Monday, December 22, 2025

Openings: Burgerhead on 2nd Avenue

Burgerhead debuted over the weekend at 145 Second Ave. on the NW corner of Ninth Street. 

This is the second NYC outpost for the quick-serve joint serving charbroiled burgers and beef tallow fries. The menu includes hot dogs, chicken sandwiches, shakes and Mexican Coca-Cola. (There is a meatless "impossible charburger" available, too.) 

Current posted hours are 5-11 p.m., with a 1 a.m. close on Fridays and Saturdays. 

Signage arrived here on Dec. 2, 2024, and there wasn't much activity here earlier in the year. 

A fast-casual restaurant, Balkan StrEAT, was in the works for the corner space. However, the owners closed their Sixth Avenue outpost and pivoted to the burger biz. (Burgerhead took over the former Balkan StrEAT space at 353 Sixth Ave.)

This Second Avenue address was also home to a Starbucks until April 2019

And as some long-time residents will recall ... for 37 years the space was the Orchidia, a Ukrainian-Italian restaurant that closed in 1984 after the landlord raised the rent from $950 to $5,000. 

The restaurant's closing was a flashpoint in the early 1980s gentrification of the East Village. 

"Gentrify, they say that's a good thing," [Orchidia owner] Maria Pidhorodecky told the Times in a December 1983 article titled New Prosperity Brings Discord to the East Village. "To me, 'gentrify' means losing the neighborhood, the restaurant, and the feeling we have of being like family."

1 comment:

  1. I remember Orchidia. A good neighbor unlike the noisy beer & liquor fueled joints of today.
    My only enduring memory of the Starbucks was a noisy Coffee Addict banging on their door at 6:55 a.m. (they opened at 7 a.m.).

    ReplyDelete

Your remarks and lively debates are welcome, whether supportive or critical of the views herein. Your articulate, well-informed remarks that are relevant to an article are welcome.

However, commentary that is intended to "flame" or attack, that contains violence, racist comments and potential libel will not be published. Facts are helpful.

If you'd like to make personal attacks and libelous claims against people and businesses, then you may do so on your own social media accounts. Also, comments predicting when a new business will close ("I give it six weeks") will not be approved.