BY JESSICA PARKS 
 Residents of a particularly  
 well-manicured block of E.  
 25th Street in East Flatbush  
 are hopeful the city’s landmarking  
 honchos will designate  
 their stretch of Neo-Renaissance  
 style row houses as  
 a historica district.  
 “It seems as though the community  
 deserves it, not just our  
 block,” said Julia Charles, who  
 chairs the 300 E. 25th Street  
 Block Association’s landmarks  
 committee. “Our voices need to  
 be heard in East Flatbush.”  
 The proposition drew nearlyunanimous  
 praise at a Sept. 22  
 Landmark  Preservation  Commission  
 hearing, where city  
 honchos lauded the residents for  
 maintaining  the  block’s  architectural  
 COURIER L 28     IFE, OCT. 9-15, 2020 
 integrity, and for their  
 hard work in advocating for the  
 landmark designation. 
 “It’s clear how this block  
 has a sense of place that attracts  
 people,” said LPC Chairwoman  
 Sarah Carroll. “And  
 the community has been incredible  
 stewards and have a  
 shared love for this block.”  
 The proposed E. 25th Street  
 Historic District  is made up  of  
 56 row houses lining both sides  
 of the block from Avenue D to  
 Clarendon Road Z — all of which  
 are  outfi tted  with  century-old  
 front gardens and facades of  
 limestone and brownstone meticulously  
 preserved from their  
 original  construction  by  the  
 Henry J. Meyers Company between  
 1909 and 1912.  
 Residents of an E. 25th street block are seeking a historic district designation.  Photo courtesy of Julia Charles 
 “It is amazingly consistent.  
 When I saw it, it struck me as  
 its level of consistency is absurdly  
 high and the quality of  
 how people have taken care of  
 this  place  is  just  incredible,”  
 said LPC Commissioner John  
 Gustafsson. 
 The 300 E. 25th Street  
 Block Association began actively  
 pursuing  the historical  
 designation in June 2019 in an  
 effort to protect their homes  
 from  developers  with  plans  
 to build multi-story condos in  
 the area, which the residents  
 feared  would  diminish  the  
 special character of the area. 
 “It became not something  
 we were just interested in,”  
 Charles said. “But it became a  
 need to preserve our block.”  
 The residents are hopeful  
 that  the  city’s  landmarking  
 gurus will grant them historic  
 district  status,  as  their  
 proposal has seen little opposition. 
  It has also garnered  
 support from the local community  
 board,  as  well  as  local  
 pols like Assemblywoman  
 Rodneyse Bichotte and City  
 Councilwoman Farah Louis. 
 If the LPC does grant the  
 preservation status, E. 25th  
 street will be the fi rst block of  
 row houses to receive an NYC  
 Historic  Landmark  Designation  
 in East Flatbush, an area  
 of the borough that is known  
 for its rich Caribbean roots —  
 which the block association  
 head argues would be solidifi ed  
 with a historic designation.  
 Landmarking honchos  
 have yet to set an offi cial date  
 to vote on the proposal, according  
 to  an  agency  spokesperson, 
  but Charles said she  
 has faith that it will be scheduled  
 before the end of 2020.  
 “Honestly, I think it might  
 happen before the end of the  
 year,” said Charles. 
 RESISTING  
 CHANGE 
 E. Flatbush residents hopeful  
 about landmark status 
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