Showing posts with label St. Mark's Place. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Mark's Place. Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Noted



A reader noted that the 7-Eleven on St. Mark's Place was closed this morning… There was black plastic covering the windows… and a handwritten "closed" sign on the door offering no explanation… The reader said that it didn't appear to be anything noticeably, like broken, like a front window.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

A week in the life of the Cooktop Sidewalk Garden on St. Mark's Place

It was, of course, the story the captivated the city this past week. It started after someone discarded cooktops on the sidewalk along St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue. Then that one guy you always see on St. Mark's Place put them to good use.

The rest is, of course, Cooktop Sidewalk Garden history.

Monday!



Tuesday!



Wednesday!





Thursday!





Friday!



Today! [sob]



It was also a week in which we learned that not many people know, exactly, what a cooktop is.



So. Worst sidewalk garden branding ever then?

Thursday, November 21, 2013

The Cooktop Garden has legs


[Monday]

We've been watching the little plot of a former tree and, later, tree stump come alive on St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue come alive this week.

The latest.





And, perhaps, this plot needs another name... mostly since no one seems to know what a cooktop is! Some discarded cooktops were used to start this whole garden...

Previously on EV Grieve:
[Updated] Behold the cooktop sidewalk garden on St. Mark's Place

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Beyoncé probably shot a video on St. Mark's Place last night; remember when Billy Joel did?

Word is/was that Beyoncé was filming a secret-y video (save for the million cops) last night on St. Mark's Place or something. We haven't really looked into this one or tried to find photographic evidence.

But! This news did, rather unfortunately, perhaps, remind us of Billy Joel's "A Matter of Trust" video shot on St. Mark's circa 1986. (We wrote about this back in August 2008. Same counsel as then, per Alex at Flaming Pablum: "Best to turn the sound down…" Though it is your morning.)



Any way that Beyoncé can top this extravaganza?

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Today's sunrise in review



On St. Mark's Place and Second Avenue. We'll see what people say about it on Yelp.

Monday, November 18, 2013

[Updated] Behold the cooktop sidewalk garden on St. Mark's Place



The other day, we noticed some discarded cooktops lying on the sidewalk along St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue... and this morning, we noticed that someone (that one guy who you always see on the block) used them to help created a little sidewalk garden where this tree once lived ...



Updated 11-19

The garden didn't fare so well overnight...



Updated 11-20





Updated 11/21





Updated 11/22



Updated 11/23




Thursday, October 31, 2013

Beyond Vape opening on St. Mark's Place


A Beyond Vape store is opening on St. Mark's Place... up where that Supercuts was, you know, by the Chipotle.

Anyway, Beyond Vape has three California shops... this will be the first location on the East Coast... for all your vaping (inhaling nicotine vapor) needs, such as tubes, cartridges, batteries, atomizers and the water-based liquid that contains the nicotine. (No word if you will be available to vape on the premises here... like in the California shops...)

Now! Is vamping safe? Or, safer than cigarettes?

Dunno! Here's what the Journal of Fun, aka, Bloomberg News, had to say about it in a piece titled "Vaping May Be Hazardous to Your Health:"

U.S. consumers will spend $1 billion on battery-powered smokes this year, 10 times more than they did four years ago. Are e-cigarettes, which come in such flavors as chocolate and butter rum, a benign device to help people stop smoking? Or are they just a new way to feed an old addiction? How safe, compared with tobacco smoke, is the vapor they create?

No one knows. The small studies that have been done so far hint at both pros and cons; one found that smokers cut back on real cigarettes after trying the electronic kind, while another found particles of metal and silicates in e-cigarette vapor that could cause breathing problems. That there are more than 200 brands containing varying levels of nicotine and other substances only makes it harder to assess their safety.

Can't be any worse for you than a haircut at Supercuts!

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

St. Mark's in the morning



EVG Facebook friend Sam Teichman shared these photos along St Mark's Place — between First Avenue and Third Avenue — from a quiet Columbus Day morning...



















Find more of Sam's photos at Flickr.

Saturday, October 12, 2013

This morning



St. mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Here is Sara Curry Way



The city officially co-named St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue Sara Curry Way on Saturday. (The above photo is from early Sunday morning, in case you were wondering about the trash.)

There's also a new plaque in her honor outside the Little Missionary's Day Nursery at 93 St. Mark’s Place, which Curry founded in 1896 ...





Per her bio:

In addition to providing child care, Miss Curry fed the poor in the neighborhood and often gave her own clothing or shoes to those without. She organized cooking, sewing and child care classes for the mothers. She organized meetings to help families with their problems, and helped to steer parents towards sobriety and economic responsibility.

Posts here about co-naming streets always bring up questions about how the city decides such things. The Community Board 3 website provides the guidelines. (You can find the PDF here.)

Among the guidelines:

• Street co-naming requests will be heard by the CB 3 Transportation Committee. If the request is approved by the committee, the application will be voted on by the full Board for final approval. If approved, the request will be forwarded to the City Council office for Council approval. Co-naming requests will be placed on the committee agenda twice a year to correspond to the two yearly City Council votes. These dates will be determined as needed by determining the Council hearings.

• Prospective honorees should have a minimum of 15 years community involvement for individuals and should have demonstrated an extraordinary and consistent voluntary commitment and dedication to the community. Individual prospective honorees must be deceased. Exceptions may be made however for individuals who have died under infamous circumstances of crime, accident, disease, social circumstance or if the death itself leads to a greater awareness of the cause of death and a concerted effort to address that problem.

According to DNAinfo, Eileen Johnson, who has led Little Missionary's since 2001, started petitioning for the street renaming in 2010. City Council approved the request in December 2012.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Part of St. Mark's Place will be co-named for Sara Curry tomorrow

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Banksy's mobile garden draws a crowd on St. Mark's Place



Banksy's NYC tour continued this evening with his mobile garden making an appearance on St. Mark's Place between Third Avenue and Second Avenue... EVG regular jdx happened by ... the truck was hereabouts for roughly an hour, rambling on around 9 p.m., per jdx ...

Updated

Gothamist has more photos here.

Friday, October 4, 2013

Part of St. Mark's Place will be co-named for Sara Curry tomorrow



Tomorrow, the city is co-naming St. Mark's Place between First Avenue and Avenue A Sara Curry Way.

Curry started the Little Missionary's Day Nursery in 1896, which is still in operation today. (The Nursery is also seemingly and amazingly one of the few businesses along this portion of St. Mark's Place without a liquor license.)

Here's more about Curry via the Little Missionary's Day Nursery website:

[She] dedicated her life to providing childcare to the working parents of the Lower East Side. Since she worked so hard to help the community, and she was short in size, many called her the “Little Missionary,” hence the name of the school. At the turn of the century, children often roamed the streets of the Lower East Side while their parents worked long days in factories.

Sara Curry organized a program in her own apartment on Avenue C, and provided children with reading lessons as well as healthy food in a safe, clean environment. In 1901 the building at 93 St. Marks Place was purchased with the help of generous benefactors. On any given day, 200 children were cared for in this wonderful building, still a haven for children to this day.



Sara Curry was famous in her time, and was featured in many publications including Harpers Weekly and Fifty Years on the East Side, by Rev. John Robertson Henry. Through her tireless efforts she made numerous friends in the business community and was able to enlist the support of several very wealthy families.

In addition to providing child care, Miss Curry fed the poor in the neighborhood and often gave her own clothing or shoes to those without. She organized cooking, sewing and child care classes for the mothers. She organized meetings to help families with their problems, and helped to steer parents towards sobriety and economic responsibility. A summer house in Rye, donated by benefactors, was for many years a haven for children to escape from the sweltering heat of the city.

Miss Curry died in 1940.

"Her life was devoted to other people," Eileen Johnson, who has led Little Missionary's since 2001, told Serena Solomon at DNAinfo. "I just think she is a really great role model."

Tomorrow's co-naming ceremonies include a street fair from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

How to get your money's worth from a Citi Bike



Julius Klein shared this photo from Sunday afternoon along St. Mark's Place... they're gonna need a bigger basket.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Why, yes you can live on St. Mark's Place for $19,500 a month



The penthouse rental at 19 St. Mark's Place (waaaay above the Chipotle!) is back on the market. We wrote about it in January 2010. It was $17,000 a month then. Starting Sept. 1, the furnished place is $19,500. (A bargain, considering this apartment first went on the market in October 2008 for $25,000.)

Here's the listing via Stribling:

Dazzling views and two large private terraces (265 and 886 sq ft) flank both sides of the living/dining room of this unique and luxurious furnished 2 bedroom with office or 3 bedroom penthouse. The key lock elevator opens into the loft thereby ensuring one's privacy and north and south facing floor to ceiling windows on both sides of the loft grace every room with open city views.

The entertaining space has a large living room with a wood burning fireplace, separate dining room and a pretty top of the line windowed kitchen with breakfast bar. On the east end of the loft is the master bedroom which has a large windowed marble spa bath en-suite with soaking tub and separate shower .The office or small 3rd bedroom is across the hall and the spacious 2nd bedroom with en-suite bath is on the other side of the loft near the guest bath. A laundry room, highend finishes, central AC and a rare feeling of space, light and privacy complete this unique, approximately 2700 sq ft, home in the East Village. A gourmet market, major transportation and convenient shopping are steps away. Available September, furnished only and flex lease term. Doorman: M-F 8:30am - 4:30pm

And the accompanying photos, which are the same from 2010...







And, according to a reader who lives on this block, this is the home that a movie star and his Academy Award-winning wife have have lived in lately... But who knows.

See our previous post on this building for photos of what the address used to be...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Live on St. Mark's Place for only $17,000 per month!

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Box Kite Coffee opening at former Tuck Shop space on St. Mark's Place?

The Tuck Shop closed its location on St. Mark's Place near Avenue A on July 7. According to the sign on the door, the shop closed for a variety of reasons, including "Gentrification ... Rent is too damn high!, Laziness/ennui, Albany/Bloomberg and Gluten-free people."

Word here is that the storefront will become home to Box Kite Coffee, a shop operated by barista Cora Lambert.

Paperwork filed ahead of last night's CB3/SLA committee meeting shows a change in ownership at 115 St. Mark's Place.



A recent issue of Imbibe magazine had an item about Box Kite Coffee opening in NYC...



We haven't heard official confirmation of this... and there's no other word on a possible opening date.