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[Photo of 24 1st Ave. from April]
Developer Sergey Rybak filed plans with the city yesterday for a 7-floor, 22-unit residential building at 99-101 E. Second St., part of the L-shaped assemblage that once housed Lucky Cheng's. In total, the building will encompass 19,000 square feet, as The Real Deal first reported.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeZ3kh6gqFK8V7Sr15t3vVliqe27cgaOXysVQJGN3aDgU7IxB7Q7oNKPfYST5zdnVste-dQnfzqdQfmBPAYE3X8kcGNlRa5fVs_Fr0uInEQUN6lFvHXoJ0p_9xhrl3I09bkEmr9HaG/s530/unnamed-3.jpg)
[Photo of 99-101 2nd St. from April]
As we first reported in March, Rybak, of the South Brooklyn-based Rybak Development, was the winning bidder during an auction in February. According to EPIC Commercial Realty, who represented the buyer and the seller, the winning bid was $12.25 million.
So far, there aren't any demolition permits on file.
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Hayne Suthon, who owned and and operated Lucky Cheng's, the cross-dressing cabaret, also lived on the upper floors at 24 First Ave. She died of cancer at age 57 in June 2014.
No. 99-101 Second St. housed a variety of short-lived restaurants in recent years, including Bento Burger ... Marfa... and Waikiki Wally's.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Onetime home of Lucky Cheng's and adjacent property on the development market for $26 million
Building that housed Lucky Cheng's on 1st Avenue now on the auction block
Onetime home of Lucky Cheng's and adjacent property sell for $12 million
2 comments:
And don't forget The Baths! It was a gay bath house for years before all of this.
I've always like that little red brick building; it was originally built as a horse stable, and it's a true rarity, probably one of the few left in the city - for now, at least.
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