No. 109 between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue features 13 residential units and a retail space.
The longtime owner was listed as a trust with a Los Angeles address. The name of the new owner has not hit public records just yet.
According to the New York Business Journal: "The property's current zoning allows for up to 15,000 buildable square feet and the possibility for future development or air rights sales."
The Central Bar, the bi-level sports bar-lounge, closed this past March. In a letter to patrons, the bar owners noted: "Our landlord has sold the building and the new owners will not be keeping us as tenants."
Some years back, the address was home to Pageant Book & Print Shop, and its storefront served as a location for Neil Simon's "Chapter Two" and Woody Allen's "Hannah and Her Sisters."
You can now find Pageant Print Shop at 69 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.
Many moons ago💥
ReplyDeleteThere was a great restaurant next door
EAST WEST (fantastic food❤️💥❤️💥❤️🫖
"The longtime owner was listed as a trust with a Los Angeles address." This should not be allowed You want to own property, you should be a recognizable human being and live locally.
ReplyDeleteComing soon: another bland glass box building.
ReplyDeleteTo 1:49,
ReplyDeleteIt appears that it was in a family trust for Sidney B. Solomon, who founded Pageant Book Shop in 1946. The building had been in his family for 70 years.
Sidney B. Solomon did not own the building. He held a net lease from 1979-1993, which included managing the SRO above the shop. Where are those people now? Thanks for the shout-out. Pageant still exists in the East Village, come by and visit.
ReplyDeleteThis building has been an SRO (single room occupancy) for decades. A lot of low income people live here. The new owner is an issue. Apparently, he runs a consulting business helping landlords to avoid (lower...) property taxes. So, why would someone spend over 3 million dollars on an SRO? Be ready.
ReplyDeleteI lived there Jan-Dec 1966 4C later 2A.This was my “ Walden” I moved in with a suitcase and a sleeping bag. Never-had sheets, dishes, or blankets. I heated up soup in a can and ate it out of the can. It was convenient to most places I went.
DeleteI lived there Jan, 1966 through Dec.1966. Was lucky to find a sparsely furnished room while a student. Lived first in 4C over top of a retired man who chain smoked and drank in a room full of old newspapers in 3C. Moved to 2A in a couple of months. Bed bugs came in June, rats later. This was decades ago and has nothing to do with the building today.When I lived there, I slept in a sleeping bag, had no dishes. Opened cans of soup and heated them on the stove and ate out of the can. 109 E. 9 was my equivalent of Walden Pond.
ReplyDeleteFor anyone who lived in this building in the 1960s and 1970s, if you knew the man who lived in Room 3A, please let me know. His name was George Kukoi, and was my great uncle. As a young man, he was forced to go to the Manzanar Camps in California with his mother, father and 5 siblings. He left in 1945 and despite being very close to his family, was never heard from again. The only hint was he was headed to New York. After decades of research, I was finally able to confirm he passed away in unit 3A at age 60. I would love to hear from anyone who could recall anything about him, where he worked, what he was like. I saw postings of those who lived here and if there are those out there who might have known George, please let me know. Thanks!
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