Expert TV wall mounting for Brooklyn’s waterfront ridge — Victorian mansions, limestone rowhouses, pre-war co-ops with harbor views, detached homes on the glacial bluff, and three bustling commercial corridors. Verrazzano Bridge neighborhood. Same-day service.
Get a Free Quote Call (347) 934-8335Fiske Terrace is central Brooklyn’s stable, tree-lined residential neighborhood — part of the historic Town of Flatbush (one of Brooklyn’s six original Dutch towns, founded 1652). The name references the original mid-wood or middle forest that covered the area before Dutch settlement. Today, Fiske Terrace blends detached Victorian and Colonial Revival homes in the “Victorian Flatbush” section (particularly on East 17th through 19th Streets near the Ditmas Park border) with brick rowhouses on the cross streets, pre-war apartment buildings along Ocean Avenue, Kings Highway, and Avenue J, and newer condo construction.
Fiske Terrace has a large Orthodox Jewish community — home to Brooklyn College (CUNY, founded 1930), Yeshiva University High School for Boys, Torah Vodaas, and numerous synagogues. Avenue J and Avenue M are bustling kosher shopping corridors. Kings Highway is a major commercial strip with diverse retail. The B/Q trains serve the eastern edge on the Brighton Line, while the F train runs along McDonald Avenue on the western edge. Housing types span every era from 1890s Victorian to 2020s condo — each needing different mounting technique.
We install all smart TV brands and connect all your devices. 1-year labor warranty on every flat screen TV installation.
Fiske Terrace’s northern section — bordering Ditmas Park — has freestanding Victorian and Colonial Revival homes with wood-frame construction, plaster-over-lath walls, original fireplaces, and wrap-around porches. Non-standard 24” stud spacing common. Lag bolts into confirmed studs. Toggle bolts through plaster. Multi-room installations popular in these grand homes.
Fiske Terrace’s cross streets are filled with brick and brownstone rowhouses from the 1920s–1940s — plaster-over-lath walls, decorative cornices, high stoops. Toggle bolts, magnetic stud finders. Same construction era as Kensington and Borough Park.
Six-story pre-war apartment buildings line Ocean Avenue, Kings Highway, and Avenue J with thick plaster walls and concrete party walls. Many require COI. Toggle bolts for plaster, Tapcon for concrete.
Avenue J and Avenue M are kosher shopping corridors. Kings Highway is a major mixed-use commercial strip. Restaurants, bakeries, Judaica shops, and retail need professional commercial TV installation with ceiling mounts, multi-screen. Sabbath-aware scheduling. COI provided.
Brooklyn College (Campus Road and Flatbush Avenue) anchors Fiske Terrace’s southeastern corner. Student apartments and faculty homes in the surrounding blocks need affordable, reliable TV installation. Standard drywall in newer rentals. Plaster in pre-war buildings.
New condo developments throughout Fiske Terrace use metal stud framing with drywall. Standard lag bolts spin freely. Snap toggles and elephant anchors required. COI for building management.
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. Surround sound wiring for home theaters.
From $350. Learn more →
Cat6 between floors. Learn more →
We install throughout Fiske Terrace, from the Victorian homes near the Ditmas Park border to the rowhouses on the numbered streets, the apartments on Ocean Avenue, Kings Highway, and Avenue J, and commercial spaces on Avenue J, Avenue M, Kings Highway, and Flatbush Avenue.
We’ve mounted TVs near Brooklyn College (CUNY), Yeshiva Torah Vodaas, Kings Highway commercial strip, and throughout the residential blocks. Served by the B/Q at Avenue J, Avenue M, Kings Highway, Avenue U and the F at Avenue N, Bay Parkway, Kings Highway.
Standard drywall in modern homes: $185. Plaster in pre-war homes and co-ops: $215. Pre-war co-op concrete: $250+. Basement concrete/block: $250+. Above-fireplace in Victorian or Tudor mansions: $275+. Multi-TV: 10% off 2+ TVs same visit. Outdoor waterfront: $250+ with stainless hardware. All include bracket, up to 3 device connections, cable management, and 1-year warranty. Call (347) 934-8335.
Fiske Terrace has the widest variety of wall types in southwest Brooklyn. Victorian mansions on Colonial Road and Shore Road: original plaster with decorative ceilings. Pre-war co-ops on Ridge Boulevard: thick plaster and concrete party walls. Limestone rowhouses on Ovington and Fiske Terrace Parkway: masonry-backed plaster. Tudor homes: plaster over wood frame with stucco exterior. Brick two-family homes: plaster or renovated drywall. Finished basements: poured concrete or cinder block. Each needs different anchors. We carry all types.
Yes. The pre-war buildings along Ridge Boulevard, Shore Road, and 4th Avenue have plaster walls, concrete party walls, and strict building management protocols. Most require COI before contractors enter. We provide COI at no charge, coordinate with management, and carry hardware for both plaster and concrete surfaces. NYS License #12000287431 satisfies all credential requirements.
Yes for single-family homes and walk-ups. Call before noon. For co-ops requiring COI, we typically book 2–3 business days out. Evening and weekend appointments available.
Homes and apartments facing the Narrows — Shore Road, Narrows Avenue, the Belt Parkway side — are exposed to harbor salt air that corrodes standard steel hardware within 12–18 months. We use stainless steel or galvanized mounting hardware for all waterfront installations. Outdoor TV installations on balconies and patios facing the harbor get marine-grade fasteners rated for coastal environments.
Yes. Fiske Terrace’s ridge-top mansions on Colonial Road, Shore Road, and 80th–83rd Streets often have 3–5 fireplaces per home — parlor, dining room, bedrooms. Each requires individual masonry assessment. We anchor into the brick chimney breast, never into the decorative surround. Heat deflector for functional fireplaces. Pull-down mount for optimal viewing angle. Mantel protection with masking tape and dust control.
Yes. Fiske Terrace’s detached homes and large Victorian residences often want 4–6 TVs: living room, den, bedrooms, basement rec room, outdoor patio or balcony. 10% off for 2+ TVs same visit. Cat6 wiring between floors for shared streaming. Surround sound for the home theater. One team, one day.
Yes. 3rd Avenue is Fiske Terrace’s restaurant and nightlife corridor — bars, restaurants, boutiques, the annual Ragamuffin Parade and Third Avenue Festival. 5th Avenue has its own BID with shops and restaurants. 86th Street is the shared commercial corridor with Fiske Terrace. All three need ceiling mounts, multi-screen setups, outdoor TV installation for sidewalk dining. COI provided. We work around business hours.
Yes. Fiske Terrace’s limestone-fronted rowhouses on Ovington Avenue, Fiske Terrace Parkway, and throughout the residential blocks have masonry-backed plaster that’s denser and harder than wood-frame plaster. Toggle bolts grip well in this matrix. We use magnetic stud finders rather than electronic ones. Controlled low-RPM drilling prevents cracking along lath lines.
Yes. Toggle bolts for plaster without studs. Masonry anchors for concrete in co-ops and basements. Standard anchors for drywall on wood studs. No studs for TV mounting is solvable with the right anchor type. Licensed TV installer NYC.
The R serves Fiske Terrace with stations at Fiske Terrace Avenue, 77th Street, 86th Street, and 95th Street (terminal). Buildings within 2 blocks of any station experience micro-vibration. Lock washers, Loctite, vibration-dampening rubber washers standard near all stations. Fixed mounts recommended near the transit corridor.
Drywall: full in-wall wire concealment with recessed power outlet and low voltage plate ($75–$150). Plaster: color-matched surface raceways. Brick/concrete: slim cable channels. HDMI cable routing and surround sound wiring for complete entertainment setups. We deliver the cleanest possible finish on every Fiske Terrace wall type.
We fix botched installs regularly in Fiske Terrace. Common problems: wrong anchors in pre-war plaster (TV bracket loose), undersized hardware in co-op concrete (TV fell off wall), crooked mounts (TV mount not level), visible cable mess (wires showing). We remove failed hardware, patch damage, reinstall correctly. From $185.
TV dismount and remount from $185. Outdoor TV installation for Shore Road balconies, harbor-view patios, and backyard entertaining with marine-grade hardware. Multi-TV at 10% off. TV relocation across Brooklyn. Smart TV installation complete. NYC apartment rules handled. Affordable TV mounting NYC.
Licensed, 190+ reviews, same-day for houses. Co-op COI specialists. Professional TV installer NYC. Call (347) 934-8335. TV wall mount installation. TV setup service.
Stainless hardware for salt air. Drywall: $185. Plaster: $215. Outdoor: $250+. Best TV mounting service NYC. Samsung TV installation service.
Commercial and residential. Ceiling mounts, outdoor, multi-screen. Licensed TV installer NYC. TV installation NYC same day.
Multiple fireplaces, plaster walls, decorative ceilings. Masonry anchors, preservation technique. Professional TV mounting service.
Victorian plaster: Fiske Terrace’s ridge-top mansions have plaster that’s 100+ years old with decorative ceilings. Improper drilling cracks irreplaceable plaster and ornamental detail. Repair: $500–$2,000.
Co-op concrete failure: Pre-war co-ops on Ridge Boulevard have concrete party walls. Standard drills and anchors fail. TV fell off wall.
Salt air corrosion: Standard steel hardware corrodes near the waterfront. Rusty bolts weaken under TV weight. TV bracket loose within a year.
No COI, no entry: Pre-war co-ops deny uninsured contractors. TV too heavy to carry back home alone.
Every Fiske Terrace wall type: Victorian plaster, limestone masonry, co-op concrete, drywall, stucco, brick. All hardware in vehicle.
Waterfront specialists: Stainless steel, galvanized, marine-grade outdoor hardware.
1-year warranty: Anything shifts, free return.
Licensed & insured: NYS #12000287431. COI for any co-op. Smart TV installation complete.
A 75-inch OLED above the Victorian mantel in your Colonial Road mansion, with Verrazzano Bridge views from the parlor window. Samsung Frame in art mode between viewings. The Fiske Terrace standard: excellence with a harbor breeze. Outdoor TV installation for harbor-view balconies too.
Fiske Terrace’s nightlife corridor needs TVs for game nights, live events, and dining entertainment. Clean commercial TV installation matching the neighborhood’s polished-casual aesthetic. Outdoor TV installation for sidewalk dining.
Living room, den, bedrooms, basement, patio. 10% off multi-TV. Cat6 between floors. Surround sound. The whole Fiske Terrace home connected for the whole family.
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| Service | Price | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Drywall | $185 | Up to 65”, fixed/tilt, 3 devices |
| Pre-War Plaster | $215 | Toggle bolts, masonry-backed |
| Large TV (70”+) | $225 | 2-person |
| Co-op Concrete / Basement | $250+ | Hammer drill, Tapcon |
| Outdoor / Waterfront | $250+ | Marine-grade stainless |
| Above-Fireplace | $275+ | Masonry, heat, pull-down |
| Full-Motion | $225 | Swivel + tilt, corner mount |
| Ceiling Mount | $275+ | Structural assessment |
| Samsung Frame | $250 | Flush, One Connect |
| In-Wall Wires | $75–$150 | Drywall only |
| Soundbar | $75–$120 | Below TV |
| Multi-TV | 10% off | Same visit |
Under $500: full upfront. Over $500: 50% deposit. NYS #12000287431.
The Problem: Fiske Terrace has Victorian homes (1890s), American Foursquare (1900s), brick rowhouses (1920s–1940s), Art Deco co-ops (1930s), and post-war elevator towers (1950s–1960s) — five distinct construction eras with five different wall types within a few blocks. A handyman who knows one era will use the wrong technique on another.
Our Solution: We identify the building era from exterior style before entering, then test interior walls. Victorian plaster: toggle bolts, low RPM. Rowhouse plaster: standard toggle technique. Art Deco co-op plaster/concrete: toggle + Tapcon. Post-war metal stud: snap toggles. All anchor types in vehicle.
The Problem: The F/G Culver Line transitions from underground to elevated at the Culver Ramp in Fiske Terrace. Buildings near the underground stations (Fort Hamilton Pkwy, Church Ave) experience moderate vibration dampened by earth. Buildings near the elevated stations (Ditmas Ave, 18th Ave) experience stronger vibration amplified by the steel structure.
Our Solution: We calibrate hardware to station type. Near underground stations: standard vibration-dampening. Near elevated stations: lock washers, Loctite, fixed mounts only within 2 blocks. The transition zone near the Culver Ramp needs the elevated-station treatment.
The Problem: Fiske Terrace’s detached Victorian and American Foursquare homes have 100+ year old plaster-over-wood-lath walls with non-standard stud spacing (often 24”). Stud finders give unreliable readings. Decorative elements need clearance.
Our Solution: Electronic + magnetic stud finders together. Lag bolts into confirmed studs. Toggle bolts where studs aren’t at the right location. Ultra-low-RPM near decorative plaster.
The Problem: Ocean Parkway’s pre-war co-ops have plaster walls and concrete party walls. Many require COI, doorman coordination, and advance scheduling.
Our Solution: COI at no charge. NYS License #12000287431. Toggle bolts for plaster, Tapcon for concrete. Surface raceways on concrete walls.
The Problem: Ocean Parkway co-ops have thick concrete party walls between units. Wi-Fi can’t penetrate. Smart TVs buffer, devices disconnect.
Our Solution: Cat6 Ethernet from router to TV wall plate. Hardwired, zero-buffer connection. Structured cabling →
The Problem: Fiske Terrace’s four commercial corridors each serve different communities — Bengali cafés on Church Ave, Pakistani restaurants near McDonald, kosher shops near Ocean Parkway, and mixed retail on Coney Island Ave. Each needs different installation approaches for their specific space types.
Our Solution: We adapt to each corridor. Ceiling mounts for narrow storefronts. Multi-screen for restaurants. Outdoor for sidewalk dining. COI for all commercial landlords.
Wrong anchors in plaster or concrete. TV bracket loose. We remount correctly. Professional TV installation service.
TV mount not level or wires showing? Re-level, wire concealment, raceways. Best TV mounting service NYC.
Toggle bolts, masonry anchors, snap toggles. 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. Outdoor seasonal moves. Multi-TV 10% off. Residential and commercial.
Power outlet, low voltage, HDMI, surround sound, outdoor TV installation. NYC apartment rules. Affordable TV mounting NYC.