Friday, February 14, 2014

At the Streecha Ukrainian Kitchen



I've been meaning to write about the the Streecha Ukrainian Kitchen on East Seventh Street between Second Avenue and Cooper Square now for about the past, oh, seven years.

The basement cafeteria of sorts is a fundraising arm of the St George Ukrainian Catholic Church up the street. Most of the food is made by elder members of the church.(Read all about it in this feature from the Times in September 2007).

So here we are.



The menu is really straightforward with Eastern European offerings … and reasonably priced… (not really here to review this or anything… just as an appreciation that this kind of place still exists here… )



Oh, the "bacon bites" are free…



These photos are from this past December holiday, though I seem to recall it feeling Christmasy year-round (they usually take the summer off…)



Even if you don't like this kind of food it's worth a trip down here for a $1 coffee or tea to soak up the timeless ambiance.

KEEP IN MIND: It's only open Fridays through Sundays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (The after-church crowd can get a little rowdy, so … haha)

A look at your new post office on East 14th Street



By now you know that the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office will be closing soon (enough) on East 14th Street near Avenue A… and the USPS is leasing the former Duane Reade on East 14th Street near First Avenue just for retail services, such as stamp sales and P.O. boxes.

There was a hole in the paper on the inside of the former Duane Reade… we took a look inside the other afternoon…



Not real exciting, but… No official word just yet when this location will open for business.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: Closure of the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office is pretty much a done deal

Remembering Walter De Maria by tagging his building



The famed sculptor died last July at age 77… and someone now has taken the time to remember him here at his former home-studio at 421 E. Sixth St. …



The building and adjacent empty lot recently hit the market for $25 million.

JoeDough has closed on First Avenue



After two-plus years at 135 First Ave., the quick-serve JoeDough sandwich shop has called it a day, as Fork in the Road first reported yesterday.

However, proprietors Joe and Jill Dobias are keeping the space, which closed for business after service on Sunday … to use to help expand their catering operation…



In addition, they are keeping several of the popular JoeDough sandwiches on the menu over at Joe & Misses Doe on East First Street. It doesn't appear that the meatball sandwich is one of them that made the cut, though.

What it will cost to rent the former Shima space on Second Avenue

Just a quick follow-up from Monday's post about the now-closed Shima being for lease on Second Avenue and East 12th Street.

At the time, the listing wasn't online just yet at the Newmark Grubb Knight Frank website.

Now it is.



The rental rate is $185 a square foot … the available space is 1,650 feet. So if you do a little math… [Pausing to do a little math] Oh, just a little more than $25,400 per month.

Good luck.

Local blogger wants you to be his or her valentine, maybe



Happy Valentine's Day, as always, from Papaya Dog on East 14th Street and First Avenue…

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Heavy snow causes scaffolding collapse on First Avenue


[Photo by @longoM]

The scaffolding atop 175 First Ave. near East 11th Street came toppling down late this afternoon during whatever this weather is now. No word on any injuries. It wasn't clear if any workers were on the scene at the time.

According to the DOB, the city OK'd a permit for two new floors plus a penthouse atop the existing two-story building.

The complaint filed today states (in the all-cap DOB style):

NYPD REQUESTED A STRUCTURAL STABILITY INSPECTION DUE TO ASCAFFOLD COLLAPSING AT THE SECOND FLOOR DUE TO HEAVY SNOW BUILD UP

Meanwhile, outside the Schwimmer estate…

Hey, it snowed today. Then sleeted. And rained.



We have a lot of weather-related photos from today, because a few people asked if we were going to post any weather-related photos from today. Yes! Probably later!

We were paying attention!



On the Bowery this morning via Derek Berg

176 E. Third St. hits the market for $38.5 million


[Via Stone Street Properties]

The large residential building between Avenue A and Avenue B arrived on the market yesterday.

Per the Massey Knakal listing:

Standing six stories tall, the building encompasses a total of 43,520 gross square feet and currently contains 48 residential units, 1 commercial unit and 1 professional unit. Currently, 27 units are rent regulated, 21 are free market, and one free market unit is occupied by the building's super. The building possesses substantial upside potential as it is still approximately 56% rent stabilized.

Currently, the building is renting at an average of $39.00 per net square foot with the RS units averaging approximately $19.00 per net square foot. These figures illustrate that there is still a tremendous amount of additional revenue available to capture. Over time new ownership should have the opportunity to turn over some or all of the remaining stabilized units, convert them to free market apartments and increase their annual gross revenue by over $1,000,000



The property is part of "The East Side Elevator Portfolio," a five-building multifamily package available for $150 million. This address is going for $38.5 million. The buyer will become the tenants' third landlord in seven years.

In 2008, a contentious battle broke out between longtime tenants and the building's new owners, Icon Realty. In September 2008, the Post reported that several rent-stabilized tenants were fighting to keep "their East Village neighborhood affordable by turning down buyout offers of up to $125,000." (Bob Arihood covered the story first here and here.) The residents also accused Icon of harassment.

Per the article:

The tenants complained that the landlord recently changed an electronic lock on the building’s front door to a more difficult standard version as a ploy to send them to an Icon representative looking for help. The rep would then use the opportunity to pitch the buyout, the tenants said.

They want to buy people out and renovate the apartment, and then they want to flip the building,” said Heather Gradowski, who pays less than $700 a month for her one-bedroom apartment.

In the fall of 2011, Stone Street Properties bought the five-building portfolio for $90 million from Icon, according to The Real Deal. (At this time Stone Street renamed the buildings; No. 176 became "The Jesse.")

According to public records, Icon paid $14 million for No. 176 in August 2007.

Did someone say something about flipping the building?

Petition calls for an end to so many 'shitty' pizzerias opening up on the Lower East Side



Are you tired of all the $1 pizza places popping up around the neighborhood? Then you're not alone. There's a petition campaign underway directed toward Community Board 3 that calls for more food options… Here's the description of the petition via Change.org:

This is an effort to promote diversity in low to mid-priced food options for New York City's Lower East Side.

Are you sick and tired of pizzerias opening up all over the Lower East Side? With the closures of so many restaurants in the neighborhood, our low to mid-priced food options are dwindling. Pizzerias have over-saturated this part of Manhattan. Sign this petition and maybe Community Board 3 will take notice. *Enough of the L.E.S. pizzeria takeover!*

The petition was launched by No More L.E.S. Pizzerias. The person behind the campaign has lived on the LES for 18 years. We asked the petitioner a few questions via Facebook:

"Yeah, every time a restaurant shutters, it seems like a shitty pizza place is born. I'm sick of it."

What would you like to see an an alternative?

"Anything besides a chain or $1 pizza. More small local joints like Mimi & Coco's Japanese spot. It's just so hard for small places to cover the rent and expenses and still scrape a living wage together."

And without asking...

"And if you were wondering, Rosario's and Nonna's are my favorite pizzerias in the hood."

You may find the petition here.

Film crew recreates 'tent city' in Tompkins Square Park

As we mentioned yesterday, crews continued to film scenes for "Ten Thousand Saints," the coming-of-age drama set in the 1980s East Village.

Aside from turning part of First Avenue into Avenue D, the crew recreated part of tent city from the late 1980s in Tompkins Square Park …









Crew members passed some time by tossing a football…


[Photo by Derek Berg]

We also understand that the crews will recreate scenes from the Tompkins Square Park Riot of 1988 at some point this month.

The film is adapted from the Eleanor Henderson novel "Ten Thousand Saints." The husband-wife team of Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini direct. (They directed the 2003 Harvey Pekar film "American Splendor" with Paul Giamatti.) The cast includes Ethan Hawke.

Top four photos by Bobby Williams

New mural for East Houston Street building that no one seems to want to buy or rent


[Photo Tuesday by @joncheese]

Worked started on a new mural for 269 E. Houston St. at Suffolk on Tuesday... and as of late yesterday afternoon...



BoweryBoogie ID'd the artist as Queen Andrea, who created a mural advertisement for Converse.

The Local 269 closed here in September 2012. There have been a few potential suitors, though nothing ever came of the various proposals for the bar space. We spotted nine different for rent/sale signs on the business last summer ... The whole building remains on the market for $12 million.

On 2nd Avenue, Red Mango's sign remains on the sidewalk, blocking part of its neighbor's door


[Photo by Goggla]

Not really cool … even though Gelato Ti Amo here between East Fourth Street and East Third Street has not been open ... perhaps it's weather related. (A call to the shop goes unanswered.)

The Red Mango opened earlier this week.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

[UPDATED] Reader report: Did Con Ed leave some exposed wires on Avenue B?



A concerned East Village resident sent the above photo and this note...

This is how Con Ed left the repair site directly inside the crosswalks of the Earth School/P.S. 64 on Avenue B and East 5th Street.

One would hope that there is no possibility that a current could exist in these wires. However, they are certainly secured with the shrink-wrap caps that is Con Ed's protocol for securing live cables.

This does not instill confidence. We don't have any way of knowing if the cables are dead or simply capped. Nor does it seem to be an exercise in good judgement to leave the appearance of exposed wires like this within the crosswalks of an elementary school.

And the snowfall that will fall tonight will quickly cover these up…

Updated 9:35 a.m.

Con Ed spokesperson Allan Drury left this comment: "This cable is not live and poses no danger. It previously provided temporary power. We will remove it as soon as weather permits."

[Updated] RIP Maggie Estep


[Photo from October 2013 by Marissa Molnar via Facebook]

Word is spreading that Maggie Estep, the writer-poet-performance artist and all-around cool person who came to some fame while living in the East Village in the early 1990s, has died. She was 50. (She described herself as a "Novelist, occasional poet, dog-lover, handstand enthusiast" on her Facebook page.)

According to friends, she suffered a massive heart attack on Monday.

She published seven novels and two spoken-word CDs. In 1993, she became a familiar presence on MTV, who featured her poetry as well as performances on the network's "Spoken Word Unplugged" program.

From a September 1994 profile in The New York Times:

Success for Ms. Estep hasn't necessarily translated into more material possessions. Her walk-up studio on East Fifth Street looks like the home of a starving artist. The furnishings are spartan. A bookcase crammed with cassettes and novels stands in one corner of the room; a wooden desk crowned with a laptop computer fills the opposite corner, where Ms. Estep spends many an afternoon wrestling with her muse. Other than a loft bed, a couple of beat-up chairs and an electric guitar lying in the middle of the floor, the room is empty.

"I've gotten paranoid now," she said, referring to her recent success. "I think, 'Oh my God, everybody hates me because I get too much attention.'"

She was currently living in Upstate New York and working on a new book.

Estep was born on March 20, 1963, in Summit, N.J.

Here she is in 1994 with "Hey Baby" ...



Updated 12:48 p.m.

Some reaction to news of her death...








Updated 2:40 p.m.
The A.V. Club has a nice essay on Estep this afternoon... some thoughts on her writing:

Estep was also a prolific novelist, writing blackly hilarious books full of screwed-up characters in seedy, smutty surroundings, like the dominatrix’s assistant in Diary Of An Emotional Idiot. She also wrote a trilogy of mystery novels (Hex, Gargantuan, and Flamethrower) centered on Ruby Murphy, a recovering alcoholic who gets inadvertently dragged into some of New York’s oddest crimes, usually involving horse racing.

Her most recent novel, 2009’s Alice Fantastic, also revolved around the racetrack, though there, too, it was just a setting for a much larger menagerie of animals, addicts, estranged lovers, lunatics, and others living on the fringe. She also said she had been working for years on The Angelmakers, a novel about female gangsters that she’d “written seven times and not yet gotten right.”

Updated 8:46 p.m.
The New York Times has filed a feature obituary on Estep here.

Here's a photo of Estep from Friday hugging writer Chloe Caldwell at a reading in Rhinebeck, N.Y.


[Via Facebook]

[Updated] First Avenue subbing for Avenue D today


[Feb. 4]

Last time that we checked in with filming for "Ten Thousand Saints," a straight-edge coming-of-age story set in the 1980s East Village, crews fashioned the exterior of 423 E. Sixth St. into "D-Squat."

So "D-Squat" subbed for C-Squat ... and this morning, as these photos from EVG reader Creature show, First Avenue at East Sixth Street is now... Avenue D (thank you EV Arrow!)



...there's also a very pre-Cemusa newsstand stand as a prop ...



Hopefully the camera won't catch Beckham's abs on the side of the tour bus to ruin that 1980s vibe...



The film is adapted from the Eleanor Henderson novel "Ten Thousand Saints." The husband-wife team of Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini direct. (They directed the 2003 Harvey Pekar film "American Splendor" with Paul Giamatti.) The cast includes Ethan Hawke.

Updated noon:

A reader note the first Ethan Hawke sighting of the day...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Film crew uses 'D Squat' and phone booths to recreate an 1980s East Village on 6th Street

Out and About in the East Village

In this weekly feature, East Village-based photographer James Maher provides us with a quick snapshot of someone who lives and/or works in the East Village.



By James Maher
Name: Dawn Haberman
Occupation: Employee at Juicy Lucy
Location: Avenue A, Between 5th and 6th Street
Time: 12:30 pm on Monday, Feb 10.

I’m from Rhode Island. I moved here about 13 years ago, right after 9/11, into Ridge Street. A good friend of mine was a makeup artist who had moved here 4 years before and he convinced me to come. I loved it and I loved this neighborhood in particular. I loved the characters and people. It’s diverse and it has everything and everybody. I started working at Juicy Lucy pretty much as soon as I got here. I’m a juice queen, a juice princess.

Juicy Lucy opened a few years before I got here, in 1996 at the stand on 1st and 1st and this location opened in 2000. The stand goes back a long time, although I don’t know the exact year. It is one of the oldest freestanding stands in the city. It used to be a shoeshine stand and it used to be a flower shop. It’s grandfathered in because they don’t allow those structures to be in business anymore.

It’s an amazing spot in the summer. Everyone’s sitting out on the benches. It’s a fun gathering spot. Everybody loves that corner. You have the subway, and you get to people watch and everything. I’ve seen so many interesting outfits and costumes. Halloween is my favorite day here. You get all the little kids in costumes lined up to come in.

The owner is René Henrick. She’s a woman — a woman who has owned a business in New York City since 1996. She’s my hero and she’s a great teacher. We work really closely together now and I feel very much part of this place. She was working as a bartender at Boca Chica and decided that she wanted to do her own thing so she rented the stand on 1st and 1st. She started basically out of nothing. It was slow growing but she built a little niche for herself.

She knew a lot of people in the neighborhood and we still see some of the regular customers who were there from the beginning, the ones who haven’t moved. She’s Cuban so we’re Latin based, a Latin company with a Latin feeling and Latin music. We’re lucky we’re still around. It’s hard because there’s a lot of competition now. We try to stay at the point where we’re small and we want people to be able to have access to this stuff. This is juice for the people. We try to keep the prices low.

The original name was Live Juice. When this store opened we needed a new name and Juicy Lucy’s just stuck. Everyone took to it and it took over the Live Juice name. Everyone asks who Lucy is. All of us are Lucy. I say we’re all Lucy. There is a little older woman who always sees me and says, Lucy!

We’re also doing a lot of catering but our regular customers are our backbone. It’s a nice feeling to be part of the community and neighborhood. That’s our big thing. The community connects me to the place and it makes this place a little warmer. That’s why I’ve stayed so long. There’s not a lot of this left. Hopefully we can stay as long as they’ll have us.

James Maher is a fine art and studio photographer based in the East Village. Find his website here.

Why Jerry's Newsstand will be closed for a few days



Been a pretty banner year so far for Jerry Delakas ... as the city gave him a new lease on the Astor Place newsstand that he has operated since 1987.

Unfortunately, as you can see in the above sign, there's a temporary setback. Jerry has bronchitis and won't be able to reopen the newsstand until he recovers.

Previously on EV Grieve:
City shutters Jerry's Newsstand on Astor Place for 'operating illegally'

How 1 resilient East Village resident helped save Jerry's Newsstand

And then there was one Joey Pepperoni's (within a few blocks of each other)



The Joey Pepperoni's location on IHOP Way East 14th Street between Second Avenue and Third Avenue has apparently closed, Eater first noted yesterday.

This JPP popped up quickly back in November 2012, turning over an AT&T Store in about two hours.

Meanwhile, the business next door made sure to capitalize on the new-found cheap-pizza void on this side of the street…



JPP fans can still visit the Joey Pepperoni's on First Avenue between East 13th Street and East 14th Street, a location that was alive and well last night along with the other nearby $1 pizza options.

JPP on East 14th Street likely won't be the last $1 pizza casualty. We don't want to speculate on who might be next, but you can!

Previously on EV Grieve:
First Avenue $1 Pizza Wars — now with draft beer

Checking in on the $1 pizza war on First Avenue

Latest weapon in the First Avenue $1 slice wars: Dancing Pizza Menu Woman