded a community called Whitepot, which was a part of the Township of Newtown. Whitepot is believed to be so named because the original Dutch settlers named the area "Whiteput", or "hollow creek"; later, English settlers Anglicized the name.[4] The Remsen family created a burial ground, which is still located on Alderton Street near Metropolitan Avenue. The colonists also founded the Whitepot School, which operated until the late 19th century.[4]

In the Hempstead Swamp, which turned out to be good for farming, the colonists cultivated hay, straw, rye, corn, oats, and vegetables.[4] The original Dutch, English, and German farmers sold their produce in Manhattan; by the end of the 19th century, though, Chinese farmers moved in and sold their goods exclusively to Chinatown.[4]

The settlement was renamed Rego Park after the Real Good Construction Company, which began development of the area in the mid-1920s. "Rego" comes from the first two letters of the first two words of the company's name. The company built 525 eight-room houses costing $8,000 each. Stores were built in 1926 on Queens Boulevard and 63rd Drive, and apartment buildings were built in 1927–1928.[5]

The short block of 63rd Drive between Austin Street and the Long Island Railroad overpass was the scene of a fire in February 1972 that claimed a row of stores and the neighborhood library.[4] The blistering "Rego Park Inferno" reportedly started in the second store on the block from Austin Street, a shoe store, and quickly spread with the gusting winds to neighboring stores, including a television repair shop, toy store, pet shop and a pioneering Indian restaurant, and finally, the library, where row upon row of oily books and wooden shelves sent flames high into the sky and up the embankment of the railroad. Firefighters scrambled to keep the windswept flames from reaching an apartment house behind the stores, a new Key Food supermarket across Austin Street, or the Shell gas station just across the drive. The library caved in before flames could damage the electrical wires lining the railroad. A new library eventually opened across the street (on the former site of the Shell gas station). After the fire, until the new library was built, the community was served by a mobile "Bookmobile" library which parked under the LIRR tracks on 63rd Drive.[6] A similar fire had decimated the same block in 1959.[6]

Demographic makeup

Like its neighbor Forest Hills, Rego Park has long had a significant Jewish population, most of which have Georgian and Russian Jewish ancestors, with a number of synagogues and kosher restaurants. Many Holocaust survivors settled in Rego Park after 1945. In the 1990s, Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union, especially from Central Asia, moved in.[4] Most of the residents are Bukharan Jewish,[7] and the effect of life in the Soviet Union on the population has led Rego Park to have a Russian feel with many signs in Russian Cyrillic. Most of the Bukharan Jewish immigrants in the neighborhood come from Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, and there is also Uzbek and Tajik cuisine in many Rego Park restaurants.[8]

Immigrant populations from Albania, Israel, Romania, Iran, Colombia, South Asia, China, Bulgaria, Peru, and South Korea are also well represented. There are a lot of Hispanic, white, and Asian residents in the neighborhood, as well as many restaurants and stores operated by people of different nationalities.[8]

In the 2000s and 2010s, many young professionals also moved in, and the average price of residential units in Rego Park increased correspondingly.[7]

As of 2011, Rego Park has 72,741 residents.[2]

Land use and street grid

Refer to caption
B.V.'s Pub

Housing

Many apartment buildings, multi-family, and railroad houses make up the north side of Rego Park. Apartment complexes include The Carol House, Savoy Gardens, Jupiter Court, The Brussels, and LeFrak City.[8][4]

However, many houses in southern Rego Park are in the colonial, English, and Tudor styles with slate roofs. There are also two and multi-family townhouses, detached wood-frame houses.[8] This is especially so in an area called the Crescents, named for its semicircular shaped streets emanating in a concentric pattern from Alderton Street, between Woodhaven Boulevard and the Long Island Rail Road's Main Line.[4] The Crescents contain many Tudor and single-family homes, as well as large lawns and tree plantings on the sidewalks.[8] There are also many newer "Fedders houses",[4] so called because these newer houses are all cheaply made and uniform-looking, with the names of the air conditioners (usually of the Fedders brand) sticking out of the walls.[9]

As of February 2015, Vornado Realty Trust is developing a 312-unit residential tower on top of Rego Center Phase II, due to a surge in young professionals moving into the area. About 20% of the units are studio apartments, with the rest being one- and two-bedroom apartments. In addition, other new residential projects were also under construction around the neighborhood.[7]

Commerce

Rego Center Phase 1
Rego Center Phase I

Rego Park is home to some of Queens' most popular shopping destinations, including the 277,000-square-foot (25,700 m2), 4-floor Rego Center. Phase I has a large Sears, Bed Bath & Beyond, Marshalls, Burlington Coat Factory, and Old Navy locations,[8] as well as a multilevel parking garage developed by Vornado Realty Trust. Phase II opened in 2010[10] with 950,000 square feet (88,000 m2) of retail space[11] on 62nd Drive across from Rego Park Center. It houses Kohl's, Century 21, Costco, T.J. Maxx, Toys "R" Us/Babies "R" Us, Payless ShoeSource, Panera Bread, and Pier 1 Imports, with more stores being built.[11]

Across the Long Island Expressway, in nearby Elmhurst, is the Queens Center Mall.[4] Queens Center opened on September 12, 1973, on land previously occupied by Fairyland,[12][13][14] a supermarket, and automobile parking. The mall doubled in size from 2002 to 2004.[4]

The first Trader Joe's in Queens opened in 2007 at 90-30 Metropolitan Avenue, in a building that also has a Staples and a Michaels,[15] and is next to a Sports Authority, Bob's Discount Furniture, and Home Depot.

The main business thoroughfare of Rego Park is 63rd Drive. The main section extends from Woodhaven Boulevard in the south, to Queens Boulevard in the north, with the central business district of Rego Park nestled between Alderton Street (just south of the Long Island Rail Road overpass), and Queens Boulevard. The stretch south of Alderton is entirely residential. The business district is anchored by The Rego Park School PS 139Q, an elementary school dating from 1928 and Our Saviour Lutheran Church established in 1926 which right across Wetherole Street from PS 139Q. The business district is criss-crossed by four side streets: Saunders, Booth, Wetherole, and Austin Streets. Most of the businesses lining 63rd Drive are the original single story "Taxpayers" dating from the 1930s.

Across Queens Boulevard to the north, 63rd Drive becomes 63rd Road, and its business district continues another three blocks; 63rd Drive actually shifts one block south of 63rd Road. There are many small businesses in this area. Shopping districts with many smaller stores, bakeries, pharmacies and restaurants can be found along 108th Street as well.[8]

Landmarks

Refer to caption
Lost Battalion Hall

The Lost Battalion Hall, on Queens Boulevard, derives its name from a World War I army unit that suffered many casualties. Now a community center, the structure was erected in 1939 as a hall for Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion. It was taken over as a community center by the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation in 1960, and is still operated as such.[16] While the VFW maintains its offices at the building, the American Legion left in 1962. The site also contains a play area and a New York City Department of Environmental Protection water pumping station.[4][17]

The Drake Theater, which opened in 1935 and closed in the 1990s, was used in the 1997 film Private Parts. The theater was damaged in December 1978 after around 500 people, complaining about the theater's sound system threw beer and liquor bottles at the screen and tearing holes in it, smashing seats and the candy counter with fire extinguishers from the walls, and breaking all the glass doors at the entrance.[4]

AT&T Long Lines telephone exchange building
AT&T Long Lines telephone exchange

An AT&T telephone building exists at Queens Boulevard and 62nd Drive.[4]

Savior Lutheran Church, open since the 1920s, conducts its services in English and Chinese.[4]

The art deco Rego Park Jewish Center, opened in 1939, is notable for an A. Raymond Katz-designed façade with Old Testament scenes and symbols carved into it.[4] The building is listed on both the New York State and National Register of Historic Places.[18]

The Trylon Theater, an art deco theater built around the time of the 1939 New York World's Fair, was converted to the home of the Education Center for Russian Jewry in 2006. After local furor over interior refurbishment, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission was considering landmarking the property.[4] The theater, which closed in 2009, was repurposed into a synagogue for more than a decade, but in 2013, the synagogue's congregation objected to their new landlord's planned eviction of the synagogue. Largely composed of Russian Jews, the congregation had attempted, but failed, to buy the building in 2012.[19]

Notable roads

Refer to caption
63rd Drive in Rego Park
  • 63rd Road and Drive, the commercial artery of Rego Park,[8] used to be Remsen’s Lane, which was named after the Remsen family who lived along the road.[4]
  • The Crescents were originally composed of streets named Asquith, Boelsen, Cromwell, Dieterle, Elwell and Fitchett. These names were chosen when the Real Good Construction Company developed the area in the 1920s.[4]
  • Horace Harding Expressway and Long Island Expressway was once a turnpike called Nassau Boulevard and went from Elmhurst to Flushing, Bayside, and Little Neck. It was renamed for Horace J. Harding (1863–1929), a finance magnate who directed the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad and the New York Municipal Railways System; Harding encouraged city planner Robert Moses's system of parkways on New York, and after Harding died, the boulevard—and later, service road to Interstate 495—was renamed after him.[20]
  • Queens Boulevard, a wide at-grade highway that stretches from Long Island City to Jamaica, was formerly composed of two small dirt roads: Old Jamaica Road and Hoffman Boulevard. In the 1910s, it was paved and widened to 12 lanes. It is sometimes called the "Boulevard of Death" because of the high rate of pedestrian fatalities trying to cross the 12-lane boulevard.[7][21]
  • Woodhaven Boulevard was known as Trotting Course Lane because it was named when horses were the main mode of transport. The lane dates back to the colonial days, and used to run along Whitepot's border Although it extends to Cross Bay Boulevard in the Rockaways, two small parts of the original lane still exist in Forest Hills.[22]
  • Yellowstone Boulevard was one of a few colonial roads in the area. It was named after the area's original name.[4]

Community activism

Mural on 63rd Drive at the LIRR overpass. The words "Real Good" are painted onto the mural.
"REal GOod" mural on 63rd Drive at the LIRR overpass

Rego Park Group, originally hosted on Yahoo! Groups, strived to improving the quality of life in the neighborhood.[23] The Rego Park Green Alliance has also been active in the community planting flowers and trees, arranging the installation of new garbage cans, pushing for the repair of some sidewalks and creating a large mural celebrating the neighborhood under the LIRR overpass on 63rd Drive.[24]

In March 2010, the Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty, a beneficiary agency of the UJA-Federation of New York, partnered with Masbia in the opening of a kosher soup kitchen on Queens Boulevard. As of August 2010, the free restaurant was serving over 1,500 meals per month to adults, senior citizens, and families.[25]

Friends of the Queensway is also another area organization. Its goal is to try to convert the abandoned Rockaway Beach rail line in Rego Park into a park, similar to the High Line in Manhattan. Proponents claim that converting the 3.5 miles (5.6 km) line to a rail trail stretching to Ozone Park would create parkland as well as a safe space to travel, in conformance with Mayor Bill de Blasio's Vision Zero traffic safety guidelines. However, opponents want rail service reinstated on the line.[7]

Public safety

The neighborhood is served by the New York City Police Department's 112th Precinct.[26] In 2014, the precinct had 7 rapes, 57 robberies, 60 felony assaults, 114 burglaries, 412 grand larcenies, and 102 grand larcenies auto. The total crime rate in 2014 was down almost 90 percent compared to in 1990.[27]

There is one engine and one ladder company in a single firehouse within its boundaries, and another on its border; the New York City Fire Department deployments to structural fires within the district have customarily been satisfactorily prompt.[26]

Education

Public schools

Refer to caption
PS 139

Rego Park's public schools, as are the public schools in all of New York City, are operated by the New York City Department of Education. The following elementary schools serve Rego Park:

  • P.S. 139 (Rego Park School, grades K-5)[28]
  • P.S. 174 (William Sidney Mount School, grades K-6)[29]
  • P.S. 175 (the Lynn Gross Discovery School, grades preK-5)[30]
  • P.S. 206 (the Horace Harding School, grades K-5)[31]
  • P.S. 220 (Edward Mandel School, grades preK-5)[32]

All areas in Rego Park are zoned to J.H.S. 157 Stephen A. Halsey (6-9), in Rego Park,[33] or J.H.S. 190 Russell Sage (7-9) in Forest Hills.[34] Rego Park is not zoned to a high school because all New York City high schools get students by application, though Forest Hills High School is located in nearby Forest Hills.

Private schools

Our Lady of the Angelus, a PK–8 private school operated by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, is located in Rego Park. Resurrection-Ascension School, another PK-8 private school operated by the Diocese of Brooklyn, is also located in Rego Park.

Private institutions include the Rego Park Jewish Center and the Jewish Institute of Queens (also known as the Queens Gymnasia).

Public libraries

Refer to caption
The Queens Library's Rego Park branch

The Rego Park Library Branch of Queens Library, is located at 91-41 63rd Drive in Rego Park.[35] As of 2010, the total annual circulation was 382,545 volumes, which is the highest number of volumes compared to two other libraries in Queens Community District 6, Forest Hills and North Forest Park libraries. All three libraries in Community Board 6 are heavily utilized by growing numbers of immigrants.[36]

Transportation

The Long Island Rail Road overpass between Austin and Alderton Streets was the location of the Rego Park station until its abandonment in 1962. Though physically part of the Main Line heading out to Jamaica and Ronkonkoma, the station operated as part of the Rockaway Beach Branch. The station was later dismantled, and little can be discerned of its existence now save for the flattened clearing beside the tracks.

The IND Queens Boulevard Line of the New York City Subway has local stations at 63rd Drive and 67th Avenue on the E M R trains.[37] The line, running under Queens Boulevard, dates from 1935-37.[38]

The Q38, Q59, Q60 local buses serve the neighborhood, as do the QM10, QM11 express buses.[39]

In popular culture

  • Rego Park was the setting of the 1980s sitcom Dear John, which centered around the fictional "Rego Park Community Center."
  • The CBS sitcom The King of Queens is set in Rego Park, and sometimes shows clips of the area.
  • What Happened to Anna K.: A Novel by Irina Reyn is set in Rego Park. Most of the characters are Bukharan Jews who have emigrated from the Soviet Union.
  • Brooklyn's Finest, a 2010 release, was filmed in part in Rego Park.
  • A substantial part of Art Spiegelman's graphic novel Maus, a biographical account of his father, a Holocaust survivor, is set in Rego Park.
  • The 2013 film The Wolf of Wall Street was filmed in part in Rego Park, at the Shalimar Diner.
  • In an episode of General Hospital originally aired on May 26, 2015, Denise, an emerging character, claims that she's from Rego Park.

Notable residents

Notable current and former residents of Rego Park include:

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Queens Community Boards, New York City. Accessed September 3, 2007.
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  15. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  16. Lost Battalion Hall Recreation Center
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. "Conservancy holds exclusive tour of historic Queens Synagogues", New York Landmarks Conservancy website. Accessed April 2, 2010.
  19. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  22. Original "Rego Park Group" on Yahoo Groups
  23. Rego Park Green Alliance
  24. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  25. 26.0 26.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  26. http://www.nyc.gov/html/nypd/downloads/pdf/crime_statistics/cs-en-us-112pct.pdf
  27. http://schools.nyc.gov/SchoolPortals/28/Q139/
  28. http://schools.nyc.gov/SchoolPortals/28/Q174/
  29. http://schools.nyc.gov/SchoolPortals/28/Q175/
  30. http://schools.nyc.gov/SchoolPortals/28/Q206/
  31. http://schools.nyc.gov/SchoolPortals/28/Q220/
  32. http://schools.nyc.gov/OurSchools/Region3/Q157/default.htm?searchType=school
  33. http://schools.nyc.gov/OurSchools/Region3/Q190/default.htm?searchType=school
  34. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  38. Queens Bus Map, Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Retrieved August 18, 2015.
  39. Silverberg, Alex. "Comic Thanks His Queens Upbringing", copy of article from The Queens Tribune, July 6, 2007. Accessed October 18, 2007. "Hofstetter has been all around Queens. He spent his younger years in Briarwood before moving on to Forest Hills, and finally settling down in Rego Park for the duration of his teen years."
  40. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  41. http://arts.endow.gov/honors/heritage/fellows/fellow.php?id=1992_08
  42. Lipsyte, Robert. "COPING; My Bullied Days: A Smart Fat Kid's Story", The New York Times, October 22, 1995. Accessed October 11, 2007. "Rego Park was predominately Jewish, and most of the bullying had no ethnic edge."
  43. Of mice and men, The Age, March 27, 2004.

External links