Call Now: 1-888-647-9701

Home
About Us
Services
Schedule
Contacts
 
NYC - Customer Services
  • Residential Pest Control Bronx
  • Commercial Pest Control Bronx
  •  
    NYC - Services Links
  • Prices Pest Control Bronx
  • Bed Bug Simplistic Preparations
  • Bed Bug Advanced Preparations
  • Site Map Bronx Pest
  • NYC - Types Of Pests

    We would like for every client (our philosophy is customer for life) to have access to all of the educational resources and information available to gather knowledge about the various pest control issues that exist. We also offer different services for different types of pests.


    NYC - Our Services

    NYC Pest Control Exterminator Treatment Help, Bronx provides several pest control services for our clients like commercial exterminator services and residential pest control services in Manhattan.



    Our exterminators are extremely efficient at Pest Control and Extermination. You do not need to go for ineffective pest control products, just make a schedule for our caring andprofessional pest control services and then our exterminator will do everything for you.

     

      NYC Manhattan Queens Bronx Staten Island Brooklyn


    Bensonhurst is a neighborhood located in the south-western part of the New York City borough of Brooklyn.


    Sometimes erroneously thought to include all or parts of such neighborhoods as Bath Beach, Dyker Heights, and Borough Park, or to be defined by the streets where the ethnicity of Italian residents is most prominent, Bensonhurst actually has a clearly defined border, with Gravesend to the southeast, Midwood to the east, Borough Park to the north, Dyker Heights to the west, and Bath Beach to the southwest.[citation needed] Starting at the neighborhood's southern tip at the corner of Stillwell Avenue and 86th Street, the border runs north along Stillwell Avenue to Avenue P, east to McDonald Avenue, north to 60th Street, northwest to Fort Hamilton Parkway, southwest to Bay Ridge Avenue, southeast to 14th avenue, south to 86th Street, and southeast back to Stillwell Avenue.


    Bensonhurst is served by two branches of the New York City Subway system: the D elevated subway line, also called the BMT West End Line, at 62nd Street, 71st Street, 79th Street, 18th Avenue, 20th Avenue, Bay Parkway, and 25th Avenue Stations; and the N open-cut line, (also called the BMT Sea Beach Line), at Fort Hamilton Parkway, New Utrecht Avenue, 18th Avenue, 20th Avenue, and Bay Parkway Stations.The D elevated and the N open-cut lines also have a free transfer in the neighborhood at the 62nd Street D Station and the New Utrecht Avenue N Station. Bensonhurst is patrolled by the NYPD's 62nd Precinct.


    Bensonhurst derives its name from Arthur W. Benson, the former president of Brooklyn Gas, who in 1835 began buying farmland that formerly belonged to the Polhemus family. Between 1835 and 1850 Benson divided the farmland into generous lots that were sold in the following decades as part of the newly created suburb of Bensonhurst by the Sea (current day Bath Beach section), which was annexed into the 30th Ward of Brooklyn in the 1890s.


    The U.S. Post Office-Parkville Station located at 6618 20th Ave., was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.


    In the early 1900s, many Italians and Jews moved into the neighborhood, and prior to World War II the neighborhood was about equally Jewish and Italian. In the 1950s, there was an influx of immigrants from southern Italy and most of the Jewish population left the neighborhood, leaving the area predominantly Italian. Bensonhurst is heavily Italian-American, and it is usually considered the main "Little Italy" of Brooklyn. The Italian-speaking community remains over 20,000 strong, according to the census of 2000. However, the Italian-speaking community is becoming "increasingly elderly and isolated, with the small, tight-knit enclaves they built around the city slowly disappearing as they give way to demographic changes." Its main thoroughfare, 18th Avenue (also known as Cristoforo Colombo Boulevard) between roughly 60th Street and Shore Parkway, is lined with predominantly small, Italian family-owned businesses—many of which have remained in the same family for several generations. 86th Street is another popular local thoroughfare, lined by the arches of the elevated BMT West End Subway Line. The 18th Avenue Station was popularized in opening credits of Welcome Back, Kotter.


    In 2000, an influx of Chinese and Former Soviet Union immigrants began to arrive. Chinese-American residents and Chinese immigrants have opened many restaurants and shops along 18th Avenue, Bay Parkway and 86th Street. The Former Soviet Union (Jews-refugee) population has dissipated in recent years. Below the D-line elevated subway, along on 86th Street between 18th Avenue and Stillwell Avenue, has emerged southern Brooklyn's third Chinatown, along with the Sunset Park Chinatown and the Avenue U Chinatown. The Bensonhurst and Avenue U Chinatowns are now increasingly carrying the majority of the Cantonese population in Brooklyn as the Cantonese dissipate from the main Brooklyn Chinatown in Sunset Park. With the migration of the Cantonese in Brooklyn now to Bensonhurst, and along with new Chinese immigration, small clusters of Chinese people and businesses in different parts of Bensonhurst have grown integrating with other ethnic groups and businesses. It is possible that a few more small Chinatowns might form as the Chinese population and number of Chinese businesses continue to grow in various sections of Bensonhurst as it can be witnessed.


    On August 23, 1989, a 16-year-old African-American named Yusuf Hawkins was shot and killed in Bensonhurst, after he and three friends had been attacked by a group of mostly Italian-American youths. At least four neighborhood residents were tried and convicted of charges related to the assault and murder.


    In connection with the Hawkins murder several trials ensued which were prosecuted by a team of veteran homicide prosecutors including James Kohler, Edward Boyar, Paul Burns, Steven Schwartz and Douglas Nadjari. Reverend Al Sharpton led several protest marches through the streets of Bensonhurst. On January 12, 1991, before one such march, neighborhood resident Michael Riccardi tried to kill Sharpton by stabbing him in the chest. Riccardi later remorsefully said that he "thought the act would make me a hero in my community." Sharpton recovered from his wounds, and later asked the judge for leniency when Riccardi was sentenced. The two subsequently reconciled.


    Bensonhurst was stereotyped as a haven for Mafia members (Gus Farace, a reputed mob associate suspected of murdering a federal drug-enforcement agent, was found shot to death in a parked car there on November 17, 1989, and two years later the neighborhood provided the setting for the mob-themed film Out for Justice starring Steven Seagal & is known as the hometown of notorious soap opera [General Hospital] mobster, Sonny Cortinthos.), many of whom are believed to maintain residences in Dyker Heights, a nearby neighborhood.


    On April 13, 1986, while approaching his car after leaving a meeting at the Veterans & Friends Social Club on 86th St. in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, Frank DeCicco was killed by a car bomb explosion. Lucchese crime family soldier Frank "Frankie Hearts" Bellino, who was with DeCicco, lost several toes. However, the intended target, John Gotti, was not there. Turncoats and informants would later reveal that the order for the hit came from Genovese crime family boss Vincent Gigante, who did not like Gotti or approve of him killing Castellano without approval from the Commission, and conspired in his murder with Lucchese crime family leaders Vittorio "Vic" Amuso and Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso.


    Currently the neighborhood is undergoing a transformation; many of the original houses dating back over 90 years ago are being torn down and replaced by three-story brick apartment buildings and multi-family condominiums, sometimes referred to as "Fedders Houses" for their distinctive air conditioner sleeves.


    Visitors from throughout the New York City metropolitan area flock to the neighborhood each year in late August or early September to take part in the colorful Festa di Santa Rosalia (commonly known simply as The Feast to locals), held on 18th Avenue from Bay Ridge Parkway (75th Street) to 66th Street. "The Feast" is presented by Bensonhurst resident and skilled self promoter Franco Corrado, as well as the Santa Rosalia Society on 18th Avenue. Born in Rome, Italy, in 1955, Corrado has been an active social member of the Italian-American community for the past 20 years. St. Rosalia is the patron saint of the city of Palermo and is sometimes venerated as the patron for the entire island of Sicily (a sizable portion of Bensonhurst's Italian American residents are of Sicilian heritage).[citation needed] The annual end-of-summer celebration attracts thousands.


    Immediately after Italy's victory at the 2006 FIFA World Cup, a large portion of Bensonhurst's Italian American community, as well as several thousand participants from all over the tri-state area, participated in a large victory celebration. Several local cafés and businesses paid for a city permit to close 18th Avenue to commercial traffic. It was held on the same route as the St. Rosalia Feast, but stretched from 65th street to nearly 80th Street. The celebration began as soon as the Italian team won, until about 7:00 p.m., when the permit ran out.


    New York City Department of Education serves Bensonhurst.


    Colleges and Universities


    Zoned schools include:


    High schools include:


    The class – and eventually racial – tensions in the neighborhood over the years no doubt contributed to several notable films and television programs being set there, particularly when the subject matter reflected these tensions. Of note are the Spike Lee films Do the Right Thing and Jungle Fever and the cult classic movie The Warriors about rival gangs. Though much lighter in tone, the television series Welcome Back Kotter, featuring a mixed-race cast of lower-class characters, was also set in Bensonhurst.


    Bensonhurst was the setting for The Honeymooners series, featuring actor/comedian Jackie Gleason as Ralph Kramden, a bus driver in 1950s Brooklyn – again reflecting the working-class nature of the area at the time.


    Both Mirabelli's Famous Cream Soda and the Sbarro salumeria have their roots in the neighborhood as well.


    Notable current and former residents of Bensonhurst include:




    A number of high-profile organized crime figures hail from Bensonhurst including Carlo Gambino, Paul Castellano, Anthony Gaggi, Sammy "The Bull" Gravano, Mikey DiLeonardo, John Gambino, Anthony Casso, Gregory Scarpa and Carmine Sessa



    ATURA  Barren Island  Bath Beach  Bay Ridge  Bedford  Bedford-Stuyvesant  Bensonhurst  Bergen Beach  BoCoCa  Boerum Hill  Borough Park  Brighton Beach  Brooklyn Chinatown  Brooklyn Heights  Brownsville  Bushwick  Canarsie  Carroll Gardens  City Line  Clinton Hill  Cobble Hill  Coney Island  Crown Heights  Cypress Hills  Ditmas Park  Downtown  Dumbo  Dyker Heights  East Flatbush  East New York  East Williamsburg  Farragut  Fiske Terrace  Flatbush  Flatlands  Fort Greene  Fort Hamilton  Fulton Ferry  Georgetown  Gerritsen Beach  Gowanus  Gravesend  Greenpoint  Greenwood Heights  Highland Park  Homecrest  Kensington  Little Poland  Madison  Manhattan Beach  Mapleton  Marine Park  Midwood  Mill Basin  Navy Yard  New Lots  New Utrecht  Ocean Hill  Ocean Parkway  Park Slope  Pigtown  Plum Beach  Prospect Heights  Prospect Lefferts Gardens, Brooklyn  Prospect Park South  RAMBO  Red Hook  Sea Gate  Sheepshead Bay  South Park Slope  Starrett City  Stuyvesant Heights  Sunset Park  Vinegar Hill  Weeksville  White Sands  Williamsburg  Windsor Terrace  Wingate


    The Brooklyn Bridge



    Barren Island - Bath Beach - Bay Ridge - Bedford Stuyvesant - Bensonhurst - Bergen Beach - Boerum Hill - Borough Park - Brighton Beach - Brooklyn Heights - Brownsville - Bushwick - Canarsie - Carroll Gardens - City Line - Clinton Hill - Cobble Hill - Coney Island - Crown Heights - Cypress Hill - Ditmas Park - Downtown Brooklyn - DUMBO - Dyker Heights - East Flatbush - East New York - Farragut - Fiske Terrace - Flatbush - Flatlands - Fort Greene - Fort Hamilton - Fulton Ferry - Georgetown - Gerritsen Beach - Gowanus - Gravesend - Greenpoint - Greenwood Heights - Highland Park - Homecrest - Kensington - Madison - Manhattan Beach - Marine Park - Midwood - Mill Basin - New Lots - New Utrecht - Ocean Hill - Park Slope - Plum Beach - Prospect Heights - Prospect Lefferts Gardens - Prospect Park South - RAMBO - Red Hook - Rugby - Seagate - Sheepshead Bay - Spring Creek - Starrett City - Stuyvesant Heights - Sunset Park - Vinegar Hill - Weeksville - Williamsburg - Windsor Terrace - Wingate -



    NYC - Pest Fact
    Cockroaches can withstand temperatures as cold as 32?F.

    Spider
    cockroach
    insect1
    Rat
    Bug
    Rat
    Ant
    cockroach

    NYC - Pest Gallery
     
    NYC - Pest Information
     
    NYC - Pest Maps

    NYC Pest Control Exterminator Treatment Help,

    New York, NY, NYC

    CALL NOW : 1-888-647-9701

    Sample Images or Image Gallery or Samples text we can make to move horizontally here
    CALL NOW : 1-888-647-9701
    © copyright 2009 - 2010 - 2011              NYC Manhattan Queens Bronx Staten Island Brooklyn