Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Bait & Hook has closed



The now-former home of Bait & Hook is for lease on the northwest corner of 14th Street and Second Avenue.

EVG reader Jimmy reports that a "closed for renovations" sign arrived last week...



... followed by the arrival of the for rent sign on Friday. (And H/T Shiv and Pinch!)

Bait & Hook opened as an alleged seafood restaurant in September 2012.

Per the press release at the time:

Bait & Hook offers a laid-back, relaxed atmosphere where seafood is the star. Diners can enjoy a reasonably priced meal without compromising high-end, quality cuisine and service. Bait & Hook provides the perfect destination for a quick bite, affordable date or a group gathering, with something on the menu to please everyone in your party.

"We wanted to open a place that offered New Yorkers an affordable, casual dining experience, with the feel of a seafood shack but the taste of an ocean-side eatery," said Executive Chef Joe Bachman.

The space soon earned the nickname Bait & Switch via a few neighbors when the place became a sports bar (an Eagles gathering spot during the NFL season) and SantaCon stop.

There were signs on trouble early last year when the "closed for renovations" signs arrived along with a three-day rent demand from the landlord.

Before Bait & Hook, the space was the Meatball Factory then Hole Foods ... and before that! The Pizza Hut-Nathan's-Arthur Treacher's combo, which vanished in 2010...

19 comments:

  1. Ate there twice ages ago. Their fish & chips was commonplace so we never bothered to go back.

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  2. And before that, in the decades when there was stability in the commercial rent market, it was The Lunch Box diner, with a quirky red-painted wood shingle sign and down-to-earth comfort food. Still miss it.

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  3. I just hope the replacement emphasizes luxury. I'll never eat there but you can't have enough luxury!

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  4. "but you can't have enough luxury!"

    Or Gastropub.

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  5. Would always snort dismissively walking by this place but alas, they lasted a lot longer than I expected.

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  6. Or a luxury gastropub with a salt cave and a foot spa.

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  7. @ hywel dda now I have a craving for fish and chips. Anyone know of a good place for fish and chips? In the neighborhood of course, willing to travel outside too. i know the chippery is supposed to open on 1st ave, thanks to evgrieve for the heads up. But until then, open to suggestions.

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  8. @1:57 am I used to get good fish and chips at Tracks in Penn Station (the only decent place to eat there). Tracks had to relocate due to station renovations and I haven’t been to the new location yet; near Penn Station still. Not sure I would journey there but maybe a good choice if you’re in the area.

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  9. @1:57 we used to enjoy the fish and chips at St. Dymphna's. We have not been to the new location.

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  10. now's the time to get that nuisance exhaust fan replaced before new tenant comes in and can hold landlord responsible. !!

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  11. I try stay clear of that side of 14th Street, too many sporty bro's carrying on, my sympathies to all that live above those places.

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  12. I live in the neighborhood, and have said for years that that location is cursed. I liked Bait & Hook, though my wife did not.

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  13. Genuinely surprised it lasted this long. The angry ghost of Arthur Treacher is not so easily appeased.

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  14. It is time for Starbucks to come front and center and claim this space. East Village has not had a Starbucks in this vicinity for years. This space is conducive to a great location.

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  15. The Starbucks on 2nd Avenue and 9th Street closed last April. There's also a Starbucks on 3rd Avenue at 15th Street.

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  16. Telephone Bar had fabulous fish-n-chips. Now it's home to crapulous douche-bro, dicks-n-chicks (13thStep).

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  17. Fish 'n Chips are OK enough, but the Telephone Bar had British phone booths. Classy and unique.

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  18. I once opened a Lonely Planet tourguide for New York, and a top recommended restaurant for the east village was Bait & Hook! Made me question a lot of things . . .

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  19. Starbucks on 15th Street and 3rd Avenue has little to no impact on the street traffic of 14th Street and Second Avenue. This major thoroughfare would be a phenomenal place to land a new Starbucks. There is a significantly larger number of foot traffic at this intersection than the 3rd Avenue location. In addition, the space at 3rd Avenue is the size of a studio apartment. Second and 14th affords a large, spacious environment for patrons to relax, socialize and enjoy their brew.

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