Talk:Queensbridge Houses
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Requested move
Queensbridge → Queensbridge, Queens – to comply with the format for neighborhoods as <neighborhood>, <borough>. ~ trialsanderrors 21:35, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
Survey
- Add *Support or *Oppose followed by an optional one-sentence explanation, then sign your opinion with ~~~~
- Comment: I have been doing many moves of neighborhoods in Queens and Brooklyn, appending the borough to the name of the article. I have seen and edited this article several times. The only reason that I hadn't moved it already is that it is more a housing development, rather than a neighborhood. The article refers to Queensbridge repeatedly as a housing complex, and I don't think it ever talks about it as a neighborhood. I will accept the decision of this process, but request that this information be taken into consideration. Alansohn 15:54, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
- The article calls it a neighborhood. I take it that's an informal term in NYC. I think size alone make it "neighborhoody". No strong opinion otherwise. ~ trialsanderrors 18:07, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
- Moved. —Nightstallion (?) 10:46, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
- Oppose. Well, this isn't exactly a survey now is it? Since Nightstallion seemed to just go ahead a move it. Queensbridge is not an official "neighborhood". But because it's so huge and houses so many people, it's has come to be considered a neighborhood. If you wrote a letter with the address "Queensbridge, NY", the post office would know exactly where to take it. But again this is unofficial and informal. I think it should not have been moved. MrBlondNYC 09:37, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- Support. I wouldn't so much call it a neigborhood and I think that the name of this article should be changed to Queensbridge Houses and have Queensbridge, Queens redirect to Queensbridge Houses. I'd also like to point out that I've neither lived in the projects nor in Queens, so perhaps my opinion's not the greatest to go by.
NewYork1956 23:01, 26 April 2007 (UTC)
- Support. I wouldn't so much call it a neigborhood and I think that the name of this article should be changed to Queensbridge Houses and have Queensbridge, Queens redirect to Queensbridge Houses. I'd also like to point out that I've neither lived in the projects nor in Queens, so perhaps my opinion's not the greatest to go by.
AS A FORMER QB RESIDENT...I THINK I SOULD POINT OUT THE FACT THAT QB IS A HOOD...IF U AINT FROM THERE U SHOULDNT TRY N CONSIDER IT AS ANYTHING I NO ASWELL AS EVERYONE ELSE WHO LIVE THERE THAT QB AINT NO EASY GOIN NEIGHBORHOOD EITHER U WITH IT OR U AGAINST IT
QB is a 'hood for sure. I live there and have my whole life, so i should know and all you peole tlking this and that should come to the 'hhod and see for yourself. QB's no easy place, and it's most certainly a 'neighbourhood' (if not very neighboury), and anyone fron NYC will tell you that.
What? Anyways. NYCTA neighborhood maps in LIC/Astoria subway stations mark both Queensbridge and Ravenswood (another housing project) as "neighborhoods". Also, there are wikipedia pages for other housing complexes within established neighborhoods such as Edgemere. So I dunno, do whatever. 66.9.126.26 17:25, 27 September 2006 (UTC)
- Queensbridge is a housing project in the neighborhood of Long Island City, Queens.
I removed the following:
Queensbridge is the only housing complex in New York to have a subway station named after it.
This is false, there is a station in Far Rockaway named after Edgemere Houses, Beach 36th St-Edgemere [1] 66.9.126.26 21:24, 6 July 2007 (UTC)
http://nymag.com/news/features/40648/index2.html
This article from New York Magazine claims that the Red Hook housing projects are the largest in the city, contradicting the claim at the top of this article that Queensbridge are the largest housing projects in the US. 208.232.231.130 (talk) 19:43, 19 November 2007 (UTC)
- Queensbridge is the single most populated project in the country. Red Hook might cover the largest geographical area in NYC for a single housing project. I should also mention there are stretches of projects in different low income neighborhoods across the city, seperately managed but no breaks between them, much larger then Queensbridge.
- These mega developments are in: Brownsville, the Lower East Side, Soundview, Mott Haven, Melrose, Morrisania, and finally East Harlem. The line of projects in East Harlem is larger even then the Robert Taylor Homes which once stood in Chicago. It's almost a mile long. Pretty sure the others have more people and area as well.
"By the 1960s, the project was a dream of rich diversity and all the consequences such brings." What the hell does that mean? Is that sarcasm or just saying that it's diverse but the consequences have been mixed?
Nore I'snt From Queensbridge
Noreaga is from LeFrak City, Queens