Sunday, October 27, 2024

Week in Grieview

Posts this week included (with a fall photo from Sixth Street)... 

• Curtain falls on Connelly Theater: Archdiocese takes center stage in script scrutiny drama (Thursday

• Office building on the former site of B Bar & Grill will be home to Chobani House — 'a new model for urban development' (Friday

• Canines, crowds, cops and chaos: At the annual Tompkins Square Park Halloween Dog Parade (Monday

• Op-Ed: The back of our ballot in NYC (Thursday

• Openings: Gizmo on 14th Street (Tuesday

• RIP Gary Indiana (Thursday

• About Sofaclub, a licensed cannabis shop opening this fall on Avenue B (Wednesday

• A look at Walter Salas-Humara's 'Guardians and Realms' at 14BC Gallery (Wednesday

• And now, your Budget Mart signage on Avenue A (Thursday

• Openings: DupBopBro on Houston (Wednesday

• A moment in Tompkins Square Park with Robert Leslie (Tuesday

• Closings: A-Roll Bar and Grill on St. Mark's Place (Tuesday

• Houston Village Farm hasn't been open lately (Monday

• Talking baseball (Friday)

• About a new home for Baker Falls on the Lower East Side (Monday)  

... and there's a rally to save community gardens citywide at City Hall...

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think some gardens are used a lot by the community and others are just used by a few people. The issue here is that the city needs more housing. We have a housing crisis and gardens sit on land that could otherwise house families and people in need. This is a real problem that we have to address and compromise on. There is no good easy answer. Lets not forget that NY is a city meant to house people - and we do have one of the largest parks - Central Park. I think with some of our small gardens we have to think outside the box and consider if housing for people in need is more important than the current use.

Anonymous said...

Central Park is your answer? EV Gardens are what this part of town has going for it - especially now that East River Park has been destroyed by the likes of people with "reasoning" like yours!

Anonymous said...

The city is known for tearing down community garden and then replaces it with rich housing for the privilege

LUNCH said...

There are more than 21,000 vacant apartments in NYC. They are allowed to be warehoused by a city in the palms of realtors hands. There is no reason to destroy open, public spaces to build the dirty joke "affordable housing" that only the wealthy can afford.