Friday, August 17, 2018

Spend the day looking at more photos from East Village artist Carole Teller


[Undated photo outside Gem Spa on St. Mark's at 2nd Avenue]

The folks at the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation (GVSHP) have uploaded another batch of photos from the personal collection of East Village artist Carole Teller.

In this archive, you'll discover photos like this from the early 1960s showing the north side of First Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue, including (L-R) 40-56 E. First St. (For a reference point, Prune is at 54 E. First St. today.)



You can find "Carole Teller’s Changing New York, 1960s-1990s" featuring shots of the East Village, Lower East Side and some other areas right here.

And here's one more photo from this series... a look at the northeast corner of Third Avenue and St. Mark's Place circa 1991...



This assemblage will be demolished in the months ahead for a boutique office building.

You can access the previous Teller sets here ... here... and here... and shots from when "The Godfather Part II" filmed on Sixth Street here.

All photos by Carole Teller via the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation

Thursday, August 16, 2018

Thursday's parting shot



The fledgling in Tompkins Square Park is losing patience with all these photo ops... thanks to Steven for the shot...

'Desperately Seeking Susan' at the Tompkins Square Library branch (and happy bday Madonna)


Here's a combo #TBT, birthday wish and free-film announcement — all in one Instagram post...


The Tompkins Square Library branch is at 331 E. 10th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. Find the full list of free activities — such as a walking tour of Tompkins Square Park on Saturday — that the library offers at this link.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Q-&-A with Susan Seidelman, director of 'Smithereens' and 'Desperately Seeking Susan'

Madonna in the East Village circa 1982

Grant Shaffer's NY See


[Click on image to go big]

Here's this week's NY See, East Village-based illustrator Grant Shaffer's comic series — an observational sketch diary of things that he sees and hears around the neighborhood.

The conversation continues on the now-approved tech hub for 14th Street


[Rendering via NYCEDC]

The conversation/fallout continues from last week's City Council approval of the the mayor's plan for the Union Square Tech Training Center (aka tech hub) at the former P.C. Richard site on 14th Street at Irving Place.

The unanimous approval includes the rezoning required to build the the 21-story tech hub — which is larger than what current commercial zoning allows. For months, some residents, activists, small-business owners and community groups expressed concern that the rezoning necessary for the project would spur out-of-scale development on surrounding blocks.

The project is being developed jointly by the city’s Economic Development Corp. and developer RAL Development Service. The 240,000-square-foot building includes Civic Hall, which will offer tech training for low-income residents, as well as market-rate retail and office space.

The support of local District 2 City Council member Carlina Rivera was key to making the tech hub a go, as Crain's other other media outlets noted.

Rivera had reportedly promised to seek a separate rezoning for the surrounding area during her campaign last year to establish height limits and, in some cases, cap commercial square footage in exchange for her support of the hub.

In voting yes on the project, Rivera said the tech hub would bring "true community benefits, tech education, and workforce development services that will finally give women, people of color, and low-income New Yorkers access to an industry that has unfairly kept them out for far too long."

This link goes to the letter that Rivera shared following the vote.

Meanwhile, the Greenwich Village Society for Historical Preservation (GVSHP), which had lobbied for protections for the surrounding neighborhood as a component of the tech-hub plan, released this statement from executive director Andrew Berman critical of Rivera's yes vote without any substantial zoning limitations.

The GVSHP and other critics (the Met Council on Housing, the Historic Districts Council, the Lower East Side Preservation Initiative, the Bowery Alliance of Neighbors and the East Village Community Coalition were among the groups to express concern during the approval process) have said that the tech hub will provide important and valuable training services for low-income residents and small businesses starting out. However, Berman has pointed out that the training facilities could have fit in a smaller building on the site, which wouldn't require any commercial upzoning that only serves the mayor's real-estate interests.

On Monday, Rivera released a letter to Marisa Lago, the director of NYC's Department of Planning, calling on that agency to establish a special permit for hotel developments south of Union Square from Third Avenue to University Place. The permit would require an additional site-specific review process for extra time to evaluate a given project's impact on the local community, as Patch reported. (The Villager published a copy of Rivera's letter here.)

Berman quickly issued a rebuttal, stating, in part:

The requirement of a special permit for hotels will have little to no effect on the development problems the Tech Hub will exacerbate. First, any hotel can still be built with the approval of the City Council. Second, this really only applies to a portion of the affected area, since the zoning for about half the area already prohibits or restricts hotels. Third, hotels are only one of many forms of bad development this area is experiencing which this measure will not address, such as office buildings and high-rise condos, as well as doing nothing about affordable housing which the community rezoning plan Rivera promised to hold out for would have.

The GVSHP also created a table, comparing the neighborhood protections that were promised to accompany the tech hub, and those that were actually delivered. (For more detailed analysis, follow this link.)

Full reveal at 127 Avenue D



The remaining plywood recently came down at 127 Avenue D, where this 7-floor building between Eighth Street and Ninth Street is looking closer to renting action.

As previously reported, developer H Holding Group is behind this building with 11 dwelling units and a commercial space on the ground floor.

To date we haven't seen any listings for the (presumably) rentals.

This fancy lighting fixture will greet residents...



The previous building here was a one-level structure that housed Sergio Deli Superette.

Previously on EV Grieve:
On Avenue D, Sergio Deli Superette will yield to a 7-story building

Dia bringing Roman-style pizza and coastal Italian seafood to 2nd Avenue



Just noting that the awning is up at the new restaurant coming to 58 Second Ave. between Third Street and Fourth Street.

Once open, Dia will specialize in "Roman-style pizza and coastal Italian seafood," per their (still under-construction) website. Their listed hours are 5 p.m. to midnight Monday through Friday, with an 11 a.m. weekend opening.

Not sure at the moment who's behind this venture. The applicant, who had not been previously licensed, received the OK for beer-wine from CB3 back in March.

N'eat, which offered "new Nordic fare," had a nearly 8-month-run at the address before "closing for renovations" and never reopening in July 2017. Before N'eat, Cellar 58 served Italian fare here.

Eat's Khao Man Gai opens on 6th Street



Eat's Khao Man Gai opened yesterday and is serving the namesake Thai chicken-and-rice combo — a popular street food in Thailand — here at 518 E. Sixth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B.



From the looks of things, this is their only dish... available with drinks such as Thai ice tea or Vietnamese cold brew.

Until last month, this space was home to Zen Yai Pho Shop. The owners said that they were moving to a larger storefront, and using No. 518 for a new concept.

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Wednesday's parting shot



Photo opps on Seventh Street via Derek Berg...

Good burger: Lunch break with Iggy Pop and the Death Valley Girls



A little lunch-time diversion... the new video from the Death Valley Girls was released today... the clip for "Disaster (Is What We're After)" is four minutes of (former East Village resident) Iggy Pop eating a hamburger. (An homage to Andy Warhol. Thank you Glenn.) Enjoy!



Here's more from the Death Valley Girls about the video:

“We’re strong believers in opti-mysticism and connecting with people through rock’n’roll. Having Iggy dig our music was more than amazing for us. When Kansas told us she had a dream about recreating the ‘Andy Warhol Eating a Hamburger’ short film but with Iggy starring for our music video, we were cautiously excited about the possibility. Next thing we know we’re in Miami with Iggy himself, and a rock’n’roll dream became reality!”