Edges of industry, moments of disruptive infrastructure and too-wide boulevards give the neighborhood an occasionally jarring tone, but, for the most part, even the modest areas have a quiet and comfortable feel to them.
The architecture is not super urban and often extremely monotonous, showcasing every New York residential style from 1915 to 1950.
On the northeastern edge of the neighborhood is an idyllic and strangely suburban development called "Sunnyside Gardens," a large residential experiment of the 1920s with long stretches of 2-story row houses surrounded by trees, trees and more trees. Plus some actual gardens.
Churches abound in many forms: Catholic, Jehovah's Witness and many Korean Protestant examples, including this gray one below, which sits on the totally industrial northern edge of the neighorhood and beseeches onlookers, "Is it nothing to you, all who pass by?" (quoting, apparently, Lamentations 1:12).
Not necessarily the city's graffiti capital, Sunnyside writers can still represent.
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