Owner | City of New York |
---|---|
Maintained by | NYCDOT |
Length | 5.3 mi (8.5 km)[1] |
Location | Brooklyn, New York City |
Coordinates | 40°36′44.56″N 73°57′46.11″W / 40.6123778°N 73.9628083°W |
South end | Riegelmann Boardwalk in Brighton Beach |
Major junctions | Belt Parkway in Brighton Beach NY 27 in Prospect Park South |
North end | NY 27 / Parkside Avenue in Windsor Terrace |
East | 11th/12th Streets |
West | 9th/10th Streets |
Coney Island Avenue is a road in the New York City borough of Brooklyn that runs north-south for a distance of roughly five miles, almost parallel to Ocean Parkway and Ocean Avenue. It begins at Brighton Beach Avenue in Coney Island and goes north to Park Circle at the southwest corner of Prospect Park, where it becomes Prospect Park Southwest. Near-parallel Ocean Parkway terminates five blocks south and three blocks west of that intersection, becoming the Prospect Expressway (New York State Route 27). Ocean Parkway originally extended north to Park Circle, where Coney Island Avenue meets Prospect Park, until construction of the Prospect Expressway replaced the northern half-mile of Ocean Parkway but included ramps to the edge of Prospect Park.
Coney Island Avenue frontage is dominated by mixed-use housing: pre-war apartment buildings, small shops, including many antique shops, and service businesses. It is also one of the most dangerous streets in New York City, with many avoidable accidents happening because of poor road design.[2]
Coney Island Avenue is served by the following:
An area surrounding about 1 mile (1.6 km) of Coney Island Avenue is home to a sizable population of Pakistani Americans, and is informally called "Little Pakistan".[3] In 2021, the U.S. Census Bureau estimated that approximately 7,000 Pakistanis lived in a region bordering the street, and they made up nearly 10% of the population of the region.[4]