Expert TV wall mounting for Brooklyn’s most transit-connected brownstone neighborhood — ~538 landmarked buildings, four architectural styles from 1845 to 1890, new luxury condos near Barclays Center, and 10 subway lines at Atlantic Terminal. Same-day service available.
Get a Free Quote Call (347) 934-8335Boerum Hill is one of Brooklyn’s great preservation success stories. Once called “North Gowanus” — a name so unflattering that in 1964, neighborhood activist Helen Buckler coined “Boerum Hill” to rebrand the area after the colonial Dutch farming family whose 17th-century holdings had covered the land. The strategy worked. The original Boerum Hill Historic District was designated in 1973, protecting approximately 250 rowhouses. In 2018, a 288-building extension more than doubled the landmarked territory — today roughly 538 buildings across Dean Street, Bergen Street, Wyckoff Street, Pacific Street, State Street, and stretches of Atlantic Avenue are protected.
These brownstones span four distinct architectural styles: Greek Revival (1840s–1850s, with heavy cornices and full-height parlor windows), Italianate (1850s–1870s, with bracketed cornices and arched windows), Neo-Grec (1870s–1880s, with incised stone ornament and angular details), and a rare row of Second Empire mansard-roofed houses on Bergen Street. Each era produced different plaster compositions, different mantel styles, and different wall thicknesses — which means different anchor types and drilling techniques for TV mounting. Add to this the new condos near Barclays Center and along 4th Avenue (metal stud framing), the Invisible Dog Art Center and artist lofts with exposed brick, and you have every wall type in Brooklyn within a few compact blocks.
We install all smart TV brands and connect all your devices — Apple TV, Roku, Fire Stick, PS5, Xbox, cable boxes, soundbars — and test everything before we leave. No monthly fees. No contracts. 1-year labor warranty on every flat screen TV installation.
Boerum Hill’s ~538 landmarked buildings span 45 years of construction (1845–1890). Greek Revival plaster on Dean and Pacific Streets is the oldest and most brittle. Italianate plaster on Bergen and Wyckoff is thicker with horsehair reinforcement. Neo-Grec buildings have incised stone ornament on the exterior and angular interior moldings. The Second Empire row on Bergen has mansard-influenced interior details. Each era requires different toggle bolt sizing, drill RPM, and clearance from decorative elements. Stud finders fail on all of them.
Atlantic Terminal at Boerum Hill’s northern edge is one of NYC’s busiest transit hubs — 2/3/4/5/B/D/N/Q/R subway lines plus LIRR. That’s 10 independent train lines generating continuous vibration in buildings on Atlantic Avenue, Pacific Street, Dean Street, and State Street. This is the most intense subway vibration environment in brownstone Brooklyn. Standard mounting hardware loosens within weeks. Vibration-resistant installation is mandatory.
The Boerum (19 stories, 128 condos at 110 Boerum Place), Bergen (by Mexico’s Taller Frida Escobedo, block-long on Bergen between 3rd and 4th), 100 Flatbush (all-electric sustainable skyscraper), and other new developments along 4th Avenue use metal stud framing. Standard lag bolts spin freely. Snap toggles and elephant anchors required. Most buildings require COI before contractors enter.
Greek Revival parlors on Dean Street have painted pine mantels with classical pilasters. Italianate brownstones on Bergen have white marble with carved garlands. Neo-Grec interiors have angular incised stone surrounds. Each responds differently to the proximity of masonry drilling above it. Above-fireplace TV mounting must be calibrated to the specific era and material.
Smith Street is Boerum Hill’s legendary restaurant corridor — dozens of restaurants, wine bars, and cafes occupying restored 19th-century storefronts. Atlantic Avenue adds the design district, Middle Eastern bakeries, and specialty shops. Professional commercial TV installation with ceiling mounts, multi-screen setups, outdoor TV installation for sidewalk dining. COI for commercial landlords.
The Invisible Dog Art Center on Bergen Street, Roulette, Issue Project Room, and numerous artist studios have converted commercial spaces with exposed brick, concrete ceilings, and industrial wall types. Masonry anchors, hammer drills, and surface raceways for cable management. Creative spaces need creative mounting solutions.
Flat against wall. Works on every Boerum Hill wall type — plaster, drywall, metal stud, brick.
15° tilt for above-fireplace in parlor floors with 10–11 foot ceilings. Glare reduction in new condos.
Extends, swivels. Corner TV mounting for Boerum Hill’s bay windows and L-shaped rooms.
For Smith Street restaurants, artist studios, and condos with limited wall area.
Art mode OLED. Disappears into the wall. Popular in Boerum Hill’s design-conscious brownstone renovations.
Pull-down or tilt. Heat deflector. Greek Revival pine, Italianate marble, Neo-Grec stone — each protected.
Frame, QLED, OLED
OLED evo, Gallery
Bravia XR, A95L
QM8, Roku TV
U8N, U7N
P-Series, M-Series
All models
Omni QLED, 4-Series
Add $75–$120.
From $350. Learn more →
Cat6. Learn more →
We install throughout Boerum Hill, from the brownstones along Dean Street, Bergen Street, Wyckoff Street, Pacific Street, State Street, and Bond Street to the new condos at The Boerum (110 Boerum Place), Bergen (Bergen between 3rd & 4th), and along 4th Avenue. We work on the commercial corridors of Smith Street, Court Street, and Atlantic Avenue.
We’ve mounted TVs near Atlantic Terminal (10 subway lines + LIRR), the New York Transit Museum on Schermerhorn Street, Barclays Center, the Invisible Dog Art Center, Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), and the Brooklyn Public Library Pacific Branch. Boerum Hill is served by the F/G at Bergen Street, A/C/G at Hoyt–Schermerhorn, and 2/3/4/5/B/D/N/Q/R at Atlantic Ave–Barclays Center.
Brownstone plaster (Greek Revival, Italianate, Neo-Grec): $215–$300 depending on era and cable concealment. Above-fireplace: $275+. Metal stud drywall in new condos (The Boerum, Bergen): $185 with snap toggles. Exposed brick in lofts: $250+. All include bracket, up to 3 device connections, cable management, and 1-year warranty. Call (347) 934-8335.
Boerum Hill has all three within a few blocks. Greek Revival (1840s–1850s, Dean and Pacific) has the oldest, most brittle plaster with minimal decoration — simple cornices and full-height windows. Italianate (1850s–1870s, Bergen and Wyckoff) has thicker, horsehair-reinforced plaster with bracketed cornices and arched window trim. Neo-Grec (1870s–1880s) has angular incised ornament and sharper interior profiles. We identify the era before drilling and adjust technique accordingly.
Atlantic Terminal brings 10 subway lines and LIRR to Boerum Hill’s northern edge — the most intense transit vibration in brownstone Brooklyn. Buildings on Atlantic Avenue, Pacific Street, and the northern blocks of Dean and State experience continuous micro-vibration from trains running every 2–3 minutes across multiple lines. Lock washers, Loctite thread-locking compound, and vibration-dampening rubber washers on all hardware. Fixed mounts only within 2 blocks of Atlantic Terminal — articulating arm pivot joints fail first under this level of sustained vibration.
Yes. The Boerum (19-story, 128 condos at 110 Boerum Place), Bergen (Frida Escobedo-designed, block-long), and 4th Avenue condos all use metal stud framing. Snap toggles rated for your TV’s weight. COI provided for building management. Freight elevator booked in advance. We’ve installed in every new Boerum Hill development.
Yes for brownstones and walk-ups. Call before noon. For managed condos requiring COI, we book 2–3 business days out. Evening and weekend appointments available. Same day TV installation Brooklyn.
Yes, with extra care. Greek Revival painted pine mantels (the oldest in Boerum Hill, 1840s–1850s) are softer than marble and can split from nearby drill vibration. We anchor into the brick chimney breast at least 6 inches above and behind the wood mantel, using rubber-padded drill stops to contain vibration. For functional fireplaces, heat deflector shelf and pull-down mount. For sealed fireplaces, standard tilt mount with masonry anchors.
Yes. The Invisible Dog Art Center on Bergen Street, Roulette, and numerous artist studios throughout Boerum Hill have converted commercial spaces with exposed brick, concrete ceilings, and mixed industrial surfaces. Masonry anchors for brick, Tapcon for concrete, surface raceways for cable management. We adapt to non-standard spaces. Commercial TV installation specialist.
Yes. Toggle bolts for plaster. Snap toggles for metal studs in new condos. Masonry anchors for brick in lofts. No studs for TV mounting is always solvable with the right anchor. Licensed TV installer NYC.
Not if done in the right place. Neo-Grec brownstones have angular, incised decorative details on interior trim — sharp geometric patterns cut into stone and plaster. These are the most visually striking but also the most fragile interior details in Boerum Hill. We identify clear zones at least 6 inches from any decorative element and drill at ultra-low RPM. The mount goes on flat wall, never near ornamental features.
Yes. Smith Street’s “Restaurant Row” and Atlantic Avenue’s design district and Middle Eastern bakeries need ceiling mounts, multi-screen setups, outdoor TV installation for sidewalk dining, and commercial-grade cable management. COI provided. We work around business hours. Smart TV installation for restaurants and retail.
Boerum Hill has a community garden “about every other block.” Some brownstone gardens back up to shared garden spaces. We offer outdoor TV installation for backyard and patio areas with weather-resistant mounting hardware — great for summer barbecues in one of Brooklyn’s most garden-rich neighborhoods.
Drywall: full in-wall wire concealment with recessed power outlet and low voltage plate ($75–$150). Plaster: color-matched surface raceways. Exposed brick in lofts: slim cable channels. Metal studs in new condos: in-wall routing works well. HDMI cable routing and surround sound wiring for complete entertainment setups.
We fix botched installs regularly. Common Boerum Hill problems: wrong anchors in plaster (TV bracket loose), lag bolts in metal studs (TV fell off wall), crooked mounts (TV mount not level), visible cables (wires showing). We remove failed hardware, patch damage, reinstall correctly. From $185.
TV dismount and remount from $185. Multi-TV at 10% off for 2+ TVs same visit — popular in Boerum Hill’s owner-occupied brownstones. We install recessed power outlet and low voltage wiring. Outdoor TV installation for Boerum Hill gardens. TV relocation across Brooklyn. NYC apartment rules handled. Affordable TV mounting NYC. TV setup complete.
Licensed, 190+ reviews, same-day. Professional TV installer NYC with historic district expertise. Call (347) 934-8335. TV wall mount installation. TV setup service.
Plaster: $215. Metal stud: $185. Brick: $250+. Fireplace: $275+. Best TV mounting service NYC. No hidden fees. Samsung TV installation service.
Metal stud snap toggles. The Boerum, Bergen condo, 4th Ave buildings. $185 standard. COI provided. TV installation NYC same day.
Greek Revival, Italianate, Neo-Grec mantels. Masonry anchors, mantel protection. Pull-down mount. Samsung Frame TV. Professional TV mounting service.
Four plaster eras, four failure modes: Greek Revival cracks differently than Italianate. Neo-Grec incised ornament shatters from vibration. Second Empire mansard-influenced interiors have non-standard mounting surfaces. One drill technique does not fit all in Boerum Hill.
Atlantic Terminal vibration: Standard hardware loosens within weeks near 10 subway lines. TV shifts, tilts, eventually falls.
Metal stud failure in new condos: Lag bolts in metal studs = TV fell off wall. Happening right now in The Boerum and 4th Avenue buildings.
TV too heavy for solo mounting: Boerum Hill brownstone stairs are steep and narrow. Carrying and mounting alone is dangerous.
538-building historic district experts: We know Greek Revival from Italianate from Neo-Grec from Second Empire. Every anchor type in vehicle.
Atlantic Terminal vibration specialists: Lock washers, Loctite, vibration-dampening hardware standard near the transit hub.
1-year warranty: Anything shifts, free return.
Licensed & insured: NYS #12000287431. COI for any building. Smart TV installation complete.
A 65-inch OLED in your Dean Street brownstone — the same block where Jonathan Lethem set The Fortress of Solitude. Samsung Frame in art mode between viewings. The Boerum Hill aesthetic: literate, understated, beautiful. Outdoor TV installation for garden patios too.
Boerum Hill’s legendary restaurant strip needs TVs that match the neighborhood’s refined-casual vibe. Clean commercial TV installation, hidden cables, ceiling mounts for converted 19th-century storefronts.
Parlor, bedroom, garden level, home office. 10% off multi-TV. Cat6 between floors for buffer-free streaming. The whole brownstone connected.
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| Service | Price | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Drywall / Metal Stud | $185 | Snap toggles, up to 65”, 3 devices |
| Brownstone Plaster | $215 | Toggle bolts, era-specific |
| Large TV (70”+) | $225 | 2-person |
| Exposed Brick / Loft | $250+ | Masonry, carbide |
| Above-Fireplace | $275+ | Mantel protection, heat, pull-down |
| Full-Motion | $225 | Swivel + tilt |
| Ceiling | $275+ | Structural assessment |
| Samsung Frame | $250 | Flush, One Connect |
| In-Wall Wires | $75–$150 | Drywall/metal stud only |
| Soundbar | $75–$120 | Below TV |
| Removal | $125 | Patch, sand |
| Multi-TV | 10% off | Same visit |
Under $500: full upfront. Over $500: 50% deposit. NYS #12000287431.
The Problem: Atlantic Terminal brings 2/3/4/5/B/D/N/Q/R subway lines plus LIRR to Boerum Hill’s northern edge — 10 independent train lines running through a single station complex. Trains pass every 2–3 minutes across the combined lines, generating continuous micro-vibration in buildings on Atlantic Avenue, Pacific Street, and the northern blocks of Dean and State Streets. This is more intense than the G train vibration in Greenpoint (one line, 8–12 minute intervals) or the BQE vibration in Brooklyn Heights (constant but lower amplitude). Standard mounting screws loosen within weeks.
Our Solution: Lock washers on every screw, Loctite thread-locking compound on all bolt threads, vibration-dampening rubber washers between bracket and wall. Fixed mounts only within 2 blocks of Atlantic Terminal — articulating arm pivot joints are the first point of failure. For buildings directly on Atlantic Avenue, we recommend annual re-torque checks. We’ve installed in dozens of Boerum Hill brownstones near Atlantic Terminal with zero vibration-related failures.
The Problem: Boerum Hill’s ~538 landmarked buildings span four distinct styles — Greek Revival (1840s–1850s), Italianate (1850s–1870s), Neo-Grec (1870s–1880s), and Second Empire (1880s) — each with different plaster compositions, wall thicknesses, and decorative elements. A handyman who knows how to drill in one era will damage walls in another. Greek Revival plaster is thin and brittle. Italianate is thicker with horsehair. Neo-Grec has angular incised ornament that shatters from vibration. Second Empire has mansard-influenced non-standard interior profiles.
Our Solution: We identify the architectural era before planning drill points. Greek Revival: ultra-gentle low-RPM, shallow toggle bolts. Italianate: standard toggles grip well in horsehair matrix. Neo-Grec: extra clearance from incised ornament (minimum 8 inches). Second Empire: adapted approach for non-standard profiles. All anchor types in vehicle. Every installation calibrated to the building’s specific era.
The Problem: The Boerum (19 stories at 110 Boerum Place), Bergen (Frida Escobedo-designed block-long building), 100 Flatbush, and other new developments along 4th Avenue use metal stud framing. Standard wood-stud lag bolts spin freely — zero grip. This is the #1 installation failure in Boerum Hill’s new buildings right now.
Our Solution: Snap toggles and elephant anchors designed for metal studs. A simple magnet test confirms metal studs before drilling. COI provided for building management. Freight elevator booked. No surprises.
The Problem: Greek Revival parlors have painted pine mantels with classical pilasters — soft wood that splits from drill vibration nearby. Italianate brownstones have white marble with carved garlands — hard but chips at edges. Neo-Grec interiors have angular incised stone or cast-iron surrounds — the most visually striking but most fragile under vibration. Each material responds differently to masonry drilling above it.
Our Solution: We identify the mantel material and era before any drill work. Protective masking for all surfaces. Minimum 4–6 inch clearance from any decorative element. Rubber-padded drill stops prevent vibration transfer. Pine mantels: extra caution for splitting. Marble: drill away from edge veining. Incised stone: minimum 8-inch clearance from patterns.
The Problem: Boerum Hill’s attached brownstones share thick brick party walls — 12+ inches of solid masonry — that block Wi-Fi between router location and TV. A smart TV in the parlor can’t stream reliably when the router is on another floor or in a different room behind a brick wall.
Our Solution: Cat6 Ethernet from router to a wall plate behind the TV. Hardwired, zero-buffer connection. We run cable through interior walls, closet risers, or along baseboards — hidden and permanent. Structured cabling →
The Problem: Boerum Hill brownstone staircases are 30–34 inches wide. A 75-inch TV won’t fit. Even 65-inch TVs struggle at tight landings.
Our Solution: Pre-measurement. Window hoisting through parlor-floor windows with padded rope and harness. Two technicians. Protective blankets. Zero damage in dozens of Boerum Hill hoists.
Wrong anchors — lag bolts in metal studs, drywall anchors in plaster. TV bracket loose. We remount correctly. Professional TV installation service.
TV mount not level or wires showing? Re-level, wire concealment. Best TV mounting service NYC.
Toggle bolts, snap toggles, masonry anchors. No studs = solvable. Licensed TV installer NYC.
TV too heavy? Two-person team. Smart TV installation 32”–86”. Insured.
TV dismount and remount from $185. TV relocation. Multi-TV 10% off. Residential and commercial.
Power outlet, low voltage, HDMI, surround sound, outdoor TV installation. NYC apartment rules. Affordable TV mounting NYC.