Thursday, June 18, 2026

Sunday afternoon with Pinc Louds in Tompkins Square Park

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Tompkins Square Park hosted a free Show Brain concert on Sunday, with headliners Pinc Louds closing out the afternoon. 

The local band — who were recording a new live album — filled their set with an F train, Christmas tree, inflatables, dancing and the kind of audience-participation-fueled chaos that has become a trademark of their performances. 

Here are a few scenes from the show...
From earlier in the day, here's Show brain founder Ozzie... and some other faces in the crowd...
The show also featured Telescreens, Abbie Roper and, below, Nautics...
The next Show Brain show is June 27 with, among others, Leftöver Crack.

Freedom Village, 13-story supportive housing, officially debuts on 2nd Street

A new affordable housing development for survivors of domestic violence and older adults experiencing homelessness has officially opened (as of June 11) at 270 E. Second St. between Avenue C and Avenue D.

The 13-story building, known as Freedom Village, contains 74 apartments and replaces a former school building that had served as transitional housing for roughly 30 years. 

Barrier Free Living, which was founded at the site in 1981, developed the project.

The apartments are available to households earning at or below 30% of the Area Median Income. Residents are eligible for on-site supportive services, including case management, health-related support services and referrals to community resources. 

All apartments are fully accessible for residents with disabilities, and six units include additional accommodations for residents with hearing or vision disabilities. The building also includes community space, offices for supportive-service staff and a rooftop terrace with a tenant-run garden. 

Foundation work for the 65,000-square-foot facility started on the site in the summer of 2023.
Read the Gov. Hochul news release on Freedom Village here

'We're back' — Kotobuki officially announces its East Village return

Photos by Steven 

Signage is up announcing that Kotobuki is returning to the East Village... in a new home at 8 Stuyvesant St. at Ninth Street, which has been vacant for six years since Sharaku closed in the early days of the pandemic. 

As you can see, the Japanese restaurant will use part of the second level of the building above the Wonder food court...
Kotobuki East Village was on the CB3 docket last month for a new liquor license. 

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, after developers bought up the parcels between 10th Street and 11th Street for a new residential building. 

Signage states a summer opening.

Signage alert: Dim Sum Bloom (and officially farewell to Taverna East Village)

Top photo by Stacie Joy

Signage arrived for Dim Sum Bloom on Monday at 228 First Ave. between 13th Street and 14th Street. (Thanks to the EVG readers who shared photos!

The brand first launched on the Upper West Side in 2023 (an interesting backstory) and has since expanded to Queens and elsewhere. 

Dim Sum Bloom takes a high-tech approach to its kitchen, including "a fully automated robot that powers its stir-fry station," per QNS.com. (Humans make the dumplings and other appetizers, however.)  Elsewhere, Dim Sum Bloom is billed as "NYC's only robotic kitchen."
Anyway, with Dim Sum Bloom's arrival, we can officially close the book on Taverna East Village...
The Greek restaurant went dark in December 2024. According to a patron at the time, Taverna EV closed without any notice to the public until a sign later arrived, noting the closure due to a "required Con Edison" inspection. 

Meanwhile, the restaurant's website stated: "We are currently closed due to a Kitchen Renovation project. We are working very hard to reopen as soon as possible." The message stayed online and was there at the last look.

The outpost of Astoria's favorite Taverna Kyclades opened in the fall of 2013. However, ownership changed hands, and the name change to Taverna East Village was made public in June 2024.

La Pizza Roma up next for 20 Avenue A

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

There's a new pizza option arriving at 20 Avenue A between Houston and Second Street. 

On Monday, we met the owners of La Pizza Roma, Monjur Murshed (left) and Saiful Shihab, who said they are opening the pizzeria on Friday.
The menu will feature pizza, pasta and salads. Hours are expected to be 10 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. daily.

La Pizza Roma operates several other locations around the city. 

As noted on Monday, the address has seen its share of turnover. Since March 2019, this will be the fourth pizzeria to try its luck in the space.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Jalen Brunson mural gets a championship update

Zimer has given his Jalen Brunson mural outside the Ridge Hotel on Houston and Eldridge a championship upgrade, replacing the basketball with the NBA championship trophy.

The mural arrived on June 1 ahead of Game 1 of the NBA Finals between the Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs ...

A Thursday night on East Village Radio with Adrian Rew of Ergot Records

Photos and interview by Stacie Joy 

From his record shop on Second Street to East Village Radio's storefront studio on First Avenue, Adrian Rew spends a lot of time introducing people to music they may not have heard before. 

The owner of Ergot Records, one of the city's most adventurous record shops, hosts a weekly Thursday-night (8-10) program on East Village Radio featuring new releases, reissues and deep catalog discoveries. 

We asked him about the show, the East Village record scene and a recent broadcast devoted to the music of legendary Egyptian singer Umm KulthĹ«m. 

What’s the vibe of your Thursday night show? How does it reflect what’s happening at Ergot Records right now? 

The Ergot Records show is all about highlighting great music that is currently available at our shop. Usually, this means we play all new records we have multiple copies of, covering both brand-new music and newly reissued recordings from the past. 

Since new releases officially come out on Fridays and the show airs on Thursday nights, it can sometimes serve as a sneak peek at new music that listeners can purchase the following day. We have pretty eclectic taste, so any given program could feature a more focused aesthetic, or a range of sound that might include spoken word, minimal music of various stripes, subterranean pop, dub, experimental music, jazz, house, techno, field recordings, medieval music, industrial music, and folk music from around the world. 

For special occasions, we’ll take deeper dives into artists' discographies. This has included two-hour sets examining the work of Timo Van Luijk and Christoph Heemann, both broadcasts programmed in anticipation of live appearances we’ve organized for the artists. 

We recently highlighted the work of Umm Kulthūm in a program that I'll elaborate more upon. Whenever possible, we also invite local artists whose records we've been enjoying to join as guests for interviews about their work.
What does being in the East Village bring to the show? 

Downtown New York, and the East Village specifically, feels like the nucleus of NYC, accessible to residents from all five boroughs as well as people from the broader tri-state area. This means that we get a real heterogeneous mix of customers from all walks of life at our shop, a diversity we seek to reflect in our inventory and thus — to an extent — in the music that we play on our show. 

It doesn’t hurt that the East Village has what might be the densest concentration of record shops in the country—with Academy, A-1, Stranded, Limited To One, and Manhattan45 all located within a six-block radius. 

The neighborhood has changed a lot, even in just over the decade I've been working in it, but it undeniably remains NYC’s record Mecca, and we’ve met many of the artists we’ve played and hosted on the show in part thanks to our location. 

You’re known for digging up overlooked gems. What's something you've been playing lately that deserves more attention? 

We do have a penchant for seeking out deadstock; original copies of records from the past that remained unsold and tucked away for decades, in our case, usually because they were too strange or ahead of their time for there to have been much of a market for them upon release. 

We did a two-hour deadstock special on East Village Radio a few months back and have another one planned for a yet-to-be-determined slow-release week in the not-so-distant future. A personal favorite from that last show was Mexican minimal synth trio Vistas Fijas' sole release, an eponymous 1985 7" EP of beautiful, wistfully optimistic early electronic music that we still have a handful of copies of. 

Can you speak a bit about the Umm KulthĹ«m show on April 30? 

A couple of years ago, we had the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to purchase a large collection of about 200 records by legendary Egyptian singer Umm KulthĹ«m, undeniably the most beloved musical artist of the 20th-century Arab world. 

It was a rather overwhelming amount of records for someone like myself with—at the time—only a cursory knowledge of her music and life to engage with, so they kind of sat around in boxes for a while. Finally, I set myself a deadline of what would have been her 122nd birthday to process everything. 

In anticipation of making the collection available to the public, I invited two of our customers with strong connections to Umm KulthĹ«m to join me for a two-hour special on her music, during which we played selections from the collection that wound up in the shop’s bins on her birthday. 

Egyptian musician and filmmaker Andrew Kamel [below, middle], who grew up with parents who regularly listened to Umm Kulthūm, was a no-brainer, and he truly carried the show with his knowledge and selections (plus he brought his oud to play along with).

I also invited Gary Sullivan [bottom right] — host of the WFMU show Bodega Pop as well as the compiler of last year's Sublime Frequencies LP Born In The City Of Tanta: Lower Egyptian Urban Folklore And Bedouin Shaabi From Libya's Bourini Records 1968-75—whose first exposure to Arabic music was to Umm KulthĹ«m's “Hazihi Laylati” 30 years ago!
Check out the East Village Radio website for info on the station's dozens (and dozens) of eclectic shows.

Ergot Records is at 32 E. Second St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

Signage alert: Bar Monto on 2nd Avenue

Bar Monto signage is up at 61 Second Ave., between Third Street and Fourth Street.
This is the new concept from the owners of the Gray Mare, who closed their equine-inspired pub in March after 10 years in service. 

Per Instagram, Bar Monto will feature: "Pints, martinis, food and plenty of entertainment. Everyone's a winner." 

And regarding the sign: "A nod to the glorious shopfronts and pubs seen all across Ireland, the lost art of tile and acrylic." 

Ownership plans to open this month.

The Community Boutique & Café has closed on 12th Street

After 18 months, the Community Boutique & CafĂ© at 515 E. 12th St., between Avenue A and Avenue B, has closed. 

EVG reader lime shared the above photo, noting that they had "the best ube matcha latte in the neighborhood." May 31 was their last day in business.

Upon opening in November 2024, owners Soudavone Khamvongsa and Settareh Barakhshan described their project as "a unique retail and cafe space designed to uplift our community, local makers, and small businesses." 

On the Instagram closing notice, patrons left many kind words, including: "Never forget all the people you brought together, the community you built, and the impact you had on so many of us."

A new landlord took possession of the building in the spring. 

According to PincusCo., Marshall Aronow, David Aronow and Anna Bauder sold No. 515 for $7.2 million to Kings Capital on April 29.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Knicks revelry on St. Mark's Place

We have one last batch of Knicks championship celebrations (see here and here) from Saturday night ... these shots by East Village native @jimmyjameo were taken are on St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue...
Also, as you may have heard, the Knicks’ ticker-tape parade is Thursday morning, starting near Battery Park before heading north along Broadway (aka Canyon of Hereos) to City Hall.

Remembering Steve Almaas

Photo via Instagram

Steve Almaas, a longtime East Village resident, musician and songwriter whose career stretched from the pioneering Minneapolis punk scene to New York's alt-country movement, died June 5 at his home in Beacon, N.Y., from complications related to cancer. He was 69. 

As reported by the Minneapolis Star Tribune, Almaas was a founding member of the influential Minneapolis band the Suicide Commandos, whose late-1970s work helped inspire a generation of Twin Cities musicians, including members of HĂĽsker DĂĽ, the Replacements and Soul Asylum. 

After relocating to New York in 1979, Almaas became a fixture on the downtown music scene. He played in several bands, including Beat Rodeo, the group for which he became best known. The band is widely regarded as an early pioneer of the Americana and alt-country sound that would later gain broader popularity. Beat Rodeo released two albums on I.R.S. Records in the 1980s, with the group's debut produced by Mitch Easter, who also worked on R.E.M.'s earliest recordings. 

Almaas also recorded several solo records and was a frequent collaborator with other musicians. Friends quoted by the Star Tribune remembered Almaas as a connector who brought musicians together. 

In addition to music, Almaas worked as a teacher, librarian and community advocate. In recent years, he lived in the Hudson Valley, where he worked at the Woodstock Public Library. 

He is survived by his partner, Brandy Burre; two sisters, Janet Almaas Pickford and Judy Almaas; his daughter, Solveig; son-in-law TJ; and grandchildren Sully and Loa. 

We knew Steve from our many evenings at Sophie's in the days leading up to the launch of EVG. He lived on the same block of Fifth Street and was one of the bar's memorable cast of characters. 

We would occasionally run into him in recent years. Unaware of his health challenges, we didn't realize what he had been facing when we crossed paths this spring.

When asked how he was doing, he paused for a moment and said, "Just trying to enjoy all the positive things in life."

He smiled, as upbeat as ever, said goodbye and continued down the block.

Trinity Lower East Side celebrates 30 years in its Avenue B home

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Parishioners of Trinity Lower East Side Church marked the 30th anniversary of the dedication of their church building on Sunday at Avenue B and Ninth Street. 

The original dedication took place in 1996. Among those attending the celebration was Pastor Bob Wollenburg, who led the congregation through the rebuilding effort during his tenure in the late 1980s and 1990s. He is pictured here with current Pastor Will Kroeze.
As part of the anniversary program, the church screened "In Word and Deed," a 1992 film documenting Trinity's ministry and its campaign to build a new church amid challenging circumstances.
"For over 180 years, Trinity Lower East Side has been in the heart of our beloved community, worshiping, serving our neighbors, and offering a place of radical welcome for all seeking healing and wholeness," Kroeze said on Sunday. "Today we give thanks for all who have given so much of themselves to support this remarkable place, especially those whose hard work and sacrifice made possible the construction of our church home 30 years ago."

Construction watch: 57 4th Ave.

Foundation work continues on the NE corner of Ninth Street and Fourth Avenue, previously home to a one-level building that housed Chris French Cleaners. 

As we first reported, a 10-story condoplex with 10 residential units is in the works for 57 Fourth Ave., aka 101 E. Ninth St.

According to Crain's, Ilyas Abayev, founder of the real-estate firm Moonshot Development, is behind the new project. BKSK Architects LLP, whose local credits include The Jefferson on 13th Street between Second and Third Avenues, is listed as the architect of record.

Here are shots of the foundation in progress... as well as the bottleneck the project is causing on Ninth Street at Astor Place...
The plywood rendering lists a fall 2027 completion date.

The dry cleaner closed its doors for good last September, marking 65 years in business. 

In the spring of 2022, we noted that the corner property was being pitched as a development site, shortly after the family patriarch, Chris Mitrofanis, passed away. Public records show the family also owned the one-level structure. 

Shaky Eyez coming into focus on 14th Street

Photos by William Klayer 

Signage arrived Friday for Shaky Eyez at 402 E. 14th St., just east of First Avenue. 

The storefront has been home to a smoke shop in recent years, and much of that setup — including water pipes and other accessories — remains visible inside the currently closed space. 
There isn't any information yet about Shaky Eyez or what type of business is planned for the address. 

Monday, June 15, 2026

June 15

A reader shares this discard pic from Sixth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue...couldn't even wait for the Summer Solstice...

A Bambi Lake poetry collection gets an East Village launch party

A poetry collection from the late Bambi Lake will be celebrated Thursday evening at Francis Kite Club, 40 Avenue C between Third Street and Fourth Street. 

"Devour Me, Again" gathers the work of Lake, the San Francisco poet, performer and punk musician who died in 2020 at age 70. According to organizers, the anthology explores themes including love, heartbreak, transgender identity, underground nightlife, queer survival, chosen family, desire and downtown decadence. 

The launch event will feature readings by Silke Berlinn, August Bernadicou, Perry Brass, Kay Gabriel and Harron Walker.

Bernadicou, executive director and co-founder of The LGBTQ History Project, described Lake as "the San Francisco street poet and punkette who once proclaimed that her greatest talent was making people cry."

Lake was associated with the Cockettes and Angels of Light and chronicled a period of LGBTQ life and culture that helped shape generations of artists and performers. 

RSVP here.