Instagram

Inquiring Photographer: Thoughts on Quality-of-Life Issues in & Around the Williamsbridge Oval in Norwood

 

SOMEONE APPARENTLY REMOVED a tire lock placed on a scofflaw vehicle and dumped it in the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood as seen Sunday, May 24, 2026.
Photo by David Greene

Editor’s Note: The following is an extended and updated version of the article that appears in our latest print edition.

This week, after some negative comments about quality-of-life issues in and around the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood, and in Norwood more broadly, were sent recently to the Office of Councilman Eric Dinowitz (C.D. 11), Bronx Community Board 7, and the Jerome Gun Hill BID from George Lunney of Norwood Residents Association, and others from another resident, Zahrah Ahasuerus, Norwood News asked other residents for their views on the situation.

 

Complaints highlighted to date in the Oval included broken tennis nets in the tennis courts, too much trash, and an apparent lack of citations for dog poop, while in other areas of Norwood, complaints related to noise, and reduced public parking spaces due to “motorcycles parking horizontally” on Perry Avenue between East 206th and East 207th Streets, and due to plants, Citibikes, ZIP car shares, and garbage containers.

SAGGING TENNIS NETS are seen in the Williamsbridge Oval tennis courts in Norwood on Friday, May 29, 2026.
Photo by Síle Moloney

Other complaints related to clogged catch basins in the Oval and the Oval Skate park, which frequently floods after heavy rain, and in Norwood more generally, dirty sidewalks, discarded e-scooters, and planters filled with trash on East Gun Hill Road, litter, and overflowing trash cans.

 

As previously reported, Webster Avenue in Norwood is frequently seen lined with piles of trash, especially along and adjacent to the Metro North train line.

A PERSON IS seen sitting on the tennis nets inside the Williamsbridge Oval tennis courts in Norwood on Friday, May 29, 2026.
Photo by Síle Moloney

On Monday, May 25, Norwood News photographed several dog poop piles in the dog park in the Oval while a putrid smell filled the air. A laundry basket was left abandoned along Reservoir Oval East on Sunday, May 24, and someone apparently removed a tire lock placed on a scofflaw vehicle and dumped it in the park the same day. We also photographed the broken steps, broken tennis nets on various days.

 

Daniela Beasley, executive director of the Jerome Gun Hill (JGH) Business Improvement District (BID), responded to Lunney on May 20 to say that the BID’s clean team is responsible for the sidewalk and tree pits but not the gutters, and neither can the clean team go on side streets or into residential areas of the BID corridor.

BROKEN TENNIS NETS are seen to the side of one of the tennis courts inside the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood on Friday evening, May 29, 2026.
Photo by Síle Moloney

Beasley said she would ask the clean team to focus their efforts more on Webster Avenue and Bainbridge, and added that the BID has brought up the local trash issues with the Sanitation department in the past, asking them to issue warnings/tickets to people sitting in their cars during Alternate Side Parking hours if they can’t access the affected areas.

 

Beasley added that the planters were to be serviced the week ending Friday, May 22, with new plants, and are tended to once a month by a vendor when trash is removed. She added that a graffiti removal service also takes care of graffiti in the area. She added that the Montefiore planters aren’t within the BID’s scope. Nonetheless, she offered to follow up with Montefiore once advised of specific affected sites.

BROKEN TENNIS NETS are seen in the Williamsbridge Oval Tennis Courts in Norwood on Friday, May 29, 2026.
Photo by Síle Moloney

Karla Cabrera Carrera, district manager for Bronx Community Board 7 (CB7) said on May 21 that the board does everything it can to address and escalate concerns raised by the nearly 147,000 residents in the district and mentioned that Norwood is the most active in terms of public safety and quality-of-life issues.

 

Cabrera Carrera confirmed that the City’s Sanitation enforcement team was due to walk through the blocks mentioned and issue summonses as needed. She added that Sanitation is not responsible for picking up e-scooters and that such complaints should be reported via 311 here.

A CLOGGED CATCH basin is seen recently in the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood.
Photo courtesy of George Lunney

She said dog waste or animal waste should be reported via 311 here and catch basin complaints via 311 here. The district manager went on to say that requests for litter baskets should be logged via 311 here, and added that any 311 complaints can be escalated to CB7 via email or text (including a picture of the issue) or to the councilman’s office.

 

For her part, Jenna Klaus from the councilman’s office followed up with Lunney by phone to address his concerns. Dinowitz had recently organized a clean-up in the park around Earth Day on Sunday, April 19, with local groups and volunteers, including Future of Mosholu Parkland (FOMP), who often organize clean-up events in and around the neighborhood, as had Friends of the Williamsbridge Oval in the past when the Friends group was more active. Norwood News has also carried out one or two clean-up sessions in the Oval.

NORWOOD RESIDENT KAMA Linden is disappointed with the apparent lack of response to her various quality-of-life complaints logged in the vicinity of Webster Avenue in Norwood, The Bronx.
Photo courtesy of Kama Linden

Meanwhile, Lunney said he founded the Norwood Residents Association around one month ago, adding that he has offered to provide funding to the Parks’ department to address some of the needed repairs (capital projects) in the park like the broken tennis nets, the cracked steps and more. He alleges, however, that City bureaucracy is such that even an offer of funding is seen as complicated to process by City officials. More to follow.

 

Norwood News has reached out to the Parks department for comment and are due to receive their feedback on this next week.

A CLEARED CATCH basin is seen in the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood on Monday, May 25, 2026. Local resident George Lunney had complained and shared photos with Norwood News of clogged catch basins in the park in the last week or so.  
Photo by Síle Moloney

Meanwhile, separately, NYC Parks is also asking residents to share their ideas about how to improve the Williamsbridge Oval Park, as well as their ideas on the reconstruction of the park. A virtual meeting will be held on Wednesday, June 3, at 6 p.m.

 

Register at nyc.gov/parks/input. Registration is required by June 3 at 5 p.m. For more information, contact Katerine Borrome at Katerine.Borrome@parks.nyc.gov or on (718) 430 1801. You can also visit nyc.gov/parks under the Capital Project Tracker section.

AN EXAMPLE OF some of the cracked steps in the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood, as seen on Monday, May 25, 2026, that have been the source of frustration to some residents.
Photo by Síle Moloney

Another Norwood resident, Kama Linden, also raised concerns with what she described as the “ongoing situation” at 3187 Webster Avenue. On May 27, she said, “The bodega is the site of not just loud, [but] 76 decibel loud, parties. My left ear is still hurting from last night.”

 

She continued, “311 is a joke. It is possible that the police did actually respond last night, but I am not sure if they got there to hear the music. My decibel reader showed 71, then 76 decibels. This has been going on for 10 years.”

311 COMPLAINTS LOGGED in respect of the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood since Jan. 1, 2026. Part 1
Image courtesy of 311

Linden added in part, “Mostly the same people. There is the horrible woman who screams and laughs like a hyena. Now that there are Citibikes, people hang out on those.”

She said music was sometimes blasting out of a car, van, or portable speaker.

311 COMPLAINTS LOGGED in respect of the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood since Jan. 1, 2026. Part 2
Image courtesy of 311

Linden continued, “The groups will usually be on this corner, but in order to avoid police detection, they will sometimes sit closer to the apt building right next to it on 205th under the awning. Last night was particularly bad. Only Evan from [Assemblyman] John Zacarro’s (A.D. 80) office and Emma from Eric Dinowitz’s office care and try to help.”

 

311 COMPLAINTS LOGGED in respect of the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood since Jan. 1, 2026. Part 3 
Image courtesy of 311

Linden said she had difficulty knowing who to reach out to at the 52nd Precinct. Norwood News shared the contact information for NYPD Det. Stephen Echevarria of the 52nd Precinct’s Community Affairs team with her and she confirmed that she has since spoken with him.

Linden also shared other noise-related concerns which Norwood News is following up on and will report on at a later point since we need to first request comment from those involved. More to follow.

BEDFORD MOSHOLU COMMUNITY Association members and other volunteers take a breather after they conclude a clean up of Mosholu Parkway on Saturday, May 9, 2026. Photo by Síle Moloney  
Photo by Síle Moloney

In terms of safety in the park, after 14-year-old Ángel Miguel Mendoza Hernández was tragically and fatally stabbed in the Oval on Aug. 5, 2025, followed by some rapes, amid grave concern raised by residents, State Sen. Gustavo Rivera (S.D. 33) announced on Dec. 16, 2025, that 20 cameras had been installed all around the Oval recreation center.

 

A BROKEN LIGHT pole apparently fell down and was removed from the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood but the base was left with loose wires sticking out of the ground as seen in this undated photo taken by resident George Lunney. “Even if power is off, it should be properly sealed,” Lunney said. “It is located outside [the] tennis court entrance closest to the [rec] center.” 
Photo courtesy of George Lunney

Meanwhile, other “Argus” cameras funded by Councilman Eric Dinowitz (C.D. 11) and Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson, have also been installed outside the entrance to the Oval park on Van Cortlandt Avenue as well as inside the park near the basketball courts.

 

SOME OF THE several piles of dog poop seen in the dog park in the Williamsbridge Oval park in Norwood on Monday, May 25, 2026.
Photo by Síle Moloney

Residents had also requested more police and Parks Enforcement Patrol (PEP) presence in the Oval both before and following Ángel’s death.

NYC Parks staff have been seen in the Oval on different occasions, including on April 4, a day after it was reported that a teenage girl had been stomped on by a group of youths in front of the rec center, the same general area where Angel was killed, though some have stated that they are not a constant presence.

AN NYC PARKS vehicle is seen in the Williamsbridge Oval in Norwood on April 4, 2026, a day after a teenage girl was stomped on by a group of teens. 
Photo by Síle Moloney

Meanwhile, Lunney followed up on his initial complaints regarding the Oval on Friday, May 29, and has raised some additional complaints in respect, including some relating to people riding motorcycles and mopeds in the park. More to follow.

AN NYC PARKS vehicle is seen in the Williamsbridge Oval in Norwood on April 4, 2026, a day after a teenage girl was stomped on by a group of teens. 
Photo by Síle Moloney

Norwood News has reported on the issue of electronic bike racing in the Oval in the past, once notably and seemingly to intimidate those who were holding a healing circle event for local youth outside the rec center, following Angel’s death.

An overview of 311 complaints logged in respect of the Williamsbridge Oval since the beginning of the year is attached in three sections.

A LAUNDRY BASKET was left abandoned at the foot of the Williamsbridge Oval Park along Reservoir Oval East in Norwood on Sunday, May 24, 2026.
Photo by David Greene

Elsewhere in nearby Bedford Park on Risse Street, close to Jerome Avenue and Mosholu Parkway, resident Shannon Lee Gilstad Sucre recently queried why there are so many cars with non-New York State registration plates parked on this street. While it is not illegal, Norwood News counted 18 such cars parked on the street on Monday, May 25, and reached out to the NYPD to see if they had any information on the situation.

 

We received the following response from Echevarria. “We will look into it but if the cars are parked legally not much can be done,” he said. “We don’t have local laws stopping out of state residents from parking in on public streets like in other cities.”

AFTER A RESIDENT complained about seeing various out-of-state cars parked along Risse Street in the Bedford Park section of The Bronx in recent weeks, Norwood News counted 18 such cars parked on the street on Monday, May 25, 2026, including this one. We have obscured the reg in the photo. 
Photo by Síle Moloney

Elsewhere, in Bedford Park, Bedford Mosholu Community Association (BMCA) carried out a clean-up event of Mosholu Parkway on Saturday, May 9, one of many the group often organizes in the neighborhood.

 

They were joined by Sirio Guerino of Guerinos against Graffitti* and other volunteers and collected several large bags of trash which were later seen piled together on Webster Avenue, ready to be collected.

ANDY COX, NORWOOD 
Photo by David Greene

“You cannot come here at night to take a jog, that’s for sure. It’s not too safe. I didn’t even know they just put cameras here. I didn’t even know that. I see garbage, yes. I don’t know if this is a part of the upcoming Zoom, but they should have more entertainment here in the summertime. There is also a rat problem. Otherwise, everything else is fine because it looks like it’s improving.”

Andy Cox,

Norwood

Photo by David Greene

CHUY TELLO, YANKEE STADIUM via Norwood 
Photo by David Greene

“Oval Park is fine how it is, but it’s just people who just don’t respect the park as much as they should, and they just do whatever and they cause trouble and stuff. The park has a bad reputation about how it is now; that’s the only problem. They should just respect the Oval, how it used to be, because everybody used to come here. I kind of grew up here. My grandmother used to take me here to the playground. I see they have installed new cameras, which is good, but before there used to be problems. I got robbed here too at night; that’s how bad it really was. It’s a little bit better now, but once the kids are here, they still create problems, like the incident that happened with the kid who got stabbed over there. It was very unfortunate. The police come once in a while, but they’re not really here much.”

Chuy Tello,

Yankee Stadium via Norwood

ANTHONY RIVIECCIO, BEDFORD Park 
Photo courtesy of Anthony Rivieccio

“While I know there is a new effort to recreate the ‘Friends of Williamsbridge Oval’ to hopefully address these problems, long term and short term, all elements of our city agencies, from City, State, federal, even community boards, have not put together any organizational plan. If you look closely, it’s because they are new themselves. Thus, the [problems] you speak of. Today, the Park is a disaster in many ways. When you have people in charge that are newer than the next building going up, you will have destruction, from the trash to multiple homicides.”

Anthony Rivieccio,

Bedford Park

TONY APOSTOLOS, BEDFORD Park 
Photo by David Greene

“I walk in the tunnel there and I notice it’s not a clean park, but the garbage is coming from, I hate to tell you, from people who are from outside the neighborhood. Not only that, but it’s also a lot of immigrants who play soccer there. I know the people bring food and they sit there on the benches, and I can see that people leave their junk all over.”

Tony Apostolos,

Bedford Park

CHRIS PERKINS, NORWOOD 
Photo by David Greene

“The huge pile of garbage at the entrance at Holt Place is not ideal, but I guess that is where it is picked up. I no longer consider the tunnel at Bainbridge Avenue and Van Cortlandt (Avenue) ‘the pee tunnel,’ as we did back in the day. The restrooms are open during the day now. By and large, I use and appreciate the Oval as a valuable neighborhood resource. I did feel a slight concern when cutting through the park one night recently. Not that it has gotten worse, but I’m not young and invincible anymore.”

Chris Perkins,

Norwood

 

 

Welcome to the Norwood News, a bi-weekly community newspaper that primarily serves the northwest Bronx communities of Norwood, Bedford Park, Fordham and University Heights. Through our Breaking Bronx blog, we focus on news and information for those neighborhoods, but aim to cover as much Bronx-related news as possible. Founded in 1988 by Mosholu Preservation Corporation, a not-for-profit affiliate of Montefiore Medical Center, the Norwood News began as a monthly and grew to a bi-weekly in 1994. In September 2003 the paper expanded to cover University Heights and now covers all the neighborhoods of Community District 7. The Norwood News exists to foster communication among citizens and organizations and to be a tool for neighborhood development efforts. The Norwood News runs the Bronx Youth Journalism Heard, a journalism training program for Bronx high school students. As you navigate this website, please let us know if you discover any glitches or if you have any suggestions. We’d love to hear from you. You can send e-mails to norwoodnews@norwoodnews.org or call us anytime (718) 324-4998.

Like this story? Leave your comments below.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.