The Continental ends its 27-year run tonight at 23 Third Avenue at St. Mark's Place. (Final night details here.)
Ahead of that, workers removed the
The special evolved from $10 for five-shots-of-anything ... then $12 for five-shots-of-anything... to $12 for six-shots-of-anything. (Documented here.)
As you likely know, a five-story office building with ground-floor retail will eventually rise on this northeast corner.
Updated
Apparently Dec. 15 was simply the farewell party but NOT the last night... flyers are now up on the front doors noting a Dec. 31 last night... with inventory clearance until then...
Previously on EV Grieve:
The Shake Shack effect? McDonald's on 3rd Avenue at St. Mark's Place has closed after 20 years
Report: Northeast corner of St. Mark's Place and 3rd Ave. fetching $50 million for development site
Report: NE corner of St. Mark's Place and 3rd Avenue will yield to a 7-story office building
Demolition permits filed for northeast corner of 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place
End is nearing for the businesses on the northeast corner of 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place
The Continental gets a 3-month reprieve
New building plans revealed for 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place
Goodbye without regrets. So much of the commentary on this site is about "neighborhood." The Continental hasn't been, and perhaps never was, about being a neighborhood bar (pace all those who remember live shows there). There were no bartenders there that one went in to see (like John and Maria at Grassroots or Brendan at Bull McCabe's). No regrets--some places should fade away and this is one of them.
ReplyDelete@10:00am: Agreed! This, to me, was only a bro-magnet bar, not anything to do with the neighborhood (except its location made it "cool").
ReplyDeleteI'm only sorry it's being replaced by a crappy glass building; one lousy thing yields to another lousy thing. There's no win for the neighborhood anywhere in this.
Literally...
ReplyDeleteAnyone remember "Wrong Way Shaun"? Rocker dude who used to play at Continental and also did furniture deliveries in his van from antiques market at Broadway/Grand. Nice guy !
ReplyDeleteIt was an important neighborhood live music staple, and that is what we remember and miss. If you don't get it, maybe it's time to go back to Ohio.
ReplyDeleteI went last night to try to attend the party and was turned away-- they said "tonight is a private party and the actual last night is the 31st."
ReplyDeleteNot sure if that was true or B's, evgrieve should investigate!
@anon 12/15/18 10:00 AM, given, yes, it hasn't been a neighborhood staple for a long time, but if you remember the 1990s and you went to see shows at the continental and coney island high and all those other places, you would have some regrets that these places are no more, just as you do about the other places that have come and gone. Most of us who enjoyed the continental back in the day probably did our grieving when they dropped live music and changed into the 6 shots place, but that doesn't mean we can't remember it fondly now, or that we should say good riddance. I'll always miss coming off of the train at astor place and seeing the continental and the mixtape guy and the gringo mural and knowing I was back on one of my favorite blocks.
ReplyDeleteIt's kind of funny to think of the EV resident of a certain vintage (think recent grad) who is seeing their go-to cheap shots spot close down and is saying to their friends, "well, there goes the neighborhood."
ReplyDelete