Thursday, July 16, 2026

The most colorful building in the East Village isn’t permanently turning white

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Some neighbors have expressed concern about the sudden disappearance of the familiar colors at the southeast corner of Avenue B and Fourth Street. 

Not to worry: The white exterior is only primer. Antonio Echeverri, who has owned the building at 246 E. Fourth St. since 1992, told us that a new color scheme is on the way: red, gold and two shades of burgundy. The lavender and purple around the ground-floor entrance and grates will remain.
He refreshes the building about every five years. Painting is expected to begin soon and take about three weeks.
Echeverri, whose son, Michael, also lives in the building, has long selected — and sometimes mixed — the colors himself. 

He said the palette reflects the colorful buildings he remembers from his native Colombia. The building previously featured a violet exterior with red trim, along with touches of blue and gold. 

As The Village Voice reported in a 2016 profile, Echeverri bought the property when it was close to being condemned and gradually restored it, working apartment by apartment with a small crew and often doing the renovations himself. 

So, no, the white era isn’t permanent. Stay tuned for the next coat.

The heat isn't done yet — and neither is the wildfire smoke

The city's heat emergency plan has been extended through today as another day of 90-degree temperatures coincides with smoke from Canadian wildfires drifting into the region.

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation is forecasting an Air Quality Index (AQI) of 200 for the NYC metro area today — considered "Unhealthy." Officials are urging New Yorkers to limit outdoor activity, especially those with heart or lung conditions, older adults and children.

Cooling centers will remain open today, and free KN95 masks are available at locations citywide. Locally, that would be at the 9th Precinct on Fifth Street between First and Second Avenues... plus our two library branches, Ottendorfer on Second Avenue and Tompkins Square on 10th Street. Find a map for other NYC locations here

According to The City Reporter, "when smoke from Canadian wildfires engulfed the city in June 2023, the boroughs turned suddenly orange, with air quality indices reaching 484 — the highest ever recorded." 

The City Reporter has more FAQs and resource info here.

Rabbit Books and Bar sets opening weekend for July 24-26 on Avenue A

Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy

Rabbit Books and Bar, the incoming independent bookstore and café at 170 Avenue A at 11th Street, has set its grand opening weekend for July 24-26. 

Owners Marianna Vaidman Stone (above right) and her daughter Emily Samara Stone announced the dates on Instagram yesterday. 

According to the owners, opening weekend visitors will have access to limited-edition merchandise and can become "Founding Readers," a membership that includes future perks and special offers. 

We first spoke with Marianna and Emily in late May about their plans for the space, which will offer new and used books, coffee, beer, wine and community events. 

Previously on EV Grieve:

GonzoFest NYC brings Hunter S. Thompson celebration to Howl! Happening

A three-day celebration of Hunter S. Thompson's life and legacy is coming to the East Village this weekend.

GonzoFest NYC takes over Howl! Happening Friday through Sunday with a lineup of talks, live music, art, panel discussions and spoken-word performances exploring the influential writer's impact on journalism, politics and American culture. 

The festival will focus on Thompson's political writing and activism, as well as his connections to the Beat Generation. 

Featured guests include artist Ralph Steadman and his daughter, Sadie Williams; Thompson's son, Juan Thompson; grandson Will Thompson; Joe Iconis, who will present songs from his musical inspired by Thompson's life; plus Phoebe Legere, Puma Perl, Penny Arcade, and other writers, artists and poets. 

Daily details here

Howl! Happening is at 6 E. First St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Wednesday's parting shot

Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy 

If you stop by C&B café this week, chances are owner Ali Sahin will be cooking your breakfast or lunch.

Sahin is back on grill duty while members of the kitchen staff enjoy some vacation time.

C&B is at 178 E. Seventh St., just west of Avenue B.

First president of japan caps Show Brain show with a joyous set in Tompkins Square Park

Photos by Stacie Joy

If you like your Sunday afternoon concerts fun and unpredictable, first president of japan delivered.

The Brooklyn punk band headlined Sunday's free Show Brain concert in Tompkins Square Park, capping the afternoon with a joyous, high-energy set that blurred the line between performance and audience participation.
Lead vocalist Non Kuramoto (also a comedian and actress by trade) spent much of the set in the crowd — crowd-surfing, dancing and encouraging fans to join the fun as the audience eagerly obliged.

The band's sound blends punk, garage rock and math rock with a healthy dose of absurdity. (Their latest EP, Your Recommended Daily Intake of first president of japan, includes songs featuring humor, heart... and whale facts.) 
And faces in the crowd on this Sunday...

Hot Hot Hot!!!

The Heat Advisory remains in effect until 9 this evening, per the National Weather Service. 

The heat index will hover near 105 today. Find a list of beat-the-heat resources here

In addition, there's an Air Quality Advisory due to the smoke from the wildfires burning in Canada. 

The resources do NOT include sending out the city snowplows, which we spotted multiple times yesterday... reverse weather psychology? 

Headline inspo.

Who is stealing the 'the' from the East Village?

Outside the Mars Bar from 2009 

Is it "the East Village" or just "East Village"? 

That's the question posed in a New York Times piece examining a small but increasingly noticeable shift in how New Yorkers talk about neighborhood names. The article centers on the growing tendency — especially among younger New Yorkers and newcomers — to drop the definite article, saying "East Village" instead of "the East Village" (and "West Village" instead of "the West Village"). 

The trend has sparked spirited debate online, with longtime residents arguing that omitting "the" just sounds wrong. The story cites New York City walking tour guide Nicky Shapiro, whose TikTok video urging people to "hold onto their articles" drew hundreds of comments. 

Some readers blamed social media and abbreviated speech, while others said dropping "the" is simply more efficient. 

The Times also notes that neighborhood signs and maps typically omit articles for space, which may contribute to the confusion, and points to other naming debates, from "the Bronx" versus "Bronx" to the use of "L.E.S." for the Lower East Side. 

As for us? We'll be over here in the East Village.

Signage alert: Archives Of Us on 2nd Avenue

A new coffee and matcha shop is in the works at 84 Second Ave., between Fourth and Fifth Streets.

Archives Of Us, which got its start in downtown Los Angeles last year, is taking over the storefront. 

According to the business, the café will serve "ceremonial-grade" matcha sourced from Kagoshima, Japan, along with coffee in a minimalist, design-focused setting. The menu is expected to focus on coffee, matcha and a small selection of specialty drinks. 

Nai closed here last November... they were the first retail tenant here in decades at the once-mysterious address.

ICYMI: The Swiss Institute closes before opening its new Bowery home

We fielded a few reader queries about the Swiss Institute in the past 10 days.

As previously reported, the gallery space and the contemporary art nonprofit have closed on the SE corner of Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place...
... ahead of a move to its first permanent home — 250 Bowery near Stanton Street... expected to debut in the spring. 

The last day here for the Swiss Institute, which debuted at 38 St. Mark's Place in 2018, was on July 5.

They will be missed, but we do look forward to their new space. 

No word on what might take over this prime EV corner.

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

RIP Hell Ride, now in skateboard heaven

EVG reader Elliot noted that the Parks Department trashed the newly double-wide Hell Ride in the multipurpose courts/TF in Tompkins early this morning. 

We thank you for your service... (photos from Saturday by Stacie Joy)...

Show Brain Sunday (part 1) with Diary, Tea Eater

Photos by Stacie Joy

We arrived at Sunday's free Show Brain show in Tompkins Square Park just as Tea Eater had audience members ducking under an oversized inflatable stick of butter during a limbo contest inspired by "Butter," a track from the art-punk band's LP, I Don't Believe in Bad Luck. 

We knew it was going to be a memorable afternoon.
Next up, NYC's Diary, which just released an infectious new single, "Keep Comin' Up," that we happily heard on the Morning Show with John Richards on KEXP several times last week. 

The band's first LP, Spiral Bound, is out in September.
Show Brains veterans Pons were next, and they never disappoint...
Then came the headliners — The First President of Japan, who provided 30 minutes of unbridled joy...
To be continued ...

The heat is on (again)

Photo by Stacie Joy 

With another heatwave expected over the next few days, the city is ramping up the beat-the-heat messaging. Find a list of resources here.

The Aurea: Affordable housing planned for NYPD lot on 5th Street

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

City officials yesterday announced that the 9th Precinct's parking lot on Fifth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue will be developed into a mixed-use building with approximately 131 affordable apartments, a senior center, community space and replacement parking for the NYPD. 

The project, called The Aurea, will be developed by Spatial Equity, Housing Works, the Cooper Square Committee and This Land is Ours Community Land Trust. 

Speakers yesterday included (from left) Steve Herrick, executive director, Cooper Square Committee; Dina Levy, HPD commissioner; Leila Bozorg, deputy mayor for housing and planning; Brian Kavanaugh, state senator; and Brad Hoylman-Sigal, Manhattan borough president.
According to the city, all 131 apartments will be income-restricted, with 30% reserved for formerly homeless New Yorkers. Housing Works will provide on-site supportive services for residents. 

Officials told us afterward that the final height of The Aurea has not yet been determined and will depend, in part, on a future rezoning of the site. If approved, construction is expected to take about two years.

Here's a look at the renderings...
The proposal stems from a city request for proposals that followed the SoHo/NoHo Neighborhood Plan process and community outreach, including public workshops and multilingual engagement. 

The Aurea is the first city-owned development site designated under the Mamdani administration. City Hall said it reflects a broader push to build affordable housing on public land and expand the role of community land trusts in future projects.

The parking lot across the street from the 9th Precinct station house has long been identified as a potential site for affordable housing. In recent years, neighborhood organizations, including the Cooper Square Committee and This Land is Ours Community Land Trust, have advocated for the redevelopment of publicly owned property into permanently affordable housing. 

While the city said the project will include 25 replacement parking spaces for the NYPD, a police source told EVG that the Precinct is losing more than half of its existing parking capacity. 

The source said the redevelopment will also eliminate storage space used for vouchered vehicles, confiscated e-bikes and other large seized items, much of which will now have to be kept on the street.
Previously on EV Grieve