Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Blinded by the 24-hour ATM light

Some residents who live on Avenue B just south of East Seventh Street are unhappy with Anwar Grocery for installing "an incredibly bright flashing 24-hour ATM sign better suited to Times Square."

Said one neighbor: "Residents ... now have their apartments lit in alternating shades of red and green throughout the night."



Requests by neighbors to turn the sign off at night have been rebuffed by the Anwar staff, according to EV Grieve reader Robert.

Which new building looks the most out of place in the East Village?

In the last month or so, we've posted items on the unveiling of several new buildings around the neighborhood... in three of the cases, we heard from people who thought the new buildings looked really out of place alongside their neighbors ... like when we mentioned 100 Third Ave. yesterday.

So... with that in mind... which of these new buildings that we've seen in the last month seem the most out of place to you (this has nothing to do with the amenities and what not on the inside... just purely from how they fit in the skyline) ...

So.

532 E. Fifth St.


219 First Ave.

[Via evilnyc]

100 Third Ave.


A little out of bounds and not quite as new as the first three ... but I'd toss in 290 Mulberry at the corner of Houston... as BoweryBoogie noted, workers recently replace the years-old plywood around the perimeter...


We could do one of those fancy widget poll things ... but if you just want to weigh in with an opinion in the comments... [Please note: "All of them" will be accepted as an answer.]

Monday, April 23, 2012

2 types of sidewalk seating on Avenue C


Near East 10th Street this afternoon.

Photo by Bobby Williams.

U.S. Supreme Court rejects challenge to NYC rent control

In case you missed this earlier ... The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear a challenge to the constitutionality of New York City’s rent regulations, the Times reported.

April showers bring... new trees along Tompkins Square Park

EV Grieve reader Robert notes the arrival of new trees this morning... which city workers planted along East 10th Street and Tompkins Square Park...




[Updated] Shitty way to start Monday: Garbage truck crushes parked cars on Delancey


EV Grieve reader @guywasko sent along this photo from Delancey Street today... Word is that a garbage truck, owned by Imperial Sanitation Corp., blew a tire and smashed into 6-8 parked cars along this eastern stretch of Delancey... no reports of any injuries...

The Lo-Down has a lot more photos here. BoweryBoogie has some nice aerial views of the damage here.

The driver reportedly fell asleep at the wheel, according to published reports.

100 Third Ave.'s theater past


Last Thursday, we pointed out that 74 Third Ave., the former home of Nevada Smith's, was nearly demolished...

Meanwhile, if all goes to plan, Nevada Smith's should be reopening one day up the Avenue at 100 Third Ave., a building that has been under renovation for a seemingly long time. (We recently noted the building's new, gargantuan addition.)

Anyway, here's a quick snapshot on the history of 100 Third Ave.

The Bright Light Film Journal has an overview of the address, noting that it opened in 1880 as a restaurant ... later becoming a music hall. In 1910, the building began life as a theater called the Comet...

[Via Cinema Treasures]

... and later the Lyric (circa 1936 here)...

[NYPL]

According to Cinema Treasures, it became the Jewel Theatre, which played all male films, in the 1960s. Some Cinema Treasure commenters posted movies ads for the theater.

From 1975:


From 1971:


Per the Bight Lights Film Journal:

Sporting tacky ornamentation like Greek pillars and an obsessive fondness for the ever popular whorehouse red, it was just as garish as its Times Square brethren. In the '70s it screened such fare as Joe Gage's Kansas City Trucking Company and El Paso Wrecking Corp., which ads billed as "Lusty, dusty, sweaty and hardhitting!"

In the 1980s, the place was renamed the Bijou, according to Cinema Treasures, and continued to show XXX fare.

In February 1989, City officials closed the theater (and the Variety the next block up), "charging that the owners of the Bijou Cinema were 'essentially operating an AIDS breeding ground with profit being the driving force,' Dr. Stephen C. Joseph, the New York City Health Commissioner," told The New York Times.

You can read more details at the Bright Lights Film Journal here.

Jeremiah's Vanishing New York has more history on other nearby, now-defunct theaters here.

Here's the flyer for the last show at the Lakeside Lounge

As New York Music Daily first reported, the Lakeside Lounge is closing after 16 years on April 30. There isn't going to be any gala farewell parties at the live music venue on Avenue B at East 10th Street, New York Music Daily noted. The bands already on the schedule will be playing... and here's the flyer for the Lakeside's very last live show...


Until then then, you have another week to stop by ... Also, the Times has a piece on the Lakeside here today. Co-founder Eric Ambel, whose band is playing the last night, told the Times: "The economics of the new East Village caught up with us."

h/t Shawn Chittle

The latest message at 35 Cooper Square

This spring, someone has been leaving messages for/about developer Arun Bhatia at the formerly historic 35 Cooper Square ... we're on to message No. 3 now... (the first one is here ... and the second is here...)

Actually, this one is more of a checklist than a message...



Previously.

[Photos by Bobby Williams]

A weekend morning streetscene


Single Linds Reflex sent along the above photo from early Saturday morning on First Avenue between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place... not sure what's going on here. Sitting on a stoop with a smartphone ... locked out... lost... getting an early start for Saturday night... regardless, she was attracting attention from passersby...

Sunday, April 22, 2012

At First Park Green's Earth Day

Despite the dreary weather, the show went on today at First Park Green ... Earth Day (today!) marked the grand opening of the Park's first season of cultural programming ... including the unveiling of a sculpture by Robert Sestok ...




Photos by Bobby Williams.

Previously.

Internet making woman who sits on newspaper boxes on Bleecker and the Bowery world famous

[Photo by Bobby Williams from last fall]

Gothamist has an item about that woman who you also see lying on newspaper boxes on Bleecker and the Bowery... Someone posted a photo of her on Reddit yesterday in a thread titled "This lady knocked down the newspaper stand so she can devour her pickle comfortably...only in New York." So far, people have left more than 1,100 comments.

Not sure how long that she has been doing this here outside Think Coffee. The Voice noted it last fall.

h/t @Sharkbitenyc