Brooklyn’s Forgotten Army Terminal

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 316

  • @RUSSELLNILES
    @RUSSELLNILES Рік тому +65

    I departed from Brooklyn Army Terminal twice. Once in 1952 as an Air Firce dependant along with my mother and brother, going by troop ship to South Hampton England where we were met by my father who was stationed on England..
    Then again in 1964 as a young private in the US Army heading for Germany. Oddly, the troop ship that I sailed the North Atlantic in 1964 was the same one my mom, brother and I sailed on in 1952.

    • @gardbjj24
      @gardbjj24 Рік тому +5

      My Mom, Sister ,and I also passed thru in DEC 1952 en route to Southhampton England. We got lucky and changed from the Troop Ship GEN Patch to the SS United States...

    • @jeremymackevincaylor5041
      @jeremymackevincaylor5041 5 місяців тому +2

      I rode to the front in Antarctica during the teens on the Merrimack and wouldn't you believe it my great grandpa died on it

    • @EwokNubNub
      @EwokNubNub 4 місяці тому +1

      thank you for the insight. kinda surprised that Ryan & Team didn’t mention this in the video.

  • @miket5740
    @miket5740 Рік тому +249

    Most people don’t know there are huge data centers in there. I’ve gone at night and it’s a bit creepy walking through the central atrium at midnight. Feels like your being watched. Anyway it is a really cool building

    • @miket5740
      @miket5740 Рік тому +15

      I didn’t know he was gay. What difference that make and no I am not “gay for him”

    • @cameronrichardson3108
      @cameronrichardson3108 Рік тому

      @CaliforniaHigh-SpeedRail he is a bender is he i did not know that, now why does talking about exploring this place at night make him homophobic ?

    • @fukyoutube444
      @fukyoutube444 Рік тому +18

      @CaliforniaHigh-SpeedRail what's all this about. Why you mentioned that

    • @Jason-rn4jk
      @Jason-rn4jk Рік тому +1

      🙄

    • @fukyoutube444
      @fukyoutube444 Рік тому +7

      @CaliforniaHigh-SpeedRail gonna comment back there bud. Why you being prejudice.

  • @claraguzman6842
    @claraguzman6842 Рік тому +167

    You didn't mention that it was also used by the Post Office Department in the late 60s and very early 70s. There were thousands of Postal workers working out of there at that time. My husband was one of them.

    • @mattbailey576
      @mattbailey576 Рік тому

      That's not true..

    • @als2879
      @als2879 Рік тому +18

      @@mattbailey576 It is true. When Morgan Station had to close due to a fire in 1967, the NYC Post office moved their operations to Brooklyn Army Terminal up until 1971 or 1972. I worked for the Post Office Department at Brooklyn Army Terminal in 1970 and 1971.

    • @Dan_the_afol
      @Dan_the_afol 11 місяців тому +2

      Thank you for sharing that Mrs Guzman I found that very fascinating

  • @ceejay1364
    @ceejay1364 Рік тому +72

    I’ve been in one of those warehouses owned by the NYC BOE. I was in awe at the large floor space and all the old stuff they saved in there.

    • @koolaidblack7697
      @koolaidblack7697 Рік тому +4

      What all did they have? Anything cool?

    • @ceejay1364
      @ceejay1364 Рік тому +15

      @@koolaidblack7697 they had some heavy antique safes and paperwork/files from the 1850s.

  • @pjhenley5991
    @pjhenley5991 Рік тому +35

    You drew a line from 1st avenue in Manhattan into Brooklyn. Brooklyn has its own 1st avenue and it intersects 58th street at the Army Terminal. A line of job seekers extending up 1st avenue in Brooklyn is possible. A line extending into Manhattan seems implausible.

    • @Jason-rn4jk
      @Jason-rn4jk Рік тому +8

      I’ve no idea how something’s like that are put into videos. Why would people make a line halfway into Manhattan as opposed to circling around the building many times lol

    • @davidwahrheit6143
      @davidwahrheit6143 Рік тому +3

      I was thinking the same thing! To imagine a line of people waiting in line from Manhattan's 1st Ave. all the way into the water down to Brooklyn's 58th Street (of one believes the diagram shown) is absolutely absurd! Both these buildings have artists' studios which I have visited many times over the years during the Open Studios weekend. Also, the NYC ferry to Rockaway stops at the pier in front of the complex.

    • @robby062
      @robby062 Рік тому +1

      I’ve seen other videos of his that have content issues. He’s obviously not from New York or the even surrounding area. Decent content, but the errors get annoying.

    • @johnsilva9139
      @johnsilva9139 11 місяців тому +3

      Yes. That was very strange and funny to see. A line of people about 12 miles long! Also, a payroll of $20,000 for 6,000 workers? So they each earned about $3/week?

  • @christophervillanti1417
    @christophervillanti1417 Рік тому +17

    I have been repairing equipment at that location on and off since the '80's. The changes over the last 40 years have been remarkable . I still like to spend time in the Atrium whenever I'm there.

  • @chuckhuthmakerlvrr8866
    @chuckhuthmakerlvrr8866 Рік тому +26

    During the 1970s the US Customs Service operated a special tactical unit out of the 7th floor. The building was largely unused. There were stories of ghosts and groups of hidden people living within the vast spaces. Never saw any, but heard periodic screams when working at night. Glad to see the structure back in use.

  • @davehollander6543
    @davehollander6543 Рік тому +19

    Thanks for this! After drafted, I served as an MP there in the late 1960s.

  • @delurkor
    @delurkor Рік тому +18

    In May of 1957 we passed through Brooklyn Army Terminal to board the SS General Hodges to go to Europe. I was 12 then. I did not see much, we came on a bus from Fort Hamilton. We were on the bus on families that had dogs. Straight to wharf-side, but I remember the archway.
    Thanks for the memories.

  • @kittyhawk1255
    @kittyhawk1255 Рік тому +11

    Its so good to see that this mammoth of a complex is still used today while also being taken care of and updated! Its too often these days that we see these incredible buildings just left behind once its original purpose is no longer. Great video!

  • @11KleinAL
    @11KleinAL Рік тому +18

    My Grandmother and Great Aunt worked there during the war. That is where they met. One day my future Great aunt met my Grandfather while hitchhiking from the Catskills. To thank him she invited him to a party. He brought his brother (my Great uncle). That party is where my Great Aunt met my Great Uncle and my Grandfather met my grandmother. Without this building.....I might not be here. Thank you for sharing the history of it.

  • @johnbarnes5237
    @johnbarnes5237 Рік тому +6

    My Great Aunt worked as a clerk-typist at the Brooklyn Army Terminal for many years. My Dad (her nephew) came home from Korea there in 1951. She typed his discharge papers!

  • @joestrike8537
    @joestrike8537 Рік тому +33

    Living in NYC it's a blast being able to visit places like this. Speaking of which, have you thought about doing a piece on the nearby "Industry City," formerly Bush Terminal? From a grungy warehouse facility it's now a high-tech hub for IT businesses - & it has a pretty good food court, and a great comics shop that got priced out of Manhattan.

    • @JeffreySJonas
      @JeffreySJonas Рік тому +1

      St Marks Comics? I found them at a recent NJ comic convention, same owner! I'm there mostly for MicroCenter (which has a glorious wall of fame of computer industry pioneers).

    • @joestrike8537
      @joestrike8537 Рік тому +2

      @@JeffreySJonasI've bought plenty of stuff at that MicroCenter, including a recent close-out laptop at a very reasonable price. (And yes, those pioneer pictures are very impressive.)

  • @rickwalsh91
    @rickwalsh91 Рік тому +16

    WOW! Glad to see that we are reusing and appreciating our great Historical Infrastructure👍

  • @Liz19791
    @Liz19791 Рік тому +6

    Im from brooklyn and grew up not far from here and even alot of nyers dont know this place exists. With ems i used to go in there all the time years ago. We used to drop patients off at the dialysis office. Then wed go to one of the retaurants there that had great food and walk around passed the train. Its an old interesting place with alot of history. Thank you for the video.

    • @sarge6870
      @sarge6870 Рік тому +3

      And thank you for your service! I was also an EMT for about 7 years in Queens.

  • @mileshigh1321
    @mileshigh1321 Рік тому +29

    What a great big architectural place and such a an interesting history! Ryan, you find some great little know, but historically important places to make videos of !

  • @bobbysenterprises3220
    @bobbysenterprises3220 Рік тому +6

    No where near the scale but in the Binghamton NY area there is a large project of saving the old Endicott Johnson buildings. Many of the original area homes were built by the company. Many local parks, swimming pools, a golf course, 6 carousel rides. All back in the 20s-30s. All for their workers. Some of the large shoe factories that were almost collapsing are now being refurbished and being used again. Now they are considered to be liberty factory locations.
    As I said it's not as popular but it's almost forgotten even in the area if you ever want to do a video on it I can try and help.
    An hour or so away is a interesting very large army warehouse facility that was mindbogglingly large when I went in it. Called "the holding point" in Horseheads Ny. Not too far from newtons battlefield park and sullivans march.

  • @DMETS519
    @DMETS519 Рік тому +22

    I remember about 20 years ago I had to go there to pickup more boxes of traffic summonses to bring back to my precinct in the NYPD. Apparently there is a quartermaster section there at the terminal. I had to go to one of the upper floors in the building and was required to take a man operated freight elevator. Guy looked like he started working there when the building was first built. Upon boarding the elevator I noticed that every square inch of wall space was occupied by a clock. Clocks of all types, shapes and sizes were ticking away. Pendulums swinging, mechanisms wurring, all keeping the exact time. All inside this one freight elevator. The operator in a full throwback style uniform that included a "bell hop" style cap politely asked where I needed to go. Upon exiting the elevator my experience did not get any less creepy. The floor I ended up on was absolutely dead quiet, near dark and deserted. The expanse of floorspace and seemingly infinite aisles of supplies were staggering. Now for me to find the boxes I needed I could only think that I was in the last scene from the movie "Raiders of the lost ark".

  • @briantracy1324
    @briantracy1324 Рік тому +5

    My father was a manager there in the 1950's and early 60's ... While there he developed with IBM their first successful inventory control system as he was in charge of all shipments to European military installations , US and others.

  • @rvnmedic1968
    @rvnmedic1968 Рік тому +17

    My Dad, retired Navy, worked on some MSTS (Military Sea Transportation Service) ships in the late '60s. My brother and I along with our Mother would go to Fort Wadsworth on Staten Island to see his ship pass through the Narrows. I remember him getting calls from the Brookly Navy Yard, telling him which pier the ship was moored at. Thanks for a very interesting documentary on this little known Behemoth in Brooklyn! Cheers!

  • @UncaDave
    @UncaDave Рік тому +15

    Very good piece on what went on behind the history. You might want to check out Nitro, WV, where during WWI they created a whole town and made explosives. Very interesting story also.

  • @BM_718
    @BM_718 Рік тому +3

    So weird..I was just here for the first time 3 weeks ago. I was in awe that I never had even heard about this place. And now you drop a video..wild.

  • @richbockmann9751
    @richbockmann9751 Рік тому +8

    I worked in the BAT in 1990’s. It was best in the winter when the steam rose from the cantilever’s in the atrium. It had a Blade Runner vibe.

  • @prenty99
    @prenty99 Рік тому +7

    Great informative piece. Enjoyed it thoroughly.
    Reminds me of the Remington building in Bridgeport CT , since demolished and now a school. A massive arms manufacturing building which became a GE building and then run into the ground .

  • @waltergolston6187
    @waltergolston6187 Рік тому +11

    Dad had gone through the terminal going to Europe for WW2 and then came home via the Terminal via troop ships.

  • @enzocannizzo8744
    @enzocannizzo8744 Рік тому +6

    I grew up not too far from BAT when it was active . Thank you for your perk into local Brooklyn , NY history 👍👍

  • @alanzaleski7160
    @alanzaleski7160 Рік тому +7

    I got to hand it to you you come up with some interesting stuff to report best wishes to you

  • @luislaplume8261
    @luislaplume8261 Рік тому +6

    The 2 passenger railroad cars looks like those used by the Long Island Railroad that were pulled by diesel locomotives in the 1950s. They were originally painted gray with orange trim around the windows and end doors the the name of the railroad was painted in orange.

  • @acesecure9817
    @acesecure9817 Рік тому +5

    Ryan as I saw in a train lovers video it is the last stop for subway trains at end of life.

  • @warrenjohnknight.9831
    @warrenjohnknight.9831 Рік тому +5

    Another truly stunning historic episode,

  • @alrutledge1872
    @alrutledge1872 Рік тому +4

    Lived a couple blocks away in Brooklyn in the 50s and 60s. Elvis departed from there September 22, 1958. As a kid they always had Open House on Armed Forces Day.

  • @robertdipaola3447
    @robertdipaola3447 Рік тому +1

    My mother worked there during world war 2 as a secretary for the army, she remembers when FDR came by during the war to visit the army terminal

  • @mrclueuin
    @mrclueuin 11 місяців тому +1

    Worked there for three years pre-covid for King-Tele. Found the whole place fascinating! Thanks for the extra info!

  • @bullettube9863
    @bullettube9863 11 місяців тому +1

    I remember seeing this building in 1970, my brother-in-law called it the army terminal, it was an impressive sight then as it is now.

  • @charlesclager6808
    @charlesclager6808 Рік тому +3

    Good video, as usual. I enjoy reading the many comments about their memories of the place.

  • @johntrimble9057
    @johntrimble9057 Рік тому +18

    John F. Kennedy would not have been arguing against it closure in 1964.

    • @islandrevenant5746
      @islandrevenant5746 Рік тому +1

      Politely gotta disagree. As Senator-Elect at the time he didn’t have the power to stop it but he was publicly against it.

    • @johntrimble9057
      @johntrimble9057 Рік тому

      @@islandrevenant5746 As the US President at the time, John F. Kennedy was killed in November of the previous year.

    • @othertonywi1son
      @othertonywi1son Рік тому +12

      @@islandrevenant5746 Check again, he wasn't senator-elect... he was dead.

    • @ShelterCats
      @ShelterCats Рік тому +3

      Robert. Robert Kennedy. Come on what a massive oversight.

    • @michaelwhite2823
      @michaelwhite2823 Рік тому +2

      I caught that too
      Talking about RFK but pic of JFK

  • @siddasquid8573
    @siddasquid8573 Рік тому +8

    I use to work there, it is a pretty amazing building. They filmed some scenes using the train in the show Gotham. A huge E-commerce company a really good chocolate factory and I believe the NYPD has a drug and terrorist division there and they also train their K-9s on the premises

  • @traderalex1
    @traderalex1 Рік тому +2

    I grew up next door to the site, on 68th Street. Last government mission was HQ for the Military Sealift Command.

  • @prizrak420
    @prizrak420 Рік тому +5

    I remember back when you had to show ID to get into it even if you were just picking someone up and now there are a whole bunch of businesses and a ferry landing along with a Ford service for a dealer

  • @jeffstorm
    @jeffstorm Рік тому +6

    In WW2 a family friend went off to war with the 82nd Airborne went to and from Europe on the Queens. His return trip was the smoothest in 1946 on the Queen Mary when the entire remaining 82nd Airborne returned on a single voyage. Fred Passed Away on his 92nd year having survived the Battle of the Bulge where 4 out of 5 were killed or were casualties requiring hospitalization. He was tough. Our easily offended would not survive today.

    • @zegotashalom3881
      @zegotashalom3881 Рік тому +2

      How true, wonder if they could take their cell phones so they could call from the battlefield. Sadly, I do not believe we have what it would take today to fight for our freedom.

    • @nolanjohnson2009
      @nolanjohnson2009 Рік тому +1

      @@zegotashalom3881 Well you can see Ukrainians making tik toks on the front lines, the only difference is that the percentage of Ukraine's population willing to die for their county before the Invasion was around 80%.

    • @timf2279
      @timf2279 10 місяців тому

      Fred was a true hero. Sadly, his generation is leaving us fast.

  • @kennethfharkin
    @kennethfharkin Рік тому +7

    14:47 you may recognize from the recent Joker film as it was used, with CGI enhancement, as Arkham asylum.
    I was last in the building and walked through the atrium in 2018. It is amazing to look at and think of all the men who passed through there heading to WWII.

  • @alpaykasal2902
    @alpaykasal2902 11 місяців тому +1

    i've lived near this most of my life and had no idea. thanks for this episode!

  • @Meepermicmeep
    @Meepermicmeep Рік тому +1

    I was looking at this part of NY on Google maps extensively for a couple of days about a month ago, when I stumbled across this place, didn’t find much on it, thank you for making this video!!

  • @billy1673
    @billy1673 Рік тому +1

    This building will always have limitless potential.
    Great video!

  • @TheLemon333
    @TheLemon333 Рік тому +4

    So glad they didn't demo it. Concrete construction is really expensive. They'd never make a building like that today.

  • @jerseycab1
    @jerseycab1 Рік тому +1

    Stopped there two weeks (8/23) while biking. Some of it , I imagine a very small part is being used as artist space. In seeing it up close I can imagine the incredible hustle and bustle that must have been taking place there when my pop shipped out early on in WW2. Still impressive.

  • @JosephDeLuna-yj8vg
    @JosephDeLuna-yj8vg Рік тому +5

    This Was The 1st Reinforced Concrete Building In The USA To Be Built! Mayor Dinkins Revived The Army Terminal In The Late 90s!

  • @bobbysenterprises3220
    @bobbysenterprises3220 Рік тому +3

    This is awesome. I love your videos. Although I'm only half a days drive from the city Ive only been there twice in my life. The second time was for less than an hour. I might enjoy checking out this kind of stuff and not just the bustle and tourist hot spots and shopping hubs. Not for me

  • @ObeyBanksy
    @ObeyBanksy Рік тому +1

    You really do a great job with these videos

  • @brianberthold3118
    @brianberthold3118 Рік тому +2

    i though merchandise mart in Chicago was biggest concrete building ... hell it has its own zip code

  • @carmineriganti2333
    @carmineriganti2333 Рік тому +4

    👏 More history of Brooklyn, my birthplace.

  • @thefanone
    @thefanone Рік тому +5

    Very informative❤❤

  • @davidhollfelder9940
    @davidhollfelder9940 Рік тому +3

    I grew up in South Buffalo in the 60s. The smoke stacks from:
    2 steel plants, several oil refineries and chemical plants, produced air pollution beyond belief. Also, rivers and creeks pollution was worse than awful.

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 Рік тому +9

    Just thinking here: Would that be the place LARGE ships like the Queen Mary would go to pick up troops?

    • @islandrevenant5746
      @islandrevenant5746 Рік тому +1

      As one of the researchers I couldn’t find any direct evidence as to if Queen Mary and the other converted liners would embark soldiers, but I don’t think that would typically be the case. They probably usually used their previous dedicated berthing piers where the ship’s personal infrastructure was already familiar and facilities already set up

    • @jetsons101
      @jetsons101 Рік тому

      That's what I was somewhat thinking. It is one big complex........@@islandrevenant5746

    • @mileshigh1321
      @mileshigh1321 Рік тому +1

      @@islandrevenant5746 Perhaps, Liberty or Victory ships where loaded from here. Maybe tenders or ferry's would move soldiers to other piers. You could do a multi part video of here, just on the shipping alone! I live close to Halifax and the Bedford Basin, which had many convoy's assembled for the Atlantic crossings!

  • @watthairston1483
    @watthairston1483 Рік тому +1

    Fascinating as usual!!!

  • @WeekleyProductions
    @WeekleyProductions Рік тому +2

    The Fallout TV series filmed here last year, I suspect it'll have a boost in popularity with tourists briefly, as does anywhere Fallout goes, after the show releases. Neat to hear the history of one of NYC's many terminals.

  • @JohnJBrowne11209
    @JohnJBrowne11209 Рік тому +1

    It's a ginormous area I live in Bay Ridge which borders Sunset Park.. The size of the Navy Yard is mind boggling

  • @jacobl5488
    @jacobl5488 Рік тому +1

    Ive lived next to here for 30 something years. So interesting to learn.

  • @mikekolczynski5665
    @mikekolczynski5665 Рік тому +2

    In 1988 i installed some HVAC for three different businesses there. Armstrong Label, Holland Glass ,and Edgar Berebi earrings.

    • @sconrey7
      @sconrey7 Рік тому

      What refrigerant did you use back then

    • @mikekolczynski5665
      @mikekolczynski5665 Рік тому

      @sconrey7 R12 was almost gone by then. R22 was still going strong. Not sure if it was 134 A or 410 was the new one.

  • @jeffwindrim975
    @jeffwindrim975 Рік тому +1

    Good Video nice find something different and interesting to watch. Nice to see an original video for a change 👍.

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 Рік тому +10

    Boy, between the Army Terminal and the Pentagon ---- the military really knows how to build big and expensive...... To build something like the Army Terminal is 18 months today would be imposable, just like Disneyland was built in 12 months in 1955. Today a environmental impact report would take years, then having to go through the permit procress.........

    • @jmd1743
      @jmd1743 Рік тому

      People like to bash environmental laws until they have the Berkeley Pit in their backyards ruining their wells. But hey, can't blame the Greatest Gen, Boomers, and GenX for having that mind set given that anytime things became difficult they just ran away from the problems they contributed to for greener pastures like they did with NY, CA, and cities like Detroit.
      Good thing those 3 generations will be too old to do it again to states like TX & FL in order to run away to states like Idaho & Montana. The same people who allowed states like CA to be run into the ground are now in control of FL & TX when they haven't gone through any character development so they'll just repeat their mistakes, but this time around they'll be too old to run away from the problems to restart their lives after they'ved fucked up another state once again.

    • @redneckroy8947
      @redneckroy8947 Рік тому

      Well, I'm sure the military is able to skirt the over regulation that strangles us plebs

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Рік тому +1

      well... you'd be surprise how war would free up those resources... and EIRs being secondary... or at least somewhat curtailed

    • @CallsItLikeISeizeIts
      @CallsItLikeISeizeIts Рік тому +1

      The pentagon took about 18 months or so as well

    • @TheNobleFive
      @TheNobleFive Рік тому

      If the land is private, purchasing it for government use can take time as well.

  • @PhD777
    @PhD777 Рік тому +1

    Excellent informative video!👍🏻🎅👍🏻🇺🇸

  • @stephenmoerlein8470
    @stephenmoerlein8470 Рік тому +1

    Interesting history of a WW2 legacy structure. Thanks for the content.

  • @oldgoat142
    @oldgoat142 Рік тому +1

    My father, God rest his soul, worked down the street from this old depot. It does bring back good memories.

  • @RussellFulner
    @RussellFulner 11 місяців тому

    Way to go man YOU ROCK keep up the great work 👍

  • @ShelterCats
    @ShelterCats Рік тому +9

    Robert Kennedy. Robert. Kennedy.

  • @mpedward2
    @mpedward2 Рік тому +2

    There is so much potential for that great place for modern use but sadly current politics could be an issue with not being business friendly like it used to be..Great video and I learned alot thanks..

  • @thomasramirez718
    @thomasramirez718 Рік тому +1

    It’s crazy cause when I used to be a driver for fed ex the yard was part of my route for deliveries and pick up’s.

  • @zaybx3485
    @zaybx3485 11 місяців тому

    I used to work at a call center in the Brooklyn army terminal it’s mad creepy at night the walk to the train station was the worst at night

  • @RobertWilliams-mk8pl
    @RobertWilliams-mk8pl Рік тому +1

    I repaired machines there on the 8th floor of the East Wing for years. North from that facility is Bush Terminal. The entire area is intense in that you can still see traces of the manufacturing might of the country. Politicians over the last 30 years have no idea of what went on in this country. I think the Normandy capsized in port only a few blocks north from there.

    • @guypalumbo7892
      @guypalumbo7892 Рік тому +2

      The Normandy capsized on Manhattan's west side piers, Pier 90 I believe

    • @RobertWilliams-mk8pl
      @RobertWilliams-mk8pl Рік тому

      Oops. I thought it was Brooklyn. Thanks.@@guypalumbo7892

  • @kenney5454
    @kenney5454 Рік тому +2

    @14:07 Contractors had to get creative whenever someone required HVAC back then, how did that pass...LOL

    • @sconrey7
      @sconrey7 Рік тому

      The janky piping or the condensers next to walls on balconies lol

  • @alexanderreyes222
    @alexanderreyes222 Рік тому

    I worked inside the building for uncommon goods. I love the architecture of the building.

  • @evilborg
    @evilborg Рік тому +4

    How is this a forgotten place??? Tons of movies have been shot there and people still to this day remember the navy yard.

    • @bruisersdilemma354
      @bruisersdilemma354 Рік тому +4

      I think he means that it's a forgotten place for what it originally started out as, not a forgotten place today. I drive by it regularly and it's always bustling with people and trucks.

  • @Cream5oda09
    @Cream5oda09 4 місяці тому +2

    The algorithm knows this is the setting of the fallout tv show's enclave base

  • @jesuspabon5327
    @jesuspabon5327 Рік тому

    Nice story. I used to work there in pier 1 with a company called New York Railcar Corporation. A subsidiary company from NAB Construction.

  • @jantschierschky3461
    @jantschierschky3461 Рік тому +2

    I like its design, functional but kind of classic.

  • @jed-henrywitkowski6470
    @jed-henrywitkowski6470 Рік тому +1

    As a son of a veteran and logistician, I found this interesting to the point where I definitely want o to visit the "BAT".

  • @simonh317
    @simonh317 Рік тому

    Bibby Venture became HM Prison Weare in 1997 when it was sold back to the UK Government. It was finally sold on in 2006 , renamed the Jascon 27 and is now an oil industry accomadation vessel in Nigeria.

  • @doncameron5608
    @doncameron5608 Рік тому +2

    I went through there in 1965 ,three troop ships left there for Bremerhaven

    • @rvnmedic1968
      @rvnmedic1968 Рік тому +2

      My Dad was a Refr Engineer with MSTS and one of the ships would go from Brooklyn to Bremerhaven and back every two weeks or so. On one trip to Bremerhaven, he was off duty for a day and went to a German pub. The bartender asked him where he was from. Dad replied, New York City. The bartender then said where? My Dad said Staten Island. The bartender continued his "interrogation" and said he was very aware of the communities on Staten Island. My Dad told him South Beach. The bartender said he had maps of the entire NYC coastline and even mentioned the other sections near South Beach.
      He was Dad's age and was a U-Boat commander and his sub was off the coast of Staten Island. The eerie thing was that he had orders to sink the Staten Island Ferry when directed. He told my Dad he would refuse to do that if ordered. Cheers, Bob

    • @doncameron5608
      @doncameron5608 Рік тому

      The Rose, The Patch, The Buckner were in my convoy

    • @nickjcal2819
      @nickjcal2819 11 місяців тому +1

      @@doncameron5608 Apr '62 I rode the Rose to Bremerhaven, Ger. Nov '64 returned back to Bklyn on the Patch. Back then we called them "Vomit Comets"

    • @doncameron5608
      @doncameron5608 11 місяців тому

      @@nickjcal2819 Great trip huh?

  • @jonhaugen5799
    @jonhaugen5799 Рік тому +9

    Great video. I wish they would remodel part of it so it can be used as housing for our Veterans and their families. There's a lot of buildings like these around the US that could be saved and remodeled to help our Veterans with housing, educational retraining and medical assistance. They can also be used to help the homeless and for the refugees/immigrants as temporary housing and education centers.

    • @teubks
      @teubks Рік тому +3

      Sadly it is cheaper to build new than to renovate spaces like this suitable for living.

    • @JohnJBrowne11209
      @JohnJBrowne11209 Рік тому +1

      Probably not efficient. It's industrial space not residential.

  • @nurxg
    @nurxg Рік тому +1

    You should do the Port Authority Inland Terminal on 8th Ave

  • @ravinous
    @ravinous 5 місяців тому +2

    Ah this is were the Enclave scene was shot in the Fallout TV series.

  • @gtwfan52
    @gtwfan52 6 місяців тому

    Small correction: Steelworkers make steel and steel products in factories; ironworkers make buildings and bridges out of it

  • @goldwinger5434
    @goldwinger5434 Рік тому +3

    I'm confused. Congress wanted LBJ to close it so Senator JFK got involved? Time travel?

  • @paulcunneen3519
    @paulcunneen3519 Рік тому +2

    Great video! But you got your Kennedys confused. JFK was dead in 1964 but his brother Bobbie was the Senator Elect from NY. He was the one lobbying here.

  • @alexius23
    @alexius23 Рік тому +2

    Very interesting!

  • @ltgray2780
    @ltgray2780 Рік тому +2

    No one noticed the President Johnson-Senator Elect JFK discrepancy? Watch @9:53.

  • @bill2066
    @bill2066 Рік тому +2

    THANK YOU FOR THIS. WHAT SHOULD BE DONE WITH THE FACILITY? JUST DO NOT DEMOLISH IT! SO SICK OF PROGRESS ANIALATING HISTORICAL ICONS IN THIS COUNTRY, AND IT MAKES ME SICK. KEEP IT GOING NO MATTER WAHT THE COST. WE DONT TEACH HISTORY ANYMORE, AND THIS NEEDS TO STOP, AND KEEPING THIS UP WILL HELP WITH THAT ENDEAVOR. THANK YOU.

  • @Traffi.c
    @Traffi.c Рік тому

    Was looking for something to watch at work, and look a video about the place I work at lol

  • @PrograError
    @PrograError Рік тому +1

    I wonder if there's a need to reactivate it for military use would it be suitable... the NYC today is very different from the NYC then, on shipping traffic, I suppose...

  • @markcottrell5582
    @markcottrell5582 Рік тому

    I can't get over the internal architecture, seems way ahead of it's time. Those observation platforms(?) looked like stairwells to me at first

  • @MIYDNA
    @MIYDNA Рік тому

    I lived across the street my whole childhood. It was there, but we never really noticed it.

  • @CryptoX-kr3wu
    @CryptoX-kr3wu Рік тому +7

    That entire complex would be an awesome mega logistics hub for Amazon.

    • @bruisersdilemma354
      @bruisersdilemma354 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, because we need more of those

    • @Jason-rn4jk
      @Jason-rn4jk Рік тому

      Amazon is working on “amazon city” a subsidiary of “sim city” for Xbox x series. The only warehouses are amazon hubs, the only delivery service is amazon, and everyone can only work for Amazon in amazon communities like 1800’s coal mine towns with tokens for employees always in debt. Amazon fresh always has fresh food no matter how many people order, how?

    • @DavidLLambertmobile
      @DavidLLambertmobile Рік тому +1

      AOC would block that 🚫 ....

  • @NontasK
    @NontasK Рік тому

    Great video, seems like the buildings we have in ports and industrial areas in Greece.

  • @bryantmendez4768
    @bryantmendez4768 Рік тому

    Grew up in Sunset park BK, I actually learned how to ride a bike on this pier 😂 small world

  • @steveh5542
    @steveh5542 Рік тому

    ty for video bro

  • @stevefox3763
    @stevefox3763 Рік тому

    4:31 I was surprised to hear him say bridged by the 3rd floor and then the photo showed what the 3rd floor is to people like myself from outside the U.S, the bridge had floors 2,1, and ground below it, normally Americans call the ground floor the 1st.

  • @bigsexy7781
    @bigsexy7781 Рік тому +2

    The OG of youtube well done sir

  • @SuperMikesweeney
    @SuperMikesweeney Рік тому +1

    More likely 58th street in Sunset, not Manhatten...

  • @billlombard9911
    @billlombard9911 Рік тому

    The federal jail on 29th street in Brooklyn and the building next door was part of that complex