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Bronx-on-the-Bay

A WATERFRONT subdivision approved for a slip of land that’s halfway underwater in the Country Club district of the Bronx is making innovative use of nautical architecture, but has some neighbors sending distress signals.

Four houses, all to be in the $1.6 million to $1.8 million range, are planned for the intersection of Schley and Clarence Avenues. They were designed by Tobias S. Guggenheimer with nautical elements, like porthole windows, and chimney stacks and roof decks much like a ship’s.

“I’m kind of inventing a name: nautical modernism,” Mr. Guggenheimer said. “We wanted very light and open structures.”

The three-bedroom houses, all lightweight steel frame and glass on the first floor, but clad in oiled cedar with decks on the second, will look out onto Eastchester Bay. Besides splendid views of Long Island Sound, roof decks will have wooden trellises and painted steel railings.

The houses face a well-off neighborhood where many small aluminum-sided homes have been rebuilt to double or even triple their size in recent years. A new large condominium complex and marina are next to the subdivision.

Some neighbors are not happy about losing their view of the water.

“We love the views of Long Island Sound and the boats and tugs we see going by in the water at the end of Clarence Avenue,” Matt Griffo, a nearby homeowner, told YourNabe.com. “Our view of the water at the end of the block is a hidden treasure.”

To address those worries, Mr. Guggenheimer added floor-to-ceiling glass entries. “We really didn’t want to create a kind of monolithic wall” between the neighborhood and the water, he said. Read more..

 

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Bronx Beaches Are Mostly Private

Bronx Beaches Are Mostly Private

turner-beach-club.jpg

A member of the American Turner Club had the place all to herself last week.

It may not be Miami, San Diego, or even the Rockaways, but the Bronx - yes, the Bronx - has 10 beaches where visitors can enjoy a summer swim.

While most people know about Orchard Beach along the sprawling shoreline of Long Island Sound in Pelham Bay Park, there are several lesser-known and less-crowded spots to take a dip in the waters of the northernmost borough.

Six of the sandy shores are side-by-side private beaches along a stretch of Clarence Ave. from Throgs Neck to Country Club. They accept new members, but require applicants to be sponsored by a current member in good standing.

“It’s a strip of heaven that we try to keep secret,” said Carol Richardson, who has been working at the American Turner Club, the largest club on the strip, for almost 20 years.

“Oh, wow. This is the Bronx?” she said people exclaim when they see the view from their 180-seat dining room, and from the beach for the first time.

The private club’s 200-foot-wide beach has brownish sand, a pier and a small lawn. There are rocks and some cigarette butts in the sand, making it an entryway to the water, not a spot for sunbathing.

All the beaches on the strip look out on City Island, and the smell of salt water makes the borough’s air pollution problems seem like they belong to another, distant place. The Health Department checks the water almost weekly and assures it is healthy for swimming.

The Danish American Beach Club down the street has a bar, dozens of picnic tables and a sun deck. It is only accessible to its 400 members, but the club accepts new members.

“I don’t think anyone realizes there are beach clubs like this. In the summer, you have to watch where you step because there are a million little children running around,” said Matt Curry, 32, the caretaker of the club, who lives on the property and was a member as a child.

Next door, a member of the White Cross Fishing Club said most people do not know about the strip and “that’s the way we like it.”

He said prospective members must be recommended by two members in good standing to join the 100-member club.

“Strictly private, for members only,” says a sign outside.

The Morris Yacht and Beach Club on City Island also has a beach -its waters are tested regularly for swimming - as do Locust Point and the Schuyler Hill Civic Association.

Orchard Beach is the largest Bronx beach, at 1.1 miles, and the only one run by the Parks and Recreation Department.

SOURCE: NYDailyNews.com

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