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Atlantic Terminal and Atlantic Center are shopping malls located on Atlantic Avenue surrounded by Hanson Place, Fort Greene Place and Flatbush Avenue in the Fort Greene section of Brooklyn, New York City, near Downtown Brooklyn. Atlantic Terminal is located across the street from the Atlantic Center Mall (via a small enclosed bridge from Target), and both are under the same management of Forest City Ratner Companies, the New York subsidiary of Forest City Enterprises. Atlantic Terminal is also an office building and part of the ticket office of the Long Island Rail Road's Atlantic Terminal. Parts of Atlantic Center Mall were also renovated to complement the new mall. The malls are both located directly across Atlantic Avenue from Barclays Center arena, in the neighborhood of Pacific Park, which is being developed by Forest City Ratner.Before the mall was planned, the land was to be the site of a domed baseball stadium proposed by then Brooklyn Dodgers owner Walter O'Malley. However, the plan fell through, and the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles in 1958.
It's beauty. It'space. It's timeless. It's here. The Long Island Railroad's Brooklyn Terminal has a brand new home. Flatbush Avenue customers have a real treat and store for them with the opening of their brand spanking new entry pavilion and how sweet it is. But don't just take our word for it. Very nice. Wow. I think it looks gorgeous. Finally Brooklyn gets something that they can be proud of. This three-story glass enclosed marvel has all kinds of good stuff for customers says the LARR's Rich Oakley. The interior is housed in a glass atri It has limestone wall panels. We have granite floor tiles and from this level we have grand stairs that lead down to a lower level where we have our customer amenities. A new ticket office, a new waiting room, men and women's restroom. We have a new information booth for our customers as well and electronic signage that will guide our customers. Work completed during an earlier phase brought vast improvements to LARR platform and subway areas but the new entry pavilion is the crown jewel of the 108 million dollar renovation of Atlantic Terminal. Now a clear and striking public landmark for Brooklyn evoking the grand transit terminals of past eras that properly greeted travelers at such busy hubs. Customers at this intermodal hub can make connections to five MTA New York City transit bus routes and ten New York City transit subway lines. The two, three, four, five B, D, M, the N, the Q and the R. Talk about connectivity. Our customers are going to love the new terminal. When they come off the street they can come down the grand staircase to the new concourse level where right there is the Long Island level platforms, subways, ticket office and if they choose not to go to one of those they can stay upstairs and go right into the mall. Street level customers will enjoy peering down on the scurry of the concourse level below. In between the two is where art and architecture meet. Artist Alan and Ellen Wexler collaborated with architects D to Minnico partners. Together they have created a work called Overlook. It'somewhat Here what is the view? The view is great architecture. The view is light materials that welcome you. What does that say? That says that we care about our customers. Far removed from the circa 1907 Flatbush Avenue Terminal building that once occupied this site this new entry pavilion will bathe customers in an abundance of natural light and gives new meaning to the term grand opening. Now this is why they make glass curtain walls. While here you can't help but gawk at this breathtaking view top to bottom of next door neighbor the Williamsburg Savings Bank building one of Brooklyn's most enduring landmarks. And at night when there's no natural light to be had these metal halite spots will cast upward into the skylight. So in the surrounding neighborhood the place will look just as gorgeous as it does during the day. And this new home will soon sport a new name. Flatbush Avenue.