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What was it? Ruins along the South Brooklyn Railway

May 1st, 2001 by


Original publication date: May 1, 2001, Updated & re-posted: Feb. 16, 2014.
What was it? This new category of blog posts will feature locations around NYC that I've explored, but haven't had the time to dig up good historic information on. It is my hope that someone out there will be able to comment below and let us all know - what was it? Today's feature was located along another Brooklyn abandonment: The South Brooklyn Railway

Outside of it's address (1242 38th street, Brooklyn NY), I know little about what this facility was used for. There are however some clues to be found in the photos and the building's location.

This place was located just south of the former South Brooklyn Railway (or SBK for short) which ran from the waterfront, along 37th street under the old Culver Shuttle, and hooked south along MacDonald avenue to what is today's NYCTA Coney Island yard. Thus it's a fairly good guess that at some point they received freight via these tracks. By the 1980s, these tracks were severely neglected and judging from these photos of cars parked on the tracks - completely disused. One might also assume this building was likely abandoned around the same time period. Sometime after 2001, the building and silos were demolished. Curiously the NYC Dept. of Buildings seems to have no permits on file for such work. Certainly someone was being paid to look the other way.

Here's my original write up from the spring of 2001:
"From the exterior on one street, all one can see are graffiti coated brick walls, but if you circle around the block, one might find a hole in the back wall which leads directly under the 6 large silos that dominate the structures. What these silos were used to store is unknown. Was it coal? Sand? With the large piles of sand nearby, one can guess that this building later saw use as some sort of aggregates supplier. Today, there's not much left of the place - it is as if someone drove a bulldozer through the place and dug up any dead bodies buried here (or maybe just a below-surface storage tank?). Everything has been destroyed and gutted, leaving no evidence of what function this facility once served."

So what was it?

Update 2018:
Turns out this was the former location of the Klein Coal company. Back when nearly everyone in Brooklyn used Coal to heat their homes, Klein sold it. They received freight carloads of coal from the anthracite hills of Pennsylvania.

5 responses to “What was it? Ruins along the South Brooklyn Railway”

  1. Control says:

    So, Mr. GasAxe commented on this on FB – found a track map that shows it used to be ‘Klein Coal’ – one of many coal distributors that used to be all around the NYC area.

  2. dizzy5 says:

    grafitti is bullshit.

  3. Control says:

    And so too is your comment.

  4. Connie says:

    The rail crane in one of the photos is extremely interesting to me – do you have any idea who might have used it, or it’s make?

  5. Bad Guy Joe says:

    Not sure the make, but I’m guessing it was an old MTA/SBK crane. I’d bet a nickel there are photos of it on the nycsubway.org website.

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  • About The Author

    Bad Guy Joe

    Bad Guy Joe
    Bad Guy Joe knows more about the NYC underground than anyone else on or below the surface of this planet. He has spent nearly 30 years sneaking into NYC's more forbidden locations. When not underground, he's probably bitching about politicians or building something digital. 
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