Expert TV wall mounting for southwest Brooklyn's quiet coastal grid — semi-attached brick rowhouses, mother-daughter two-family homes, four-story walk-up co-ops along Bath Avenue and Benson Avenue, and the multilingual commercial strips under the elevated D train on 86th Street. Same-day service.
Get a Free Quote Call (347) 934-8335Bath Beach sits on the southwestern edge of Brooklyn along Gravesend Bay, bounded by 86th Street to the north, 14th Avenue and Dyker Beach Park to the west, and Stillwell Avenue and Gravesend to the east. Once a 19th-century luxury summer beach resort named after the English spa town of Bath, the neighborhood's sand was paved over in the 1940s to build the Belt Parkway. What remained is a compact residential grid of semi-attached one and two-family brick homes, mother-daughter houses with separate entrances, mid-rise pre-war and post-war co-ops, and a handful of surviving Victorians now converted to multi-family.
The commercial spine runs along 86th Street beneath the elevated BMT West End Line (D train), where Chinese groceries spill over from Bensonhurst's Chinatown, Uzbek bakeries sit next to Italian delis like Tommaso Ristorante, and the Caesar's Bay Shopping Center at the foot of Bay Parkway anchors big-box retail with Target, Kohl's, and Jmart, one of the largest Asian supermarkets in New York. The neighborhood is 41% Asian and 40% White — a working-class mix of Chinese, Russian, Uzbek, Italian, and Central Asian families where you'll hear Mandarin, Cantonese, Russian, and Uzbek spoken on the same block.
We install all smart TV brands and connect all your devices. 1-year labor warranty on every flat screen TV installation.
Bath Beach's defining housing type — what locals call fraternal twin houses or semi-detached. Shared party walls are solid brick, front and rear walls are often brick veneer over wood frame. Each wall behaves differently. We test before drilling: solid party wall takes a hammer drill and Tapcon; veneer wall needs toggle bolts set through the veneer into studs.
Widely popular with multigenerational Chinese, Russian, and Uzbek families. Separate entrances, separate kitchens, often a finished basement unit. Typical ask: mount a TV upstairs AND downstairs same visit. 10% multi-TV discount, Cat6 drops between units if Wi-Fi won't reach through concrete slab.
The Bath Beach co-ops along Bath Avenue, Benson Avenue, and Cropsey Avenue are mostly converted rental walk-ups. Plaster walls, concrete party walls, no elevator, strict building boards. COI required. Toggle bolts for plaster, Tapcon for concrete.
The BMT West End Line runs elevated directly over 86th Street with stations at 18th Avenue, 20th Avenue, Bay Parkway (22nd Ave), 25th Avenue, and Bay 50th Street. Buildings within 1-2 blocks of the structure experience constant micro-vibration every few minutes. Lock washers, Loctite, and vibration-dampening rubber washers standard near the corridor.
Homes along Cropsey Avenue, the Shore Parkway Promenade, Bath Beach Park, and the Caesar's Bay end face Gravesend Bay with clear views toward Staten Island and the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. Standard zinc-plated hardware corrodes inside 12-18 months. Marine-grade 316 stainless or galvanized hardware for any install within 4 blocks of water.
A handful of original late-1800s Victorian resort cottages remain, most converted into multi-family. Frame construction — wood sheathing, plaster over lath, sometimes vinyl siding applied later — is also common on older blocks. Stud-based anchoring, no masonry required. Often the simplest and fastest install type in the neighborhood.
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 to any Bath Beach TV install. Surround sound wiring for multi-room homes.
From $350 per camera with same-visit install. Learn more →
Cat6 drops between floors in mother-daughter homes. Learn more →
We install throughout Bath Beach — from the semi-attached brick rowhouses on the Bay numbered streets (Bay 7th through Bay 54th), to the Bath Avenue and Benson Avenue walk-up co-ops, to the mother-daughter homes on the two-way numbered avenues (14th, 17th, 18th, 20th, 21st, 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, and 28th Avenues). Four thoroughfares run southeast-northwest parallel to the shore: Cropsey Avenue, Bath Avenue, Benson Avenue, and 86th Street.
We've mounted TVs near Bath Beach Park, Bensonhurst Park at Cropsey and Bay Parkway, the Ulmer Park Library on Bath Avenue, Scarangella Playground, Calvert Vaux Park, and along the stretch of 86th Street that Tony Manero walked in the opening of Saturday Night Fever. Served by the D train and express buses including the X28 and X38 to Manhattan.
Drywall in modern apartments: $185. Plaster in pre-war Bath Avenue and Benson Avenue co-ops: $215. Solid brick party wall in semi-attached homes: $235. Basement concrete in 1-family homes: $250+. Above-fireplace in surviving Victorians: $275+. Multi-TV (mother-daughter homes): 10% off 2+ TVs same visit. Outdoor waterfront near Shore Parkway Promenade: $250+ with stainless hardware. All include bracket, up to 3 device connections, cable management, and 1-year warranty. Call (347) 934-8335.
Bath Beach has five distinct wall types depending on the block and era. Semi-attached brick rowhouses: solid brick on the party wall, brick veneer over wood frame on front and rear. Mother-daughter 1970s–1990s brick: often concrete block under the brick. Pre-war walk-up co-ops on Bath Avenue: plaster over lath, concrete party walls. Converted Victorians: plaster over lath over wood frame. Modern condos and new construction (limited): drywall on metal studs. We carry anchors for all five.
Yes. The co-ops along Bath Avenue, Benson Avenue, and Cropsey Avenue were converted from rental walk-ups in the 1980s–1990s. One-bedrooms run $250,000–$325,000, renovated two-bedrooms around $400,000. Building boards generally require COI before any contractor enters. We provide COI at no charge, coordinate with the super, and carry hardware for plaster, concrete party walls, and occasional exposed brick. Walk-up means no freight elevator, so we bring a two-person crew for any TV 70 inches or larger.
Yes. Bath Beach's defining housing type is the semi-attached brick 1- or 2-family home — fraternal twin houses that share one party wall. The party wall is solid brick, which needs an SDS-Plus hammer drill and Tapcon masonry screws. Front and rear walls are often brick veneer over wood stud framing: a toggle bolt through the veneer into the stud cavity holds securely. We test each wall before drilling with a masonry bit to feel for depth before committing.
Yes, and this is one of our most common Bath Beach jobs. Multigenerational Chinese, Russian, Uzbek, and Italian families sharing one home with separate entrances upstairs and downstairs typically want at least one TV per unit, often two (living area and main bedroom). Same-visit install, 10% off for 2+ TVs. If Wi-Fi won't reach through the concrete floor slab between units, we drop a Cat6 run from the router to both floors for hardwired streaming.
Constantly. Bath Beach is among Brooklyn's most multilingual neighborhoods — 41% Asian and 40% White, with Chinese, Russian, Uzbek, Pakistani, and Georgian populations heavily represented. We speak plainly, confirm anchor placement by pointing before drilling, and text the finished mount photo for approval before leaving. We've done hundreds of installs along 86th Street, Bath Avenue, and Bay Parkway in households where English was a second or third language.
The elevated BMT West End Line runs over 86th Street with stations at 18th Avenue, 20th Avenue, Bay Parkway (22nd Avenue), 25th Avenue, and Bay 50th Street. The D runs local at all times with limited rush-hour W and R service terminating at Bay Parkway. Buildings within 1–2 blocks of the elevated structure feel vibration every 5–10 minutes. Standard mounts loosen over 12–18 months. We use lock washers, Loctite thread locker, and vibration-dampening rubber washers on every install within that corridor. Fixed or tilt mounts recommended over full-motion near the structure.
Yes. Properties along Cropsey Avenue, the Shore Parkway Promenade, and the Bay Parkway shorefront face Gravesend Bay with open views toward Staten Island and the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. The salt-laden air corrodes standard zinc-plated mounting hardware within 12–18 months. For any install within 4 blocks of the water we use 316 marine-grade stainless steel or galvanized fasteners, and for outdoor balcony TVs we use weatherproof mounts rated for coastal exposure.
Yes. 86th Street under the elevated D is the main commercial strip — Chinese groceries and pharmacies near the Bensonhurst border, Italian delis and Tommaso Ristorante, multilingual mobile phone stores, nail salons. Bath Avenue has a dense cluster of Uzbek, Pakistani, and Georgian restaurants. Caesar's Bay Shopping Center (Target, Kohl's, Jmart) has large commercial tenants. We do ceiling mounts, multi-screen video walls for restaurants and salons, outdoor TV installations for sidewalk dining. COI provided. We work around business hours.
Yes. The few surviving pre-1910 Victorian cottages in Bath Beach — mostly converted to 2- or 3-family — typically have one or two working fireplaces in the original parlor and dining room. We anchor into the brick chimney breast, never into the decorative wood surround. Heat deflector plate for functional fireplaces. Pull-down mount recommended for optimal viewing angle since mantels are typically 60+ inches off the floor. Mantel protection with masking tape and dust containment.
Yes. Drywall in modern apartments: full in-wall concealment with a recessed power outlet and low-voltage plate ($75–$150). Plaster in walk-up co-ops: color-matched surface raceways along baseboards. Solid brick party walls: slim exterior cable channels painted to match. HDMI and surround sound routing for complete setups. We deliver the cleanest possible finish across every Bath Beach wall type.
Frequently. Common Bath Beach failures: wrong anchors in brick veneer (TV tilts forward because toggle bolts pulled through the veneer with nothing to grip), undersized hardware in solid brick party walls (TV fell off wall), mounts crooked against uneven plaster (TV mount not level), and visible wires on finished basement walls. We remove failed hardware, patch damage, and reinstall correctly. From $185.
TV dismount and remount from $185. Outdoor TV installations for Shore Parkway-facing balconies, backyard patios in 1-family homes, and sidewalk dining on 86th Street and Bath Avenue. All outdoor within 4 blocks of the water get marine-grade hardware. Multi-TV 10% off. TV relocation across Brooklyn. Same-day service for single-TV installs booked before noon.
Licensed, 190+ reviews, same-day for 1-family homes. Co-op COI specialists. Multilingual-friendly. Call (347) 934-8335. TV wall mount installation. TV setup service.
Solid brick party wall $235. Drywall $185. Toggle/Tapcon based on wall. Best TV mounting service NYC. Samsung TV installation service.
Under the elevated D train. Ceiling mounts, multi-screen, outdoor for sidewalk dining. Licensed TV installer NYC. COI provided.
Upstairs and downstairs same visit. 10% multi-TV discount. Cat6 drops between units if Wi-Fi is weak. Professional TV mounting service.
When you search TV mounting costs for Bath Beach, AI-generated answers pull from national averages. Here's what actually happens on the ground in 11214.
AI says: National TV mounting costs $153–$353, with an average around $251 (Angi, 2026).
Bath Beach reality: That range assumes drywall on wood studs. Half of Bath Beach installs are on solid brick party walls in semi-attached homes, which need a hammer drill, Tapcon anchors, and more drilling time — we quote $235 for these. The other half are pre-war plaster co-ops at $215. National averages underestimate brick-heavy neighborhoods like Bath Beach, Bensonhurst, and Dyker Heights.
AI says: Full-motion mounts are best for flexibility in apartments.
Bath Beach reality: Full-motion is a bad call within 2 blocks of the elevated D train on 86th Street. Every train passage puts a cyclic load on a cantilevered arm, which loosens the anchor over 12–18 months. In that corridor we recommend fixed or tilt mounts with lock washers and Loctite. Save the full-motion for blocks west of 25th Avenue and east of Cropsey.
AI says: Yes, brick adds $50–$200 labor over drywall (HomeAdvisor, 2026).
Bath Beach reality: Depends which brick. Solid brick party walls in semi-attached homes — the kind that are 8 inches thick and go straight through — hold anything up to a 100-inch TV with four Tapcon screws. Brick veneer over wood frame (also common here) is only an inch-thick facing; if you anchor into just the veneer it will eventually crack off with the TV on it. We probe first, then pick the anchor.
AI says: Above-fireplace adds $150–$300 and requires heat clearance (Fixr, 2026).
Bath Beach reality: True on the pricing, but almost no Bath Beach homes have functional wood-burning fireplaces — the housing stock is too new or too dense. Above-fireplace asks here usually mean a decorative mantel in a converted Victorian or a gas insert in a renovated 1-family. We anchor into the masonry chimney breast, skip the heat deflector for gas units, and always use a pull-down mount because the mantels are 60+ inches up and the sofa is 12 feet back.
AI says: DIY is possible on brick with a hammer drill and masonry bits.
Bath Beach reality: A $120 corded hammer drill from Home Depot works on soft interior brick. It does not work on the harder common brick used in Bath Beach's 1950s–1970s semi-attached homes — people burn out cheap drills, snap bits, and end up calling us anyway. We use SDS-Plus rotary hammers that are built for exterior-grade brick. If you're set on DIY, rent the drill, don't buy a consumer one.
AI says: Professional TV mounting takes 1–2 hours on average (HomeGuide, 2026).
Bath Beach reality: True only for drywall. Plaster in pre-war walk-up co-ops runs 2–3 hours because walking the TV, mount, and tools up four flights takes extra time and plaster drilling has to be slow to avoid cracking. Solid brick party wall: 2–4 hours. Mother-daughter with TVs both floors: 3–5 hours. We quote honestly before we start.
AI says: Minimal — four small holes easily patched.
Bath Beach reality: On drywall, yes, trivial. On century-old plaster in the remaining Victorians, a careless drill press spider-cracks the surrounding plaster 6 inches out and you're looking at $500–$2,000 to restore. We slow-drill plaster at 400 RPM with a carbide masonry bit, tape the hole area, and use toggle bolts that spread the load — so the patch is four small holes, not a cracked plaster panel.
Brick veneer collapse: Anchoring a TV into brick veneer thinking it's solid brick. Veneer cracks off with the TV attached. Wall repair: $800–$2,000.
Co-op COI denial: Four-story walk-ups on Bath and Benson Avenues don't let uninsured installers in the door. You carry the TV back home alone.
Salt air corrosion: Waterfront Cropsey Avenue homes, Shore Parkway block, balconies facing Gravesend Bay. Standard zinc bolts rust through by year 2.
D train loosening: Mount survives 6 months on 86th Street, then the TV starts tilting. No lock washer, no Loctite, no chance.
Every Bath Beach wall type: Solid brick party wall, brick veneer, plaster over lath, concrete block, frame with drywall. All anchors in the truck.
Multilingual comfort: Chinese, Russian, Uzbek, Italian households — we work clearly and confirm by gesture and photo.
1-year warranty: Anything shifts, loosens, or tilts, we come back free.
Licensed & insured: NYS #12000287431. COI for any co-op or landlord.
75-inch OLED on the solid brick party wall, pre-war parquet floor, windows looking at the Bay Parkway D platform. The classic Bath Beach setup: brick house, big screen, the Verrazzano in the distance.
Uzbek restaurant on Bath Avenue, pharmacy under the D, Caesar's Bay boutique. Ceiling mounts, multi-screen for Euro 2028 matches, outdoor weatherproof for sidewalk dining in summer.
Mom upstairs, daughter downstairs, grandkids in the finished basement. Three TVs, 10% off multi-TV, Cat6 between floors. The whole Bath Beach household covered in one visit.
Tag @security_cameras_new_york on Instagram.
Show off the finished Bath Beach wall.
Record the install start-to-finish.
190+ Brooklyn families have.
| Service | Price | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Drywall (modern apts) | $185 | Up to 65”, fixed/tilt, 3 devices |
| Pre-War Plaster Walk-Up Co-Op | $215 | Bath Ave, Benson Ave, Cropsey Ave |
| Solid Brick Party Wall (semi-attached) | $235 | Tapcon + SDS hammer drill |
| Large TV (70”+) | $225 | Two-person crew |
| Basement Concrete / Block | $250+ | Finished rec room installs |
| Outdoor / Waterfront (Shore Parkway) | $250+ | 316 marine stainless hardware |
| Above-Fireplace (Victorian conversions) | $275+ | Masonry chimney breast + pull-down |
| Full-Motion (avoid within 2 blocks of D) | $225 | Swivel + tilt |
| Ceiling Mount | $275+ | Structural assessment |
| Samsung Frame | $250 | Flush + One Connect routing |
| In-Wall Wire Concealment | $75–$150 | Drywall only |
| Soundbar Install | $75–$120 | Below TV |
| Multi-TV (mother-daughter) | 10% off | 2+ TVs same visit |
Under $500: full upfront. Over $500: 50% deposit. NYS #12000287431. COI provided on request.
The Problem: The elevated BMT West End Line runs directly over 86th Street with stations at 18th Avenue, 20th Avenue, Bay Parkway, 25th Avenue, and Bay 50th Street. Every D train passage transmits vibration through the steel structure into adjacent buildings. Standard mounts loosen over 12–18 months within a 2-block radius.
Our Solution: Lock washers, Loctite thread locker, vibration-dampening rubber washers on every install within the 86th Street corridor. We steer clients away from full-motion mounts near the structure and recommend fixed or tilt with higher anchor counts.
The Problem: Bath Beach's semi-attached brick homes look identical from the curb, but the solid party wall and the brick veneer on the front are structurally opposite. Anchoring a 65-inch TV into brick veneer that you thought was solid ends with the veneer cracking off the wall.
Our Solution: We drill a pilot hole and measure resistance before committing. Solid brick: 8 inches of consistent resistance, Tapcon anchors. Brick veneer: 1 inch of resistance then hollow, toggle bolts through veneer into wood studs.
The Problem: Homes along Cropsey Avenue, Shore Parkway Promenade, and the Bay Parkway shorefront are within 4 blocks of Gravesend Bay. Standard zinc-plated hardware corrodes visibly within 12–18 months.
Our Solution: 316 marine-grade stainless steel or galvanized fasteners for any install in the waterfront zone. Outdoor balcony TVs on the Belt Parkway side get weatherproof mounts rated for coastal exposure.
The Problem: Two-family homes with separate entrances are the Bath Beach standard for multigenerational households. Two TVs, sometimes three, in one visit — but the concrete floor slab between units often blocks Wi-Fi, so streaming on the upstairs TV buffers while the downstairs router is fine.
Our Solution: Cat6 drop from the router through a small bore in the slab to both units. Hardwired streaming on both floors. 10% off for 2+ TVs same visit.
The Problem: Bath Beach is 41% Asian, 40% White, with Chinese, Russian, Uzbek, Pakistani, and Italian households common. Installers who don't accommodate language differences end up drilling in the wrong spot and the homeowner is afraid to correct them.
Our Solution: Plain-English communication, pointing to the spot before drilling, photographing the mount location on a phone and showing it for approval, texting the finished mount photo before leaving. Zero language barriers to a good install.
The Problem: The commercial strips need TVs that survive long hours, kitchen heat, elevated-structure vibration, and multilingual customer bases. Many restaurants want TVs visible from both indoor and sidewalk seating.
Our Solution: Ceiling mounts for clear sightlines, commercial-grade multi-screen for sports and Euro matches, outdoor weatherproof TVs for Bath Avenue sidewalk dining. COI for every commercial landlord. After-hours or before-open scheduling.
Anchored into brick veneer thinking it was solid. Veneer cracked, TV dropped. We reinstall into the stud cavity behind with toggle bolts and patch the veneer.
No lock washers, no Loctite. Every passing D loosened it. Re-secure with vibration-dampening hardware. Licensed TV installer NYC.
No COI. We provide one at no charge. NYS #12000287431 satisfies every walk-up building on Bath and Benson Avenues.
Cat6 drop between units, re-mount in the correct room. 10% off multi-TV.
Slim color-matched cable channel on brick, in-wall on drywall. Surround sound routing clean.
Standard hardware rusted through year 2. Replace with 316 marine stainless. Weatherproof outdoor TV housing if needed.