Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Starbucks confirmed for 219 First Ave., former home to Allen Ginsberg's favorite Chinese restaurant

[March 30]

Back on April 26, a worker at the newly unveiled 219 First Ave. told EV Grieve reader Greg Masters that a Starbucks was opening in the retail space here...

Of course! But you never know with such intel from construction workers.

Anyway, in the last few days, paper went up on the windows here at East 13th Street ...



A newly issued work permit points to the incoming tenant...



Well, a Starbuck singular.

And while we let that sink in... might as well bring up again that the ground floor here once housed the Mee Noodle Shop, a favorite spot for Allen Ginsburg.

As the Times noted in its obituary on Ginsberg from April 1997:

Ah Lan Chong, a waitress at Mee's Noodle Shop and Grill on First Avenue, which was Mr. Ginsberg's favorite Chinese restaurant, remembered Mr. Ginsberg in simpler, less heavily freighted terms.

Sure, she knew he was someone important, someone artistic. She could tell that from overheard conversations and from the way other diners would sometimes point at him when he entered. But to Ms. Chong, he was mainly the unfussy man with a dependable hankering for steamed flounder in ginger sauce. "When he came in," she said, "we knew what he wanted."

And so it goes...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Today in rumors of another Starbucks opening in the East Village

219 First Avenue ready for a chain store, probably

33 comments:

  1. are you serious? two on First Avenue now? i suppose they'll push all the way to Ave. D eventually.

    how do we stop this?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Please everyone reading this, get your coffee from somewhere else like a smaller coffee house or cafe. Chain restaurants force rents up and mom and pops out. They give New York City the look of a strip mall in suburbia we don't want of need more of this here.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Starbucks adds absolutely nothing to the neighborhood. Bring back Mee Noodle Shop!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Starbucks, like Walmart, Home Depot, and others, is a predatory chain. They saw The Bean doing well here, and in their former spot on 1st, and so they swooped in. A small business opens and sustains a market, and these predators try to snatch it away.

    This is a similar psychology as the people who move into neighborhoods that queers, artists, and assorted oddballs have made safer and more interesting. They swoop in with the goal of pushing out the "pioneers" who made it possible for them to live well.

    As for those who came before all that--the really poor, immigrants, people of color, the bodegas, diners, etc.--they don't even count in this game.

    The fact that we're now facing two Starbucks on a handful of blocks along First Ave is unacceptable. They will bring in their wake more of the same. They will make it all much, much worse.

    How do we stop them? Not buying their coffee won't do it, because there are armies of morons who will buy their coffee every day. Passive resistance is not the answer.

    How much longer before the tipping point comes and we finally say, "We're mad as hell and we're not taking anymore"?

    ReplyDelete
  5. The thing is, when I go into starbucks and ask for a double macchiato, they know what I want, and don't think I want some frappe sized sugar rich death drink. When I go into Starbucks and ask for a double espresso to go, they don't stick their nose up in the air and say "Oh, we dun't do 'tuh go' espresso'. BUt their food selection is shit, they could be buying locally, this is where the Bean has them beat.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Allen Ginsberg's favorite restaurant is now a Starbucks. Is there a more painfully symbolic example of all that is wrong with the world in 2012?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Fuck these people who are ok with Starbucks because "they get what they want" there. Build a relationship with your local business or grow up and do things different. Your choices have consequences. Is it really worth changing the neighborhood to get your macchiatto just right?

    Time to fuck shit up. Let Starbucks know they aren't welcome.

    ReplyDelete
  8. No, Starbucks will push all the way out to the East River. Next thing you know, Starbucks will be securing a contract with the East River Ferry to do business there. Or there'll be a Starbucks Ferry, like a food truck, but in the water.

    ReplyDelete
  9. @ Anon - 9:21 when you say this like, "Time to fuck shit up. Let Starbucks know they aren't welcome." You should at least have the balls to put your name to it.

    ReplyDelete
  10. The original Bean was in a Magnum/Ben Shaoul building. The new location is in an Icon Realty Building, don't tell me The Bean didn't know. While Starbucks is bad The Bean is no better because it masks what Icon is doing. They should have just left it alone after the Second Avenue location and looked for another spot other than 147 First Avenue. Also there is another cafe on First and 10th which has excellent food and drinks. They are a bit uppity and at this point the place turns into a wine bar, it didn't start out that way.

    ReplyDelete
  11. *on or in the water, doesn't matter, Starbucks will be there.

    ReplyDelete
  12. "This is the way the world ends
    This is the way the world ends
    This is the way the world ends
    Not with a bang but a whimper."
    Or the 80’s version: "It's over Johnny. It's over!"
    I was a Mee regular as well (at least once a week). The one on 2nd Ave just does not compare.
    I know, both quotes are over the top but the EV is really on life support at this point. Like, Yah.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Kurt, I didn't know playground rules applied here. Will Starbucks think I'm less of a man/woman now? What I told you I meant that we should figuratively fuck shit up? Am I a metaphorical coward? You can throw rocks, I'll hang posters. Let's just agree to choose different windows.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Actually, Jeremiah, there's THREE on 1st Ave, if you count the one b/t 16th and 17th. I do -- it may not be *technical* EV but it's not exactly Gramercy either. And it's also just three short blocks away from this latest shitshow.

    I went on a very special lunch date at Mee when I was just about to move to the hood. Sweet memories. I can't even believe this is the same place.

    ReplyDelete
  15. I'm waiting patiently for a Starbucks on Ave A so I can kick their butts all the way back to Seattle. I'm your kryptonite Schultz.

    ReplyDelete
  16. omg! allen ginsbergs favorite chinese restaurant! let's not allow anybody pay rent to run their business there! especially some company with the means to actually pay their rent!

    ReplyDelete
  17. I'm not welcoming another Starbucks, but I'm also not getting sentimental about a plot of land where a building once stood where there was once a restaurant which a writer who has been dead 15 years apparently liked.

    ReplyDelete
  18. THE NOTORIOUS L.I.B.E.R.A.T.I.O.N.June 12, 2012 at 11:21 AM

    On First Ave there's a Starbucks at 17th Street, 9th Street, and the one everyone mocks at 3rd Street.

    On Second Ave there's the freak show Starbucks at 9th Street.

    On Third Ave there's a Starbucks at 15th Street.

    This expansion seems rather aggressive in a Subway kind of way, no?

    ReplyDelete
  19. The Bean wants to be chain as well 2 within 7 blocks and another 1 on broadway

    ReplyDelete
  20. In my opinion, Tarallucci, City Bakery, Mud, Veneiro's, and DeRobertis, have better coffee, food, and atmosphere than Starbucks and The Bean so there will be no need to frequent either of these establishments.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I like BagelGuy's attitude and wish more local businesses were ready to go to war with chains like Starbucks.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Don't fuck with The Bagel Guy. Hahaha....

    ReplyDelete
  23. I wish that more businesses were ready to go to war with the lousy greedy landlords rather than to be carpetbaggers.

    ReplyDelete
  24. I don't even go to the Bean anymore because of the obnoxious patrons. All I see is people sitting on their laptops, I can't even relax. But I do respect the mosaic work.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Re: "uppity" service at non-chain cafes. Corporations would love to return to slave labor--their profits would be much higher if they didn't have to pay those pesky benefits and living wages. Non-chain employees I guess seem "uppity" when they expect more out of a job.

    ReplyDelete
  26. So does Hot & Crusty going independent count as a victory or something?

    ReplyDelete
  27. Time to look in the mirror. Can't wholly blame Starbucks anymore. We are the consumers, we are the problem. It's a whole new demographic around here at this point. I know because I've talked to some of my neighbors who are recent college grads from places like Wake Forest or Villanova or Bucknell etc. I've heard it from the horse's mouth--there is a whole culture here of these type of transplants. They really do hang out together at places like "13th step" and they really are clueless about this neighborhood and what it once was. It's a tidal wave, it's an epochal shift. The EV as you knew it is officially over. I hate to be a defeatist but IMO it is time to wave the white flag. I myself am planning to move out within a couple of years and it is the thought of that helps get me through my New York days.

    ReplyDelete
  28. I'm looking forward to when the East Village is just 1 giant Starbucks, so I can get my coffee without stepping out in the rain. We could have underground tunnels connecting all the blocks together!

    ReplyDelete
  29. Uh, folks, as has been pointed out on this blog before: Arguing over who is morally superior for choosing whatever shop to purchase a $2 cup of coffee is ... shall we say ... not exactly fighting for world peace?

    Does the Bean offer its full-time employees health insurance? Starbucks does. Does the bean take an international stand (or, more in its back yard: a local stand) on issues, such as gay marriage?

    Also: If I'm not mistaken, isn't the building I pass each day on the M8 bus -- the "re-imagined" East Village tenement on 9th Street -- somewhat of an architectural pox on the history of the Lower East Side? Isn't it owned by a somewhat notorious landlord? So, isn't the Bean, in effect, somehow participating in the "gentrification" of the East Village? For that matter, isn't a fancy coffee shop, in and of itself -- no matter the owner -- gentrification?

    There are things to decry in this neighborhood; in my neighborhood (our neighborhood). The over-saturation of liquor licenses that have turned this neighborhood into an all-night carnival. The city's lack of tending to our rat-infested park. Greedy landlords pushing out long-time, rent-controlled tenants to free apartments to be rented and exorbitant market rates. The lack of a long-term plan to integrate public housing more thoughtfully and sustainably into the larger community (crime-infested tower blocks that warehouse people shoehorned into the corners of the city isn't it). The eviction of seniors from the Cabrini nursing home on 5th Street.

    Coffee shops of any kind might be a symbol of, perhaps, overdevelopment or a lack of respect for a well-balanced streetscape. (That is to say: Chains have a place, but so do independent businesses, and so zoning and other restrictions should take pains to ensure a good mix.)

    But to argue The Bean vs. Starbucks as some kind of avatar of our times is simply misguided. Dare I even say a distraction. Dare I even say ... plain-old stupid.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Starbucks employees get health insurance. I'm conflicted.

    ReplyDelete
  31. im running out of ways to express things in words.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Does anyone else miss Mee Noodle? That was some good cheap Chinese food.

    ReplyDelete

Your remarks and lively debates are welcome, whether supportive or critical of the views herein. Your articulate, well-informed remarks that are relevant to an article are welcome.

However, commentary that is intended to "flame" or attack, that contains violence, racist comments and potential libel will not be published. Facts are helpful.

If you'd like to make personal attacks and libelous claims against people and businesses, then you may do so on your own social media accounts. Also, comments predicting when a new business will close ("I give it six weeks") will not be approved.