Monday, May 11, 2026

Report: Judge keeps East Village intake center plan on hold

The city's plan to relocate the longtime Bellevue intake shelter and shift services to the East Village remains on hold after a Manhattan judge on Friday pushed a key hearing to May 28. 

As first reported by amNewYork, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Sabrina Kraus extended a temporary restraining order that blocks the city from relocating to the East Village facilities while legal challenges continue.

The lawsuit, filed by neighborhood coalition V.O.I.C.E. (Village Organization for the Integrity of Community Engagement), argues that the city rushed the approval process and improperly used emergency powers to move the intake center from Bellevue to the Project Renewal building between the Bowery and Second Avenue. (Public records list the V.O.I.C.E. members as Trisha Goff, Caleb Berger, David Bonnouvrier, Niki Donohue, Diane Nye, Michael Rayden and John Ruha.) 

According to court filings, the city has since proposed scaling back the planned capacity from roughly 175 beds to 117, while adding security measures and indoor processing. 

Josh Goldfein, a staff attorney with the Legal Aid Society, told amNewYork that he didn't see anything new in V.O.I.C.E.'s arguments, calling them similar to other efforts to block shelters, which he said are often rooted in racist assumptions.

"I've been in this business a very long time," Goldfein told the outlet. "I've seen a lot of cases like this. They are all the same. They raise all the same issues. There is no merit to any of these issues. The petition will eventually be dismissed and the [intake center] will open." 

Housing advocates, including the Legal Aid Society and Coalition for the Homeless, have defended the site's use at 8 E. Third St. as a shelter while also raising accessibility concerns about the accelerated timeline. 

The two groups released this statement after the V.O.I.C.E. lawsuit was filed last month.

Project Renewal was founded in 1967, and the organization has used the spaces at 8 E. Third St. and 333 Bowery for decades.

On tonight's CB3-SLA docket: The return of Kotobuki East Village; a Georgian-inspired bakery and café for 6th Street

Here are a few items of interest on tonight's CB3-SLA committee docket (find the full calendar here) ... 

• Kotobuki East Village (Soundview Horizons LLC), 8 Stuyvesant St (op) 

The Japanese restaurant is returning to the neighborhood with a new space at 8 Stuyvesant St. at Ninth Street, which has been vacant for six years since Sharaku closed in the early days of the pandemic. 

Eric Kim and Bon Koo manage three Kotobuki restaurants on Long Island, in Babylon, Hauppauge and Roslyn. They previously owned Kotibuki at 56 3rd Ave., which closed in 2024, as developers bought up the parcels between 10th Street and 11th Street for a new residential building. 

The mall-like Wonder is the main tenant in the Stuyvesant space, which makes us curious whether Kotobuki will also use part of the upper level. 

In any event, people will be pleased that Kotobuki is on the way back.
• Lanna Cafe Inc, 164 1st Ave (op) 

The owner of Bib Gourmand recipient Zaab Zaab in Queens and Zen Yai in Brooklyn is bringing Isan-Thai cuisine to 164 First Ave. at 10th Street. 

According to its questionnaire on the CB3 website, Lanna Café will offer a morning coffee service before its lunch and dinner offerings. (The questionnaire has a sample menu.)

The previous tenant here, Beron Beron, closed on Dec. 31 after the death of its owner, Yuji Umeki.
• Wild Project (Wild Project Productions Inc), 195 E 3rd St (op)

The wild project has applied to upgrade its existing beer and wine license to full liquor for sale before and during performances at the 89-seat theater venue. (Pictured above: Chris Moseley, operations manager.)

Last fall, management purchased the building that houses the long-running indie performance space here between Avenues A and B. 

• Prosciutto LLC, 435 E 9th St (wb) 

We first mentioned this pending arrival between Avenue A and First Avenue here

The operators, Gabriele Tosi and Mattia Casarin, previously worked as chefs at Fiaschetteria Pistoia on 11th Street near Avenue C.

Per the CB3 questionnaire, Prosciutto will have eight tables for 20 guests with proposed daily hours of noon to midnight.
• Thoné NYC LLC, 501 E 6th St (wb) 

This item will NOT be heard at tonight's committee meeting. 

Thoné is a Georgian-inspired bakery, café, and wine bar located in the space directly behind Corner Bistro on Sixth Street, steps away from Avenue A. 

The concept focuses on freshly baked traditional Georgian breads, breakfast offerings, sandwiches, shareable plates, desserts, coffee, beer, and Georgian natural wines. Food service will be available throughout all operating hours. The establishment will operate as a full-service café and wine bar with prepared food available during all business hours.
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CB3's SLA meeting is tonight at 6:30. The Zoom link is here. This is a hybrid meeting, and limited public seating is available. The first 15 people who show up at the Community Board 3 Office, 59 E. Fourth St., between Second Avenue and the Bowery, will be accommodated.

Photos of 164 First Ave. and 195 E. Third St. by Stacie Joy

Regina's Grocery & Deli debuts on 1st Avenue

Photos by Stacie Joy

Regina's Grocery & Deli officially debuted Saturday at 111 First Ave., between Sixth and Seventh streets.

The shop marks the fifth outpost for the Italian-American sandwich spot run by Bensonhurst native Roman Grandinetti. Regina's is built on the concept of family, with sandwiches named after relatives like Uncle Jimmy and Grandma Lucy. (Menu.) 

If you've been to the outpost down on Orchard Street, then you know the interior leans old-school ... like someone's well-loved kitchen, with family photos and keepsakes lining the walls.
Hours: Daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

A new dining room for Katz's?

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

There's been some chatter about a possible dining-room expansion at Katz's on Ludlow and Houston. 

Food writer Robert Sietsema flagged it on X last week ... ... and there are DOB permits on file for interior work on "a designated partial area" of the ground floor, along with plans to create two new restrooms.
Several workers on site confirmed that a space is in the works, though they didn't specify that it would be for dining. One source simply said it would be a storage and kitchen area.
For now, it's still the same classic Katz's — lines, tickets and all.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Sunday's parting shot

Photo by Stacie Joy 

Great turnout this afternoon for the first Show Brain show of the season in Tompkins Square Park... more photos soon!

Parting shot for Mother's Day

Photo by Stacie Joy 

"Thank you, Mom," in chalk in Tompkins today...

May 10

A Mother's Day discovery today on Third Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue... thanks to EVG reader Richard Hutt for the photo!

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a spring look on 7th Street by Derek Berg)...
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• Allan Dabrio Marrero released from ICE custody, reunited with husband at Middle Church on 7th Street (May 5) 

• Two Boots Pizza is moving — but staying in the East Village (May 5) 

• Hekate Café & Elixir Lounge closing amid rising competition in sober bar scene (May 6) 

• Sal's Deli & Grocery reopens on 13th and B (May 4) 

• Man shot on 7th Street and Avenue D; suspect at large (May 7) 

• Woman unharmed after reported domestic hostage situation on 8th Street (May 4) 

• Report: 4 East Village buildings tied to foreclosure filings (May 7) 

• Book Club Bar closing briefly for refresh as Bushwick location opens (May 4) 

• Genre is Death and the art of 'Noizz' (May 8) 

• Tacos Domingo is bringing its first U.S. outpost to 1st Avenue and St. Mark's Place (May 8) 

• Openings: Café Skye on 14th Street (May 7) … Taqueria Emilio 4 on Avenue B (May 5) … Singapore Social NYC on Avenue A (May 4) 

• Remembering a familiar presence on Broadway and Astor Place (May 4) 

• First signs of life at the former 7-Eleven on Avenue A (May 6) 

• Former Mark Rothko residence on 6th Street reemerges as luxury condo (May 7) 

• A new exhibition draws on the spirit of the juke joint at March gallery on Avenue A (May 9) 

• And now! Your Sephora signage on 3rd Avenue and St. Mark’s Place (May 8) 

• As the chain stores turn on Astor Place (May 4) 

• Double Zero returns to 2nd Avenue (May 4) 

... and from Cinco de Mayo, San Loco owners Jill and Kimo Hing outside the Avenue C location... (photo by Stacie Joy)

Miami vice: Avenue B shop shuttered for alleged unlicensed cannabis and tobacco sales

Photos by Stacie Joy 

There's less on the shelves these days at Miami Convenience and More, 106 Avenue B between Sixth Street and Seventh Street. 

On Friday, law enforcement shuttered the business and issued a stack of summonses for allegedly selling cannabis products without a license ... not to mention cigarettes, "other tobacco products," vapes and flavored vapes.
Miami Convenience opened in February, taking over for the it-closed-quickly Saba Candy & Groceries.

About the first Show Brain show in Tompkins Square Park this year

This afternoon marks the first FREE Show Brain show of the season in Tompkins Square Park.

On the bill: Headliners The Lemon Twigs ... Josephine Network and Fine Mess. There is also a DJ set by Sarah Savannah. Music is expected to start around 2 p.m.

Unfortunately, The Shadow's show yesterday, headlined by Non Residents, got rained out.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Saturday's parting shot

S-A-T-U-R-D-A-Y night! St. Mark's Place. 

It's like 2013 again.

A new exhibition draws on the spirit of the juke joint at March gallery on Avenue A

Photos by Stacie Joy 

In case you were wondering about that orange glow coming from the March gallery at 62-64 Avenue A between Fourth Street and Fifth Street... 

Inspired by the juke joint — informal social spaces for music, dance and community — the latest exhibition at March brings together works spanning 1939 to 2022, highlighting both the visual language and cultural significance of these now-vanishing spaces. 

Rather than memorializing juke joints, the show seeks to capture their energy and influence, as well as the broader need for places where people can gather outside the routines of everyday life.
The exhibit officially opened last evening... and will be here through June 20. 

Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Noted

Photo by Stacie Joy 

Street-level justice, in Sharpie, along East Houston... 

Package thief!!
I hate you!

Friday, May 8, 2026

Friday's parting shot

Photo by Steven 

As seen on Ninth Street today...

By the numbers

 

This Sunday afternoon marks the first FREE Show Brain show of the season in Tompkins Square Park.


The above video is for "2 or 3" by Long Island's own The Lemon Twigs, from their album Look For Your Mind! out TODAY. 

And now! Your Sephora signage on 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place

Photo by Jacob Ford 

Hoisted today here in the base of the all-new 1 St. Mark's Place. 

Background here.

Genre is Death and the art of 'Noizz'

Photos by Stacie Joy

Bathed in deep red light inside Madame X on West Houston Street, Sunday night's "A Red Tie Nite of Noizz & Words" blurred the lines between concert, reading and art show — anchored by the debut LP release from Genre Is Death.
First, the guests of honor: Ty V and Tayler Lee, performing songs from their first full-length release, Attractive People, where the duo put their stamp on the lurching thump of no-wave dissonance.
They were joined on the bill by Sylvia Black, Skull Practitioners and Erica Mancini's Electronium.

The night drew a crowd of musicians, artists and familiar faces ... 
Between sets, there was spoken word from Stu Spasm, Martin Bisi (who produced the new GiD record), Bob Bert, Ron Ward and Liz Lamere. 

We especially enjoyed hearing from veteran drummer Bob Bert, below, who shared stories about going to Japan with Pussy Galore in the late 1980s and touring out west with Tad. (Bert has a new record out next month.)
... while Feo (below left with partner Cat Cioper) and Jolie Dufrane presented a photo exhibit in the space.
Attendees included (right below) members of Puzzled Panther (Victoria Espinoza and Eugene Hütz, also of Gogol Bordello). We also spotted a member or two from Femcel, the Art Gray Noizz Quintet, the New Bomb Turks and Dr. Now, among others.
The night concluded with Ty and Tayler playing as loud and chaotic as we've seen them — Ty accidentally broke his guitar in half during the third song.
And more Sunday nights like this, please...