Thursday, September 4, 2025

Revisiting New Yorkers, then and now: Michael Berman's '99 SNAPSHOTS at the 14th Street Y

East Village resident Kika seen (top) in 1999 and 2019. Photos by Michael Berman 

Back in 1999, photographer Michael Berman wandered the streets of Manhattan with his camera, asking strangers if he could take their photos. 

Many of those he met lived or worked in the East Village. Some were just New Yorkers passing through, caught in a fleeting moment.

Two decades later, Berman has located many of those same people and photographed them again. 

The resulting series, "'99 SNAPSHOTS," is currently on display at the 14th Street Y's Lobby Gallery (344 E. 14th St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue) through Sept. 29. 

The exhibit presents double portraits of 18 people, side by side: their younger selves on the cusp of the millennium and their present-day selves, reflecting the passage of time in a city that never stops moving. 

"Exploring the lives and perspectives of this multifaceted slice of our community conveys a timeless — and timely — message: We can learn from anyone we encounter," Berman said in a news release about the exhibit. "The hope is that this exhibition will inspire you to meet new people, connect with them, and spend some time listening."

The portraits are part of a larger documentary film and photography project that Berman has been working on since 2017, also called "'99 SNAPSHOTS." You can find a sneak preview of the film here

At its core, the project explores what it means to live in New York, and how stories of individual lives — when viewed together — can help bridge the divides of a fractured time. 

A reception with Berman is happening tonight (Sept. 4!) at 7. The event is free and open to everyone.

Berman started his career shooting for Brooklyn community newspapers before joining the New York Daily News. Over the years, his work has appeared in magazines, restaurants, shops, schools, nonprofits, and throughout the city. 

With "'99 SNAPSHOTS," Berman revisits the images that launched his career, reconnecting with the people who influenced not just his work — but also the city itself. 

You can follow Berman on Instagram at this link

Below, Brian (an EV resident) and Susan — 1999 and 2019...
Jennifer and Bob (aka Bleecker Bob) — 1999 and 2017 ...

On Saturday, La Salle Academy celebrates return to 2nd Street campus

La Salle Academy, one of New York's oldest Catholic high schools, is returning to its longtime East Village home on Second Street after 15 years on Sixth Street. 

On Saturday, the school will hold a ceremony at 44 E. Second St. (near Second Avenue) beginning at 9:30 a.m. The day will start with a mass in the gym celebrated by Bishop Edmund Whalen, followed by a blessing of the building and the unveiling of a new 9/11 memorial plaque honoring 12 La Salle alumni who died that day, including FDNY Chief Ray Downey. 

The FDNY Emerald Society Pipes and Drums will perform as part of the proceedings. 

La Salle, an all-boys school, had operated out of St. George Academy on Sixth Street since 2010. The Nord Anglia International School New York, which previously leased 44 E. Second St., relocated to Gramercy Park for the fall. 

With enrollment on the rise, the Christian Brothers and alumni have invested in modernizing the Second Street building, which had been the school's home from 1856 to 2010. 

As part of the celebration, Second Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue will be closed to traffic until 3 p.m. The block will feature food from local restaurants, music and games for La Salle supporters and the EV community. 

Previously on EV Grieve:

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Comedy club eyeing former comedy club space on Avenue A

Photos by Stacie Joy (top pic from last summer)

The owner of the Top Secret Comedy Club, a UK-based comedy and improv venue with several locations, is eyeing the former Upright Citizens Brigade Theater's UCBeast space on Avenue A and Third Street.

Reps for the business started by Mark Rothman 13 years ago will appear before CB3's SLA Licensing & Outdoor Dining Committee on Monday.
They are aiming for a full liquor license along with a food menu featuring pizza. The proposed occupancy shows 242 seats. You can find the questionnaire here with more info. 

The past tenant here, the gallery-performance space O'Flaherty's, had a memorable 18-month run. 

Upright Citizens Brigade Theater operated UCBeast here from September 2011 to February 2019. At the time, UCB officials blamed the "extreme costs" of operating here for its closing. 

The club had its share of drama before and right after its opening, notably with the Hot Chicks Room and New Jack Cornballs

Upright Citizens Brigade opened in a new space on 14th Street last fall.

Monday's meeting is at 6:30. The Zoom link is here. This is a hybrid meeting, and limited seating is available for the public — the first 15 people who show up at the Community Board 3 Office, 59 E. Fourth St., between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

Apologizing for 'a dick move' on 7th Street

Early Saturday morning, a surveillance camera spotted three men walking off with Titi's signage outside the quick-serve spot at 130 E. Seventh St., just west of Avenue A. 

Team Titi's was understandably not happy, and they posted the footage on Instagram, asking their 36,000-plus followers to help track down the sign. 

Per the post
Please help us find our custom sign. Posting this on our feed so ya'll can share and help us locate/identify these fools. These dudes are mad corny and need to do better. Custom signs cost a ton of money and are necessary to get our name and brand out there. This has a larger impact than they think. 

The outreach apparently worked. 

Sunday night at 11, the camera picked up someone — dressed inconspicuously for a nightime stroll on Seventh Street in a hoodie, sunglasses and a homemade ski mask — returning the sign.
EVG reader Drew Heffron pointed out the returned sign included a Post-it note: "So sorry. It was a dick move."
Titi's NYC Inspired Empanadas expanded here from Williamsburg, debuting back in June.

Change is coming to Blink Fitness on Avenue A (and elsewhere)

The Blink Fitness chain, including the Avenue A outpost, is in flux following the gym chain's sale. 

PureGym, a leading U.K.-based operator, finalized its $121 million acquisition of Blink late last year, with plans to rebrand 67 New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania locations under the PureGym banner this year.

New signage about PureGym is up at the Avenue A outpost between Sixth Street and Seventh Street for current Blink members here and elsewhere (like on Fourth Street and Lafayette)...
What this means on Avenue A, though, is less clear. Staff members offered conflicting answers on whether the gym will close for renovations during the transition. There are also questions about whether membership prices will increase. 

Signage points to promises of new equipment, refreshed spaces, and "a feel-good, judgment-free community."

For now, the only certainty is that Blink's new app went live last week, requiring members to download it to access the gym.

PureGym, a budget gym brand, reportedly beat out Planet Fitness in the acquisition after Blink's Equinox parent voluntarily filed for bankruptcy in August 2024. 

Signage alert: Roku/Nana on Clinton Street

Signage is up for Roku/Nana at 67 Clinton St. between Stanton and Rivington on the Lower East Side. (Thanks to EVG reader Megan Rains for the photo.) 

The bar-restaurant is a brand via AO Hospitality. Per its website
Roku/Nana offers two distinctly different dining experiences. Downstairs, Roku reimagines the classic Japanese Izakaya with inventive small plates in a lively setting. Nana transforms into a bar, serving handcrafted cocktails in an intimate, old-world ambiance. 
As far as we can recall, this space was previously the burger joint The Burgary.

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

EVLovesNYC celebrates 100,000th meal served in 2025

Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy

On Sunday, the volunteers of the mutual aid group EVLovesNYC marked a milestone — serving their 100,000th meal of 2025 with a celebratory cake.

Since launching during the pandemic spring of 2020, the group has created and distributed more than 680,000 meals to date.

Earlier this summer, EVLovesNYC relocated to the social hall and kitchen at Middle Collegiate Church on Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue, where they continue to prepare meals for distribution across the city.

Deliveristas face new enforcement in the East Village

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

For the second time this summer, the NYPD and the Department of Sanitation conducted an e-bike sweep targeting delivery workers, also known as deliveristas. However, unlike the operation on July 30, which focused on the NE corridor at 11th Street, the Aug. 28 enforcement expanded to First Avenue, where officers seized two dozen bikes. 

Ahead of the sweep, an NYPD officer on the scene told me: "Whatever is not in the [bike] corral will be taken, whatever is on the fence will be taken."
According to police sources, the operation was initiated following a recent New York Post article, which described 11th Street as "an eyesore with 125 e-bikes clogging the street" and "a hideous dumping ground for e-bikes," prompting the attention of City Hall. From there, City Hall pressured 1 Police Plaza to take immediate action. 

While enforcement was initially requested the week of Aug. 18, officials needed Sanitation crews and trucks available, so the sweep was pushed to Aug. 28 instead. 
 
Although warning signs were posted along 11th Street, east of First Avenue, near the under-renovation Madina Masjid Islamic Council of America on the northeast corner, the seizures ultimately occurred on First Avenue, including areas north of the posted signs. That included a stretch across from Veniero's, which deliveristas had previously been told was "safe" from enforcement. 

Many workers appeared confused and frustrated as bikes locked in those areas were nevertheless removed.
I also witnessed a handful of deliveristas receiving summonses after arriving too late to retrieve their bikes. 

As officers explained, once a bike is in NYPD custody, it cannot be released without a summons being issued.
Unlike the earlier sweep this summer, personal possessions such as bags, backpacks, tables, and chairs were spared.

"This time it's about cigarette butts, trash and debris, broken bike locks, chains… no personal belongings," a Sanitation worker told me. "We don't want to trash someone's means of earning money."

Community members also played a protective role. Neighbors and activists moved deliveristas' bags out of reach before the operation began, first stashing them in the Lower East Side Playground next to East Side Community School on 11th Street between Avenue A and First Avenue, then in the adjacent community garden, to prevent them from being taken by police or Sanitation.
Deliverista support and response 

Tyler Hefferon, executive director of the East Village-based food insecurity nonprofit EV Loves NYC (below center), who has been working in coordination with Los Deliveristas Unidos and the Workers Justice Project, said they tried to reduce the losses this time by spreading word of the sweep in advance.
"[The week of Aug. 18] we were notified there would be another bike sweep outside the 11th Street mosque, and we did our best, in coordination with Los Deliveristas Unidos, to spread the word. We were able to reduce the number of bikes taken," Hefferon said. "Still, there were three or four dozen that were locked up illegally and confiscated by the NYPD." 

He continued:

"We saw people receiving summonses. We're trying to keep in touch with everyone affected — those who had bikes seized or got summonses — to help them through the recovery process. That means accompanying them to the precinct or to administrative court hearings so they can get their bikes back. We're also working with local elected officials and the NYPD Community Affairs to make sure photos of bikes, or even just having the key, can serve as proof of ownership. Last time, people lost valuable belongings — IDs, work authorization papers, even documents for immigration hearings. So we also made an effort to make sure personal property was protected this time." 

Community voices 

Officials previously stated that the enforcement was a response to a surge in community complaints about noise, congestion, and food waste resulting from 11th Street's unofficial use as a waiting and staging area for e-bike delivery workers. Quality-of-life issues have been mentioned at 9th Precinct Community Council meetings. 

However, some local residents are now serving as advocates for the deliveristas.
Community Board 3 District Manager Susan Stetzer said the support from neighbors has been crucial.

"The community has been involved and very helpful. The garden opened during the cleanup and let us store bags and chairs there," said Stetzer (pictured on the left below). "Residents did an amazing job getting the word out to move bikes. Workers Justice is planning a meeting with deliveristas, plus ways for people to join efforts and stay on top of information."
She added: "I think it's a real shame that the city is going after these very vulnerable men who are just trying to work and earn a living, instead of using resources to create a place for these men to be able to comply and be able to work." 

What's next

In a shift from July, some bikes have been returned to their owners when they could show a key as proof of ownership. Several administrative tickets have also been dismissed — in one case, because the ticket was illegible. 

Still, the overall process remains confusing, with workers required to navigate court hearings and precinct bureaucracy just to get back their means of earning a living. 

From the NYPD side, the paperwork process remains murky. "This is not a criminal court summons, although it is written on a criminal ticket," one officer said. "The city didn't anticipate this problem, so no special paperwork exists for it." 

For now, the sweeps appear likely to continue. Privately, a few NYPD officers admitted to frustration with the policy being "driven by media articles." 

With pressure from City Hall and ongoing coverage, the operations could remain a fixture under Mayor Adams. 

However, this latest sweep also revealed stronger coordination among deliveristas, neighbors, and local organizations — a sign that, while enforcement may continue, so will resistance and resourcefulness.

Previously on EV Grieve

Grassroots effort to preserve Most Holy Redeemer grows with weekly vigils

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

The grassroots effort continues to help save Most Holy Redeemer-Church of the Nativity on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B. 

A group of residents and parishioners once again held a prayer vigil outside the church on Friday evening at 7 — a gathering they plan to continue weekly at this time. (You can follow the Facebook group Save Most Holy Redeemer Historical Church here.)

Participants brought headsets and a small portable speaker that was fastened to the church gates. Prayer sheets were handed out, and the group recited a series of novenas.
The mood outside was a mix of reverence and frustration. Parishioners have expressed concerns that the Archdiocese has not been transparent about its future plans for this parcel, which includes the adjoining rectory. (That building belongs to the Redemptorists, not the Archdiocese, which had only been renting the space.) 

Several people also spoke about plans to attend the last Mass, held on Sunday, Aug. 31. Moving forward, Masses will be held at St. Brigid-St. Emeric on Avenue B. 

Fox 5 was also on hand with a camera crew to cover the scene. 

Village Preservation, along with the Lower East Side Preservation Initiative and the East Village Community Coalition, has launched a campaign to save Most Holy Redeemer, which has stood at 173 E. Third St. for more than 150 years. 

Outgoing District 2 City Council Member Carlina Rivera and leadership at the Tenement Museum have voiced their support for preserving the church.

Founded in 1844 by German-speaking Redemptorist missionaries and completed in 1851, the church was once among the tallest structures in New York. Nicknamed the "German Cathedral of the Lower East Side," it became a cornerstone of Kleindeutschland. It played a significant role in the city's religious, immigrant, and fire safety history — from introducing Gregorian chant in Catholic churches to pioneering the use of electricity for religious structures. 

Despite that legacy, Most Holy Redeemer, and preservationists warn that the building could be at risk. Village Preservation notes the Landmarks Preservation Commission has often failed to protect historic churches, synagogues, and other neighborhood sites of worship in recent years. 

For neighbors, the prospect of the steeple disappearing from the skyline after decades as a familiar presence is almost unimaginable. 

As the Facebook group states: 
Holy Redeemer is more than just bricks and stained glass — it's a cornerstone of our community's identity. Its architecture, history, and spiritual presence deserve to be cherished, not forgotten.

Monday, September 1, 2025

Monday's parting shot

An end-of-summer scene from the empty lot on Second Avenue and Second Street.

From apartment to curb: massive move-out on 9th Street

We received several reader reports about a move-out at 418 E. Ninth St., between Avenue A and First Avenue, where, seemingly, the entire contents of someone's apartment are now on the sidewalk out front.
According to a reliable source, the discard happened late last night. 

By this afternoon, the sidewalk had yet to be cleared, frustrating a reader who relies on a cane to help get around. 

Updated: Clean up!
Top photo by William Klayer; next pics by Steven. Thanks to everyone who submitted photos.

At what may be the final Mass at Most Holy Redeemer

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

Yesterday marked the final scheduled Mass at Most Holy Redeemer-Church of the Nativity on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B, following word earlier this summer that the parish would close after Aug. 31. 

Inside the historic church — a fixture in the East Village for more than 150 years — there was no mention of the closure during the service I attended. Parishioners prayed and sang as if it were any other Sunday, even as the looming uncertainty hung heavy.
Afterward, a church employee approached me, offering a blunt explanation: "Monsignor Nelan is a very difficult man to deal with and he wants this church closed." The employee added, "It's not a matter of money, it's a matter of personnel. We have no priests! And they are transferring another one of ours to upstate." 

Parishioners are being directed to St. Brigid's on Avenue B for regular services. 

Church leaders cited a shortage of priests and the deteriorating condition of the building, including falling plaster, as reasons for the shift. 

Earlier this summer, church officials said that engineers would evaluate whether the church remains safe. (An employee of Most Holy Redeemer and St. Brigid attended the July 14 meeting and expressed skepticism about the timing of the engineering review, calling it "suspicious.")
The Archdiocese has not made a formal public statement about the closure.

Earlier vigils outside the church have brought neighbors and parishioners together, some calling on the city to protect the building through landmarking.
Village Preservation has urged action, noting the church’s deep ties to the East Village's German immigrant past and its role as one of the tallest structures in New York when it was completed in 1851.

For now, the future of the "German Cathedral of the Lower East Side" remains unclear.