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Hungry in Prospect Park.....

brooklynmodern
brooklynmodern
edited November -1 in Windsor Terrace / Kensington
Are pretzel carts and the like not allowed in Prospect Park? The other day I went in for a walk and got hungry. There were no pushcarts a la central park to be found. It would be a great place to relax with some hot chocolate and snacks in the winter/fall. Water/fruit in the summer. But then, of course, there'd be litter.

Comments

  • friscopete
    friscopete
    I usually find the Carts along Prospect Park West or at the entrance to the park across from the library.
  • hunter.gatherer
    hunter.gatherer
    There's plenty to eat in the park:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/boojee/sets/72157601254739246/

    I've never been on Steve Brill's tour (check photos in link), but always pick scallions and mulberries.
  • brooklynmodern
    brooklynmodern
    Holy cow! That tour is brilliant! I'm so taking that.

    Still tho, we need a pushcart inside the park with healthy snacks. Actually, there's a restaurant in the boathouse but I think it opens in May.
  • walkathon
    walkathon
    There will be lots of pushcarts in the park but they haven't set up for the season yet, maybe April 1st is their start date.
  • tybur6
    tybur6
    There's usually only the 2 carts... the one at the Grand Army Plaza entrance, and then the one on Prospect Park West side (actually on Park Drive). Near that playground and the bandshell... around 9th street?
  • magicube
    magicube
    tybur6 wrote: There's usually only the 2 carts... the one at the Grand Army Plaza entrance, and then the one on Prospect Park West side (actually on Park Drive). Near that playground and the bandshell... around 9th street?
    Yes, at the 9th Street entrance.
  • yosimite samantha
    yosimite samantha
    I've seen a food truck at the Picnic House.
  • brooklynmodern
    brooklynmodern
    Will look out for these. However, I'm assuming it's the expected street fare: soggy pretzels, corn syrup drinks, potato chips. What we need is one of those West Coast (portland/seattle) food vendors with a cappuccino machine and pastry. I bet it costs 30k for a permit to sell those hot dogs in the Prospect Park.
    -gl
  • opossumqueen
    opossumqueen
    brooklynmodern wrote: Will look out for these. However, I'm assuming it's the expected street fare: soggy pretzels, corn syrup drinks, potato chips. What we need is one of those West Coast (portland/seattle) food vendors with a cappuccino machine and pastry. I bet it costs 30k for a permit to sell those hot dogs in the Prospect Park.
    -gl
    The actual problem is that the city only issues a certain number of permits and there are so many people waiting for one now, I think they aren't even taking more applications for years and no plans to make more permits any time soon. There are tons of reg's on this. Besides those 3 or 4 carts already in the park, anyone else selling food could end up with a fine.

    If someone wants to start a cart with fresh produce in certain areas (specific low SES nabes) a program is in place that will help them get a special permit for this. The program is meant make healthy food options available in areas that don't have them.
  • tybur6
    tybur6
    Yeah - I don't think it's 3 or 4 carts... I think it's 2 carts that appear in 3 or 4 locations (plus the wandering italian ice folks periodically)

    (My understanding - please correct me if I'm wring) The permit problem is that they are not area/borough specific. If you *finally* got a permit after years of waiting and paying lots of money... would you set up shop in Brooklyn or Central Park?

    I think this is shifting... but not very fast. Think about the Yellow Cabs. They PARK and are BASED in Brooklyn, but until *very recently* it was impossible to get a cab within Brooklyn. The money was in Manhattan. That's slowly shifting to match reality.