Comment by r0m4n0
11 hours ago
Used to drive me insane living in NYC. Funny that Google Maps even highlights both Gold street in Brooklyn and the Gold street in the financial district if you do a search and zoom out. I wonder if that’s intentional or not.
I’ve always wondered if some of the downtown Manhattan/downtown Brooklyn streets were continued continuations of one and the same street, maybe connected by ferries in earlier days, or just references to the same namesake (or possibly each other).
And speaking of Brooklyn, I really wonder what city planners were thinking with that thing in Williamsburg where numbered streets exist twice, once as “<j> North <i>th Street” and once as “South <i>th Street”, which completely clashes with Manhattan naming the Eastern/Western part of the same street (“<j> <E/W> <i>Th Street”). Not to mention the completely separate set of numbered streets (“<j> <i>th Street”, without cardinal direction indicators) in the south or Brooklyn…
Brooklyn and City of New York (Manhattan/Bronx) were separate cities until 1898. Prior to that, Brooklyn was on an expansion spree annexing cities and towns to the north (Williamsburg, Bushwick) to the east (New Lots) and south (New Utrecht, Flatbush) to make the size of the current borough hence the confusing street names. Queens has a solution to that.