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History
of Mill Brook
The
Mill Brook Community was conceived in 1933 and
built during the 1940s as the Community of Green
Acres. A part of this history was described in
a paper written by Mill Brook resident Ellen K.
Popper in 1994 entitled "Living With the
Automobile: Variations on the Radburn Idea."
The following excerpt of that paper is published
here with Ms. Popper's permission. If you have
information about the history of Mill Brook, please
e-mail the Civic Association. The project was
planned in 1933 by Clarence Stein, a town planner,
for 350 acres of flat land on a former airfield
in Valley Stream, just east of the New York City
border. The plan, conceived as a method of 'priming
the pump' to get the building industry going during
the Depression, "was to provide dwellings
for 18,000 people and . . . to fulfill a primary
objective of giving employment." The project
was never built, according to Stein, because "a
large government is slow of action and its machinery
complicated." Three years later, Irwin S.
Chanin, a powerful private developer who had built
the Majestic apartment building on Centra Park
West at 71st Street and the Century on Central
Park West at 62nd Street announced plans to build
Green Acres, a suburban development of 1,800 single-family
homes -- one-tenth the density of Stein's plan
-- and a large shopping center on the same 350-acre
site in Valley Stream.
According
to the real estate section of The New York Times,
it was Chanin, an architectural engineer, who
worked out a comprehensive traffic system where
pedestrian traffic would be served by footpaths
extending through a park system, and residences
would be built on short cul-de-sacs. The smallest
possible number of streets would be provided "to
serve the residents with the most convenience,
but which would prove inconvenient to outside
traffic." The Architectural Record of October,
1936 featured a two-page spread on "Green
Acres, A Residential Park Community" designed
by Irwin S. Chanin as "A Community for the
Motor Age." As outlined in The Record, the
plan called for 1,800 homes, five through streets
and eighty-five private cul-de-sac lanes connected
by short concrete footpaths to the general park
system which would have a combined length of more
than seven miles. Instead of a greenbelt surrounding
the community, Chanin planned to widen and deepen
the existing streams which formed natural boundaries
on two sides of the site, and incorporate them
into the park system. Playgrounds, a centrally
situated school and space for civic and business
centers and churches completed the plan. Of the
original scheme, fewer than 400 houses, one through
street and 20 cul-de-sacs were actually built
prior to World War II. After the war, an additional
four hundred houses were built, along with an
elementary school at the center of the development.
The pre-war section, still known as the "Old
Section," consists of Cape Cod, Colonial,
English, and French manor designs.
In
the newer section, the houses are ranches and
splits, more typical of post-war Long Island suburban
development. Although the cul-de-sac plan was
not followed in the post-war section, there is
only one entrance to the community on that side.
Later on, blocks of two-story garden apartments
and senior citizen housing were built on the north
end of the community that abuts the Green Acres
Mall. There is no access from the mall into the
community. The mall has been enclosed and is nearly
triple the size of the original shopping center
built by Chanin. It is privately owned and is
one of the busiest and most profitable malls in
the country. As for the community, most people
don't even know it is there. Tell someone you
live in Green Acres and they're liable to think
you mean the mall. According to Lieutenant Lawrence
W. Mulvey of the 5th Police Precinct, which has
the longest border with New York City of any Nassau
County precinct, the Mill Brook community has
one of the lowest crime rates in Nassau County,
a fact he attributes to the layout of cul-de-sacs
with limited entrances and through streets. Children
play ball, ride bikes, and roller skate freely
in the quiet streets. It is possible to walk along
the greenbelt from any house in the Old Section
to the elementary school without crossing more
than one intersection. Low-rise multi-family units
and senior citizen housing coexist harmoniously
with single-family residences. Although it is
only a fraction the size of what either Clarence
Stein or Irwin Chanin envisioned it to be, in
Mill Brook, has survived the test of time.
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