Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Taking a look at 52E4, and where the Moby mobile may park
Now that the construction has quieted down a bit, it's time to revisit the spot and enjoy exactly what's going up in this luxurious 15-story condo. The promo photos, previously available on the 52E4 Web site, are up for the unwashed masses to see. Let's take a look!
You have your roof deck and pool and, as various commenters have pointed out, no Cooper Square Hotel blocking your Midtown views...
And whatever this is.
And this is the best: The parking spot, where soon-to-be-tenant Moby will keep it real and park his Moby mobile.
Not sure exactly where the parking spaces will be kept. I'm assuming on East Fourth Street then...?
Anyway, the 59R2ERW site has more details. And images.
For further reading:
Another Bowery tower (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
Monday, August 24, 2009
Scarano's gated community continues to get gated and secure on the Bowery
The gated driveway for the likes of Moby and John Legend looks nearly finished...
And the video/keypad security thingee is now up and running...
"Yes, we have the meat lover's pizza for Mr. Moby..."
Previous E2E4 coverage on EV Grieve here.
Friday, August 7, 2009
Moby and John Legend now have something in common
Singer John Legend has signed a contract for an apartment listed at $2.3 million, in New York’s East Village neighborhood.
“I didn’t want a cookie-cutter place,” says the 30-year-old singer, who decided to buy the one-bedroom, two-bath apartment before a tour that began in June. The floor-through Lower Manhattan apartment of more than 1,300 square feet, in a new glass-and-steel residential tower on the Bowery and East Fourth Street, has 14-foot-ceilings and views in every direction. The price Mr. Legend agreed to pay couldn’t be learned. A similarly sized unit in the building sold for $2.59 million last month and another for $2.5 million in June. The 15-story tower, completed this year, has a doorman, an outdoor pool and indoor parking.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Taking a look at 52E4, and where the Moby mobile may park
Friday, April 17, 2009
David Lynch directs a Moby video
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Belse Restaurant makes it sign official on the Bowery
Friday, February 11, 2011
When you could see the Grateful Dead on Second Avenue for $2
...when the Angels were presenting shows at the Anderson Theatre at 66 Second Avenue.
The reader also included a link to the site It's All the Streets you Crossed Not So Long Ago... there, the author lays out a fairly exhaustive history of 66 Second Avenue, which is between Fourth Street and Third Street... You can read the whole history there...
A few highlights though... The theatre likely began its life as a Yiddish Playhouse in the late 1800s-early 1900s... in the late 1960s and '70s, it functioned as a rock venue where everyone from Moby Grape, Procol Harum and the Yardbirds played.
Janis Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company had their New York debut there on February 17, 1968 — look who else was on the bill: B.B. King.
Her post on the Anderson has a gazillion links and photos (some of which I reposted here) ... Far too many to try to mention here... find it all here.
Oh, one last thing. Hilly Kristal ran the CBGB Theater here from late 1977 to early 1978, she notes. The Talking Heads christened the CBGB Theater, followed by shows featuring the Dictators, the Dead Boys and Patti Smith. Here's one description of the CBGB Theater: "The place was disgusting. It made the CBGB club look like the Rainbow Room. We were talking about eighty years' worth of dirt. I mean there was popcorn left over from the last performance of the Yiddish theater in 1925...They did manage to clean up the entryway, and made it look like a subway station."
Anyway, find this and a whole lot more interesting posts on NYC's former rock & roll landmarks at It's All the Streets you Crossed Not So Long Ago.
And 66 Second Avenue today.
Previously on EV Grieve:
The Loew's Commodore Theatre
Monday, September 18, 2017
Openings: Broken Coconut, Ladybird, the Lost Lady, the Hairy Lemon
[Healthy Coconut photo from Sept. 8]
Broken Coconut, the health-conscious restaurant from Butter/1Oak founder Scott Sartiano, opens today at 15 E. Fourth St. between Lafayette and Broadway, according to the Post.
The Post notes the menu will include a probiotic, protein-rich yogurt with a coconut base.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Checking in on the former Other Music space, soon to be a health-focused restaurant
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Ravi DeRossi's vegan bar-restaurant opened at 111 Seventh St. between Avenue A and First Avenue on Sept. 5. Eater has more about the space, which counts musician/animal-rights activist Moby as an investor.
Find the Ladybird website here.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Ravi DeRossi moving Ladybird to the East Village; taking residence at former Bourgeois Pig space
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The Lost Lady, from Robert Ceraso and Jason Mendenhall, the co-owners of The Wayland and Good Night Sonny, opened last Wednesday at 171 Avenue C between 10th Street and 11th Street. This marks their third attempt at opening another bar along Avenue C. Plans for both the former Duke's space and current Royale fell through.
The space was originally going to go by The Drift Inn.
"Somebody opened a bar called the Drift Inn in Brooklyn a couple of months after we started working on that space," Ceraso told me earlier this summer. "It actually makes more sense for the space now. Once we got in there and started getting a feel for the bones of the space, our design went a lot more old nautical feeling. The Lost Lady feels to us like it could be the name of an old ship or a story that a fisherman would tell you."
Grub Street has a preview of the Lost Lady here.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Evelyn Drinkery has closed on Avenue C
Wayland team opening Drift Inn at former Evelyn Drinkery space on Avenue C
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[Image via Facebook]
The Hairy Lemon opened last Wednesday in the former Croxley Ales space, 28 Avenue B between Second Street and Third Street. The place serves traditional Irish pub fare and sports 20 TVs.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Croxley Ales-replacing bar on Avenue B is called the Hairy Lemon
Friday, April 16, 2010
What to do with the Vegan Bowery Burger
I'm not much of a foodie. The burgers tasted pretty good (couldn't even detect the mustard powder), though I recommend that you eat them with heaping piles of cheese and bacon.
Now! To more important matters. How to market the Vegan Bowery Burger!
First! We need some 1970s-style Bowery street cred... Gabba gabba yum!
...some hotties in Bowery wear... Let me see that fake beef!
We have your Vegan Bowery Burger bitches!
And a celebrity spokesperson....
Beep, beep! Delivery for Mr. Moby!
Then we'll raise the price to $17.99 a pound. See you at DBGB, suckers!
Friday, December 4, 2015
EV Grieve Etc.: Manitoba on Manitoba's; love for Love Gang
[Photo on 2nd Avenue by Derek Berg]
Talking with Handsome Dick Manitoba at Manitoba's (The New York Times)
Meeting the the proprietors of "rocker babe emporium" Love Gang on East Ninth Street (The Village Voice)
Where to find bikers, drugs and rock-&-roll onscreen (Anthology Film Archives)
Hawk interlopers in Tompkins Square Park (Gog in NYC)
A new chef for Avant Garden on East Seventh Street (Eater)
Crazy amenities alert: Extell is giving buyers in Asia dibs on luxury apartments in the new 80-story tower on the Lower East Side (The Lo-Down)
The alleged tenant harassment continues at 135-137 Eldridge St. (BoweryBoogie)
Perfect Pussy singer Meredith Graves now has a weekly column featuring recipes and record reviews (The Village Voice)
A review of Garth Risk Hallberg’s sprawling new novel, "City on Fire," set in 1970s NYC (The New Yorker)
A look at Ben Shaoul's rental-to-condo conversion on First Avenue and East 23rd Street (NY Yimby)
The great La Taza de Oro is gone for good in Chelsea (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
That time someone thought it might be a good idea to fill in the Hudson River (Ephemeral New York)
Uncovering the documentary about an all Ace Frehley cover band (Dangerous Minds)
Moby trades the Lower East Side for Los Angeles for his new vegan restaurant venture, Little Pine (Well + Good)
The disappearing Hogs & Heifers (DNAinfo)
Diversions: The Swedish punk Peanuts (BoingBoing)
From the EVG inbox...
Bayside! The Musical! will makes its return to NYC and run alongside the hit show Full House! The Musical! at Theater 80 (80 St Marks & First Avenue) from Jan. 7 through Feb. 26. (Details here.)
And tomorrow at the Lower Eastside Girls Club...
And, lastly, EVG contributor Grant Shaffer finds that people can be sooo plastic on the L train...
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
"In the late 80s and the early 90s everybody could afford to live in the East Village"
From a Q-and-A with Moby in Black Book:
People say they miss the old New York. Do you like it better now?
Only the things that I miss. it was cheaper. When you went out you never expected to spend a lot of money, so this whole bottle service, when someone goes out and has to spend $1,000 for a good night out, that’s just absurd. In the late 80s and the early 90s everybody could afford to live in the East Village, so everybody lived and worked and went out in the same neighborhood, and it just made everything a lot much nicer. So now, its almost like the NYC diaspora has happened where some people live in Bushwick, some people live in Redhook, some people live in Jersey City, some people live in Inwood, so the good old days where everybody lives on top of each other, those are gone. New York is always going to be big enough to accommodate anyone who wants to live here. There’s always going to be some new derelict neighborhood where 20-year-old artists are going to move to. That’s what Soho was, that’s what the East Village was, that’s what Tribeca was, and that’s certainly what the Lower East Side was.
Friday, October 17, 2008
East Village soon to exceed maximum capacity for dessert places
We've been far too curious about the fate of 159 Second Ave., the hallowed ground that was home for 27 years to the beloved A. Fontana Shoe Repair. There has been lots of activity there in recent weeks. Anyway, we started (sarcastically) speculating about the future tenant. Based on the above photo, there was one undeniable conclusion: high-end dessert place!
Well, guess what?
An unimpeachable source -- an anonymous tipster, who, for the purposes of this post, we'll call Jeremiah Moss -- passed along the following news on the location late yesterday:
I went by today and a worker told me it's going to be "a vegan ice cream shop." I saw soft-serve machines in the background. Should be open in 2-3 weeks. Could it be another Lula's Sweet Apothecary? Or competition?
Time will tell! Anyway, there's going to be an all-out dessert war in this area now (as if there wasn't one already)...FroYo vs. Vegan Ice Cream vs. TheLiteChoice vs. Chocolate By the Bald Man Who Kind of Looks like Moby vs. the M&M's we can buy at the corner bodega vs. ChikaLicious vs. Dunkin' Donuts vs. Cold Stone Creamery vs...(Meanwhile, we'll just be at Ray's.)
Oh, here's what the space looked like in August...
Let the "bald man" jokes begin!
[Jeremiah has a thoughtful post on what used to be in this space, A. Fontana Shoes.]
A Fucked Up cover
[Via Stereogum]
Friday, July 2, 2010
The problem with private driveways in the East Village
Yeah, it's funny until John Legend has your ass towed ... Well, unless this is the LegendMobile.... outside 52E4, the 15 stories of condo on Fourth Street... where the Legend, Moby and others live...
Perhaps a trend...Previously, as seen at 238 E. Fourth St. in front of the Novogratz-designed penthouse home....
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
52E4 gets some stairs
Monday, June 23, 2008
Looking at the signs and window displays along Fulton and Nassau Streets
The sign for Samuel's Hats on the other side of Nassau has an air of high society about it. According to their Web site, "If you are planning to attend the Kentucky Derby or you need a hat for any special occasion please take a look at our new arrivals by the greatest American and European designers. " I just don't see too many women wearing these kinds of hats these days.
The sign remains, the store is no longer in business. This is now the new home of Hat Corner.
There are several discount stores along Fulton Street (I should just call it Fulton -- there isn't much Street left with all the construction) and Nassau Street. The area reminds me a little bit of 14th Street between Third and First Avenue several years ago, when there seemed to be 99-cent shops every few storefronts. With all the fancy condos and hotels cropping up in the Financial District, I'm afraid there won't be much need for mom-and-pop stores selling, say, plastic backscratchers, Spanish-language greeting cards and off-brand detergent.
Ralph's has been here for nearly 35 years, I'm told. By the way, the door to the right of Ralph's is marked 82 Nassau Street. According to New York Songlines, "This was the address of the South Baptist Church; Herman Melville may have written "Moby-Dick" in a building in the church's courtyard, reports Literary New York. Later, in March 1878, the first telephone exchange was opened here by the Bell Company."
Been curious what this building was on Nassau Street before someone slapped the NATALIE on it.
Love the jazzy, roaring-20s look of the Wendy's sign. Adds a touch of class! Now, must order a Triple Stack with cheese.
There may be a Sophie's under here somewhere.
An exercise studio for nuns? Or mimes?
Yes, I know Dress Barn is a national chain with affordable clothing for women. That name, though. Sounds like the place to shop for the Sadie Hawkins dance.
Always like the 1-2 punch of a fried chicken chain and fitness center side by side.
More random storefronts along Nassau Street selling affordable shoes and clothing. How long will they last with the neighborhood becoming more and more affluent?