Showing posts with label Ninth Ward. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ninth Ward. Show all posts

Monday, July 6, 2026

Inside Ninth Ward's 10-year comeback on 2nd Avenue

Photos and interview by Stacie Joy 

The reopening of the Ninth Ward has become something of an East Village epic. 

When the New Orleans-inspired bar closed on Feb. 14, 2016, the expectation was that it would return after an 18-month renovation and an addition to the building at 180 Second Ave., between 11th Street and 12th Street.

Instead, construction delays, the pandemic, landlord issues and a change in building ownership turned the project into an almost 10-year journey. Co-owner Nic Ratner compares it to Odysseus finally making it home after years at sea. 

Ahead of the long-awaited soft opening this week, ahead of the official debut on Friday, we met with the owners, Ratner, Robert Morgan, and Lena Geskin, to talk about surviving the delays, watching the neighborhood evolve from the sidelines, and why they never gave up on coming back to Second Avenue. 

The interview was punctuated with lots of laughter, even when recounting the difficulties of the situation. (Geskin, the chef, had to excuse herself to see to some kitchen activities. Below: Geskin, Ratner and Morgan.)
It's been nearly 10 years since you closed with the expectation of reopening in about 18 months. Did you ever have a moment when you wondered if Ninth Ward would actually make it back? 

Ratner: Almost monthly. The analogy I’ve come up with is that — it seems appropriate that the movie "The Odyssey" is about to come out — I feel like Odysseus, that I'm finally coming back after 10 years at war. Often, I would just say, this is not going to happen. We're just constantly being told, six months, nine months, then two years of silence, three months. It just kept going… 

Morgan: And a combination of lots of different things. The New York City Buildings Department and crazy bureaucracy. And COVID. 

Ratner: The ineptitude of the landlord! It was just a confluence of annoyances. 

Morgan: There were many times that we were just waiting. And then even when things were actually happening and we were able to be in here working with the owner at the time, his architect, and his engineers, for what he wanted to do, which was build two floors on top of the building that was here, they had to go 20 feet down to underpin the building and to make it stable enough to put that much more weight on top.

But they gutted the whole thing! There were just steel beams inside here. And they repoured all the floors and everything had to be up to, at the time, a 2022 code or whatever the bureaucracy was, the hoops that they were jumping through. That was what really caused most of the delays.

And then, in the last year, the owner approached us and let us know he was going to sell the building — not yet completed — and that he had found a new owner, who took possession of the building on Jan. 1 of this year. 

Ratner: No, last year? Jan. 1, 2025. 

Morgan: That's how much of a blur this is. 

Ratner: Exactly. Time has gone completely liminal. It's what COVID did to time; this building has done so exponentially more. It was Jan. 1, 2025.
What were you told about the gut renovation of the building at 180 Second Ave.? 

Morgan: At the time, they were going to be full-floor rentals. The elevator opens up onto each floor. They’re beautiful, and they go from east to west. The sun rises in the east, and you can get sun all day long because there's western exposure over here. They are gorgeous. The new owner's plan is to go condo with it. So the whole rental idea has been removed from the table. 

Do you have a good relationship with the new owner? 

Ratner: Yes, yes. Much better than... Oh, it's a relationship now. 

Morgan: Yeah, with the last owner, obviously, things started out wonderfully. It was going to be... 

Ratner: He said 18 months! By September of 2017, we were going to be back in here. Right. And then that all went pear-shaped.

Morgan: So that relationship suffered because of it. But the relationship with the new owner has been fantastic thus far. 

Ratner: The new owner actually seems grounded in reality. The previous owner would tell you what he thought you wanted to hear. Which is a euphemistic way of saying lying. 

What has it been like watching the East Village change while you’ve been waiting to reopen? What are you most looking forward to about being back? 

Ratner: I've been on 12th Street between Second and Third since 1983. I used to wait tables at Bandito's. 

That's a long time!

Ratner: Oh, I've always said they’ll take me out of the East Village feet first. 

Morgan: We both lived nearby when we opened Ninth Ward. I'd walk over, pick Nic up, and we'd come here together.

And we had Shoolbred's before this. I guess that one closed shortly after this? 

Ratner: Not shortly after, it was still going for a while after we opened this. And we have Kingston Hall as well. That's been going on the whole time. 

So that has kept you busy? 

Ratner: That kept us busy as well. When they said they were going to close to renovate this space, he [Morgan] had just flown over to London to open up Ninth Ward in London, which still exists and just had its 10th anniversary. 

And we were opening it as a sister bar. Well, now, a decade later, we're opening up the sister bar to the one in London, which is here. 

Morgan: Yeah, it's funny how that works. Obviously, COVID was a big change in the neighborhood. Nowadays, COVID is like that timeline. It was like before and after. It's like before Christ and after. 

And obviously things had changed drastically in New York during that time, especially in this industry with people drinking from home, and now the trend seems to be that people are drinking less, or at least Gen Z is drinking less. 

Ratner: Or articles say. 

Morgan: Yeah, who knows, really? I tend to think that's true nationally, but in Manhattan, we certainly haven't seen it at Kingston Hall. And we're hoping that's the case here as well.

Ratner: The thing with our bars is that there are always two prerequisites: no TVs and fireplaces. That brings a very different crowd than the World Cup, the Knicks or any other sporting event. We take the hit on nights when there's a big game or even the Oscars.

So, a warm and cozy vibe?

Ratner: Yeah. Warm and cozy, and also just generally a little more grown-up.

Morgan: I think we've gotten a little wiser, or maybe more refined, while still keeping the casual nature of the East Village. It seems like every other bar is up for "best bar in the world" now. Every industry has its own awards, and it feels like the Village — East or West — is filled with places like that. We still like to maintain the casualness.

Ratner: It's like you're conscientious without being pretentious. One of the things we've always said is that we want to build bars that we want to drink in. And secondly, we want to build bars that a woman feels comfortable walking into by herself. If that happens, then we've achieved what we set out to do.

How did you stay motivated through the construction delays, the pandemic and everything else that stretched this into nearly a decade of... what was your phrase? "Embellishments on the truth?"

Ratner: [Laughs.] Embellishments on the truth. I don't know. For the last 10 years, I just stayed busy making movies.

Morgan: I pivoted and started a residential contracting company, knowing we'd eventually have to rebuild this place. After COVID, people were tired of staring at their old kitchens and bathrooms, so the work was there. It kept my skills sharp, and it gave me a whole crew. When it was finally time to rebuild the Ninth Ward, we were ready to go. I always joke that it was my Parris Island training for a decade.

Ratner: Because of COVID, Kingston Hall closed for a year and a half. It wasn't feasible to stay open, but we kept it underwater — we kept it breathing. I even set up my film-editing rig there because there was nowhere else to work. Bars weren't open, but we managed with the landlord and somehow kept it afloat. When things reopened, it was still a going concern. Somehow, London and Kingston Hall both survived COVID.

Will longtime regulars recognize the new Ninth Ward? What have you tried to preserve, and what will be different?

Morgan: How many bars is this now that we've opened? Five? I think with each one, you correct the mistakes you've made in the past...

Ratner: ...and you make new mistakes.

Morgan: Exactly. We've stayed true to the same aesthetic. To me, this is kind of a mash-up of Shoolbred's and the old Ninth Ward.

Ratner: The footprint is smaller.

Morgan: It's narrower because they put an elevator in the building where there never used to be one. We lost about five feet of width. For anyone who remembers Shoolbred's, that was a very narrow bar, so this feels like a combination of the two places.

Ratner: The original Ninth Ward looked much more like Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop in New Orleans. It was darker, and people would come in and say, "It looks like a pirate ship." This is a lighter, softer version of that. And yet, the other day, someone interviewing for a server job walked in and said, "It looks like a pirate ship." So... I guess we kept the pirate ship.

Morgan: We never intended that, but apparently we did. We actually got rid of all the nautical elements because we wanted to move away from that. For 10 years, though, we kept everything in a barn in Massachusetts.

Ratner: It wasn't a storage unit. It was a barn. Out in the elements. With critters.

Morgan: A friend was kind enough to let us use it. We figured we'd only need it for a year and a half, so we didn't think much about it.

Ratner: Right...

Morgan: Then, when we finally went to retrieve everything, a lot of it was covered in bat guano. Some pieces couldn't be saved, but we were able to salvage the doors, shutters, wainscoting and some of the artwork.

Ratner: We also had this whole cabinet of curiosities that used to run along this wall before the bathrooms.
So where did the bathrooms go? 

Morgan: Oh, you don't have bathrooms anymore. We're going for the real New Orleans experience with no bathrooms. 

Ratner: There's one up here. The ADA one is up here, and then there are two more downstairs. And the kitchen was upstairs too. It was all on one floor before. We did have the walk-in downstairs in the basement. 

Morgan: You had to, like, bend down to get in there. 

Ratner: Oh, no, the basement looked like a crime scene. It was just, it was terrible. It looked like something out of "The Silence of the Lambs."
Morgan: Now it's very grown up. I mean, they did spend 10 years building it, so I’d hope so. 

Ratner: There are doors and a floor and things like that. And lights. 

Morgan: And lights!
Ninth Ward begins its soft opening with happy hour on Tuesday and Thursday from 4 to 7 p.m., followed by regular service until midnight each night. The bar's grand opening is scheduled for Friday. Follow them on Instagram for updates.

Monday, March 30, 2026

10 years later: Ninth Ward announces itself again on 2nd Avenue

Ninth Ward signage is now up on the new building at 180 Second Ave. (H/T Choresh Wald!)

As previously reported, the New Orleans–themed bar closed here after service on Feb. 14, 2016, with plans to return following a gut renovation of the building between 11th Street and 12th Street.

That timeline — initially expected to be about 18 months — stretched into nearly a decade amid construction delays, landlord issues and the pandemic.

In July 2024, the owners were back before Community Board 3 seeking a new liquor license for the address as part of their long-awaited return.

Now, with the signage in place, it's one of the clearest signs yet that the Ninth Ward is getting closer to reopening here.
Good news for those who've been waiting a decade for that next drink here.

Monday, July 15, 2024

The Ninth Ward plotting its return to 180 2nd Avenue after 8 years

The Ninth Ward closed its doors after service at 180 Second Ave. on Feb. 14, 2016. 

At the time, the owners of the New Orleans-themed bar, Nic Ratner and Robert Morgan, expected to return to the retail space — hopefully in late 2018 — after a gut renovation of the building between 11th Street and 12th Street. 

Fast-forward eight-plus years and the Ninth Ward is reapplying for a liquor license for the address. Reps will appear before CB3's SLA committee tonight. 

According to their questionnaire on the CB3 website:
The scheduled renovations were planned to take 18 months, but almost immediately ran into complications. Unfortunately, due to the landlord's inexperience, construction delays, and the COVID-19 pandemic, the project has now dragged on for nearly a decade. 
The liquor license for Ninth Ward, in safe keeping with the SLA, was renewed on two occasions during the construction. In the third attempt to renew the license, it was cancelled as simply too much time had passed with the business being closed. 
Ratner and Morgan opened a Ninth Ward in London in 2017.

As for the building at No. 180, workers finally removed the scaffolding, plywood, and sidewalk obstructions in February.

And after all that, the building is on the sales market for $12.5 million.

The Chicago-based Polish National Alliance was the previous owner of No. 180. The building housed the Józef Pilsudski Institute of America, the largest Polish-American research institution specializing in the recent history of Poland and Central Eastern Europe. (They found a new home in Greenpoint.) According to public records, an LLC bought the building for $6.75 million in June 2014. City Realty listed the new owner as Robert Stern.

Tonight's CB3-SLA meeting starts at 6:30. Find the Zoom link here. This is a hybrid meeting, and there is limited seating 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.  

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

The gutting of 180 2nd Avenue continues



Gut renovations started late last year at 180 Second Ave. between 11th Street and 12th Street, where the existing building is getting a complete condoplexification with the addition of two more floors.



A look inside from the sidewalk reveals the extent of the gut job... and just how much work remains...


[Photo by Steven]

The ongoing work can't be much fun for the restaurants on either side of the property — Cacio e Pepe at No. 182 and Pangea at No. 178. (Go see a show in the backroom at Pangea!)



As a reminder from previous post, here's a rendering of the condoplex in making via Ole Sondresen Architect...



And the description:

This East Village residential building is elegantly comprised of four 2 bedroom units and two 1 bedroom homes. Each unit features its own private terrace with open views down 2nd Avenue. The apartments are composed of two programmatic wooden boxes housing closets, bathrooms, and mechanicals which allows for an open loft-like feeling in the rest of the living space. The building is designed to earn LEED Platinum and Passive House certification, integrating a green roof with solar hot water panels for each residential unit. Reclaimed wood planters are incorporated into each terrace allowing lush plantings to liven the facade.

The Chicago-based Polish National Alliance was the previous owner of No. 180. The building housed the Józef Pilsudski Institute of America, which is the largest Polish-American research institution specializing in the recent history of Poland and Central Eastern Europe. (They found a new home in Greenpoint.) An LLC bought the building for $6.75 million in June 2014, per public records. The owner is listed as Robert Stern.

As for the ground-floor retail space, the Ninth Ward, the previous tenant, is expected to return.

And a p.s. from this construction zone via Vinny & O ... a Bagel Zone sign greets any salmoners...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Residential conversion underway at 180 2nd Ave.; the Ninth Ward expected to return

The renderings for the all-new 180 2nd Ave. include Leonardo DiCaprio on a Citi Bike

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

The renderings for the all-new 180 2nd Ave. include Leonardo DiCaprio on a Citi Bike


[No. 180 from August 2017]

During the December holiday break, I noted that gut renovations were underway at 180 Second Ave. between 11th Street and 12th Street.

According to the previously approved work permits on file with the city, workers are converting the building to residential use and adding two floors in the process. Permits show that there will be one residential unit on each floor.

A tipster shared the renderings for the building... via Ole Sondresen Architect...



And the description:

This East Village residential building is elegantly comprised of four 2 bedroom units and two 1 bedroom homes. Each unit features its own private terrace with open views down 2nd Avenue. The apartments are composed of two programmatic wooden boxes housing closets, bathrooms, and mechanicals which allows for an open loft-like feeling in the rest of the living space. The building is designed to earn LEED Platinum and Passive House certification, integrating a green roof with solar hot water panels for each residential unit. Reclaimed wood planters are incorporated into each terrace allowing lush plantings to liven the facade. The concrete structure is left with exposed joints and formwork markings, juxtaposing textured concrete surfaces against refined wood and glass. The building's order is achieved through the honesty of materials and the clarity of its design.



Meanwhile, a closer inspection of the rendering reveals a Citi Biker facing the wrong direction in the Second Avenue bike lane...



Celebrities-Who-Citi-Bike watchers will recognize that scalie...



Leo!



As for the ground-floor retail space, the Ninth Ward, the previous tenant, is expected to return.

The Chicago-based Polish National Alliance was the previous owner of No. 180. The building housed the Józef Pilsudski Institute of America, which is the largest Polish-American research institution specializing in the recent history of Poland and Central Eastern Europe. (They found a new home in Greenpoint.) An LLC bought the building for $6.75 million in June 2014, per public records.

Previously on EV Grieve:
2nd Avenue bar Ninth Ward is closing for good on Feb. 14; building rumored to be demolished

Residential conversion underway at 180 2nd Ave.; the Ninth Ward expected to return

Thursday, December 28, 2017

Residential conversion underway at 180 2nd Ave.; the Ninth Ward expected to return



Gut renovations continue at 180 Second Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street...



According to the previously approved work permits on file with the city, workers are converting the building to residential use and adding two floors in the process. Permits show that there will be one residential unit on each floor. (Condos?)

As for the ground-floor retail space, the Ninth Ward was the previous tenant. That New Orleans-themed bar closed in February 2016. Earlier this year, co-owner Robert Morgan told me via email that the Ninth Ward would be returning to this space after the gut renovations.

"We recently opened a updated version of Ninth Ward in London and it’s doing fantastic across the pond. We’ll be bringing that incarnation of Ninth Ward back to 180 Second Ave.," he said in June. In the meantime, the Ninth Ward's wooden beams and original bar are "resting peacefully in a barn in Massachusetts."

The Chicago-based Polish National Alliance was the previous owner of No. 180. The building housed the Józef Pilsudski Institute of America, which is the largest Polish-American research institution specializing in the recent history of Poland and Central Eastern Europe. (They found a new home in Greenpoint.) An LLC bought the building for $6.75 million in June 2014, per public records.

Previously on EV Grieve:
2nd Avenue bar Ninth Ward is closing for good on Feb. 14; building rumored to be demolished


[No. 180 from August]

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Plywood arrives for 131 Avenue A; new Cajun restaurant on the way?



Workers yesterday erected plywood around 131 Avenue A, the former 10 Degrees Bistro and Flea Market Cafe between St. Mark's Place and Ninth Street.

Back in December, CB3 OK'd a beer-wine license for the owners of Shoolbred's and Kingston Hall (and formerly Ninth Ward) on Second Avenue. The CB3 meeting notes refer to the new establishment as "a New Orleans Cajun restaurant." (Per the meeting notes, the applicants were seeking a full-liquor license; they also faced opposition from several nearby block associations.)

The space has been sitting dormant in recent months. There had reportedly been gas issues in the building, which ultimately led to the eviction/closure of next-door neighbors Nino's and Yoshi Sushi. Perhaps landlord Citi Urban has those gas issues resolved.

H/T Lola Sáenz

Previously on EV Grieve:
New-look Flea Market Cafe shows itself on Avenue A; reopens March 11

Flea Market Cafe reopens today, and here's the menu

Was the fire at Flea Market yesterday suspicious?

On Avenue A, Flea Market Cafe is now Ten Degrees Bistro

The Marshal seizes 10 Degrees Bistro on Avenue A

10 Degrees Bistro won't be reopening on Avenue A

Team behind Shoolbred's and Ninth Ward vying for 10 Degrees Bistro space on Avenue A

Thursday, February 4, 2016

2nd Avenue bar Ninth Ward is closing for good on Feb. 14; building rumored to be demolished


[EVG photo from 2010]

Ninth Ward, the New Orleans-themed bar at 180 Second Ave., is closing its doors for good after service on Feb. 14.

Here is their official message via Facebook:
Five years ago on Mardi Gras the Ninth Ward bar was born. After five wonderful years we are closing our doors. Please come by in the next two weeks and raise a glass to both Mardi Gras and Ninth ward!!

We will be closing on Sunday, February 14th - Valentine's Day. "It's not you, it's me"

According to a tipster, management informed staff on Tuesday night ... the rumor is the new (as of 2014) owners of the building between East 11th Street and East 12th Street have designs on a gut renovation that will eventually yield condos.

The ownership here is also behind two other Second Avenue bars — Kingston Hall and Shoolbred's. In November, Nic Ratner and Robert Morgan got the OK from CB3 for a beer-wine license to open a cajun-style restaurant in the former 10 Degrees Bistro space on Avenue A.

The Ninth Ward, which serves Abita beer, Sazeracs, absinthe and other cocktails. opened in June 2010. The opening announcement reportedly elicited a strong reaction from Louisiana native Cajun Boy, who tweeted:

A New Orleans-themed bar in NYC called Ninth Ward has opened. Maybe I'll open a NYC-themed bar in New Orleans and call it World Trade Center

The opening was also discussed in New Orleans. Per an item in the newspaper Gambit: "As you might imagine, naming a NYC bar 'Ninth Ward' is fraught with complications, starting with the fact the Ninth Ward has never exactly been known as a hotspot for creative cocktails."

The address was, until 2010, Thai on Two.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Team behind Shoolbred's and Ninth Ward vying for 10 Degrees Bistro space on Avenue A


[EVG photo from September]

Nic Ratner and Robert Morgan, owners of three establishments on Second Avenue — Shoolbred's, Ninth Ward and Kingston Hall — look to be expanding their reach to Avenue A.

According to public documents (PDF!) on file at the CB3 website, Ratner and Morgan are applying for a new liquor license for the former 10 Degrees Bistro and Flea Market Cafe space at 131 Avenue A.

There aren't many details, such as a proposed name and menu served, on the questionnaire filed ahead of Monday night's CB3 SLA committee meeting. The paperwork shows 8 tables good for 31 seats as well as an L-shaped, 15-foot bar. The proposed hours are Sunday-Thursday 1 p.m. to 2 a.m.; until 4 a.m. on Friday and Saturday.

As we first reported on Aug. 18, the landlord took legal possession of the restaurant between St. Mark's Place and East Ninth Street. A sign arrived the next day noting that 10 Degrees was closed for maintenance. They never reopened.

The proprietors of Ten Degrees Bar, which remains open around the corner on St. Mark's Place, took over operations of the Flea Market Cafe in March 2013 ... changing the name to 10 Degrees Bistro in December 2013.

The December CB3-SLA committee meeting is Monday night at 6:30 in the CB3 office, 59 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

Previously on EV Grieve:
New-look Flea Market Cafe shows itself on Avenue A; reopens March 11

Flea Market Cafe reopens today, and here's the menu

Was the fire at Flea Market yesterday suspicious?

On Avenue A, Flea Market Cafe is now Ten Degrees Bistro

The Marshal seizes 10 Degrees Bistro on Avenue A

10 Degrees Bistro won't be reopening on Avenue A

Friday, December 9, 2011

Shoolbred's-Ninth Ward owner bringing Caribbean cuisine to former Holy Basil space


An entity titled "Honey Rider LLC" is on Monday night's CB3/SLA docket. Honey Rider (Ursula Andress played Honey Rider in "Dr. No"!) is looking to take over the former home of Holy Basil, the Thai place on Second Avenue that closed in October after "technical difficulties."

According to documents (PDF!) on file at the CB3 website, Robert Morgan, one of the owners of Shoolbred's and the Ninth Ward on Second Avenue, is behind the new venture. He and his partner plan to serve "Caribbean cuisine," with operating hours of 1 p.m.-2 a.m. Monday-Thursday; 1 p.m.-4 a.m. on Friday; Noon-4 a.m. on Saturday; and noon-1 a.m. on Sunday, according to the documents.

No word yet on any Bond theme.

[Image via]

Previously on EV Grieve:
Holy Basil closed, space for rent

Holy Basil remains closed for 'technical difficulties'