North Brooklyn YMCA
Conveniently located in Brooklyn's Cypress Hills neighborhood, the North Brooklyn YMCA serves more than 15,400 New Yorkers each year with its state-of-the-art fitness facilities, pool, youth programs and a community committed to helping you achieve your goals.
Our Spaces
North Brooklyn Y Afterschool Locations
YMCA Beacon Center at MS 347/349
35 Starr Street
Brooklyn, NY 11221
Eastern District YMCA Center
125 Humboldt Street
Brooklyn NY 11206
Leadership Staff
Emecheta Isles
Executive Director
eisles@ymcanyc.org
Jessenia Urgiles-Taft
Membership Sales & Engagement Director
jurgiles@ymcanyc.org
x4701
Grace Avila
Aquatics Director
gavila@ymcanyc.org
x4709
Tiffany Brown
Youth & Family Director
brownt@ymcanyc.org
x4704
Zoraida Estremera
Business Manager
zestremera@ymcanyc.org
x4706
Bryce Eve
Building & Grounds Superintendent
beve@ymcanyc.org
x4710
Juan Marte-Melendez
Residence & Business Office Administrator
jmartemelendez@ymcanyc.org
x4712
Ashley Mendoza
Program Director at Eastern District
amendoza@ymcanyc.org
Dulce Fernandez
Beacon Director
dfernandez@ymcanyc.org
Board of Managers
Phyllis White-Thorn
Chair
Walter Campbell
Miguel Feliciano
Ivan Harper
Edolphus Towns
Suhana deLeon-Sanchez
Sylvia Stovall
History
Located in Brooklyn's diverse Cypress Hills neighborhood, the North Brooklyn YMCA was formed in the early 1990's by a merger of the Eastern District and Twelve Towns branches at the Twelve Towns location on 570 Jamaica Avenue. The Eastern District Branch, originally part of the Brooklyn and Queens Association, had a reputation for emphasizing the religious aspects of the Y's programs. Officially organized in 1889, the seeds of the Eastern District Branch were first planted the previous year when a group of 10 men met in the chapel of the Ross Street Church to propose the founding of a Young Men's Christian Association.
In the 1970's, the East Williamsburg neighborhood, home to the Eastern District Branch (located at 125 Humboldt Street), underwent a major demographic shift. By 1974, it was 40 percent Hispanic and 44 percent white, with a large population of Hasidic Jews. At the time, Williamsburg had high rates of unemployment and welfare, following major shifts in local industries. The branch residence had declining occupancy, and the neighborhood could no longer support the operation. These changes caused the branch to partner with the New York City Housing Authority, which provided the Eastern District with cost-free space in the Borinquen Center, in return for the YMCA's personnel and programs. Along with another program it ran for youth and seniors in the Jonathan Williams Houses Center, the Eastern District became a leader in the development of new community housing.
In the 1980s, YMCA youth programs focused largely on prevention of teenage crime and social problems. In 1985, the Eastern District YMCA began coordinating a multi-agency program to cope with a high rate of teen pregnancy in the community, and it showed excellent results in helping to avert pregnancies among participants. The North Brooklyn Branch also opened a school-based community center under the Police Department’s "Safe Streets, Safe City" program, in which the Prospect Park Y also participated.