NEW YORK — A makeshift aquarium that popped up this summer in a puddle beneath a leaky fire hydrant has been paved over, to the dismay of neighbors who turned the area into a hangout spot and goldfish shrine.
The city's Department of Environmental Protection has long said the dribbling hydrant created a safety hazard. Workers filled the earthen area that formerly held the puddle Friday morning, and yellow tape cordoned off a patch of freshly poured concrete around the repaired hydrant, leaving it looking like the city's smallest-ever crime scene.
''Oh my God,'' said Sofia Talavera, her hands raised to her head as she looked at the spot. ''People actually took their time and their money to make it beautiful. This was literally the community coming together.''
The so-called Bed-Stuy Aquarium, named after the surrounding Brooklyn neighborhood of Bedford-Stuyvesant, was formed when the leaky hydrant carved out the shallow pool next to a tree bed on a residential street and residents filled it with store-bought goldfish.
The pond was controversial from the start. Some of the fish were ''rescued'' over the summer by people concerned about their welfare. That angered others, who said the fish were fine, restocked the pool and set up a watch.
After media attention and some donations, organizers kept building out the site, adding signage, decorations and seating. A bootleg sign designed to look like an official Parks Department plaque read ''BEDSTUY AQUARIUM,'' and a telephone pole was painted with palm-size goldfish surrounded in blue.
The pond was easy for tourists to find after it became searchable on Google Maps. Two visitors from California who came to the site Friday morning said they had planned to send a picture to friends in Los Angeles who were obsessed from afar.
''Now we have to break the news,'' said Adam Aguilar, a visual artist. His friend laid a bouquet of flowers next to two flickering candles at an impromptu memorial site.