Friday, September 17, 2010

New sidewalk shed at St. Brigid's brings an end to shelter for travelers

Last week, to meet the demands of the continued renovations, workers put in a new sidewalk shed on the Eighth Street side of St. Brigid's... the structure takes up most of the sidewalk now...



During August, before the expanded sidewalk shed, several travelers would camp out here at night ...



Last month, I spoke with several regular East Village travelers... they all told me that the NYPD had suddenly cracked down on them like never before... and, according to them, the police said that this area by the under-renovation church was OK for them to sleep... and that Tompkins Square Park was "strictly forbidden."

There was some talk of increased gang activity... with the travelers being the target of the violence...

By now, though, most of the travelers have already moved on as usual this time of the year... just a handful remain.... In any event, the new sidewalk shed would keep them from sleeping alongside St. Brigid's...

Meanwhile, I keep thinking about this image early one Friday morning in August... I was out around 6:30 a.m., and came across this young woman asleep on the front steps of an apartment building on Seventh Street... In my 10-second assessment, I could tell that she wasn't part of the travelers scene... and she also wasn't someone who got locked out of her apartment... She seemed so vulnerable ... I felt a little cheap for taking a photo... Still, I wonder what the story was...

First fines levied for 2 Cooper pool party



Figures! Two guests per unit, people!

Previously on EV Grieve:
'Draconian regulations' for 2 Coop's pool and club

The perfect accessory for weekend nights out in the East Village



Homemade mask spotted on 10th Street.

The one sidewalk table you may not want at Westville East



On 11th Street... and to think the eatery was going to have even more tables out here...

Related reading: The Worst Outdoor Seating In New York (Eater)

On second thought...Rhong Tiam the Sequel not likely happening

JUST the other night, the former Rhong Tiam space on Second Avenue and Fifth Street was all lit up...

'

A worker on the scene said that they'd be reopening next month...

THEN! Last evening, while walking by, "for rent" signs had gone up...

Where the old Bowery fetishists will be this weekend



At the Film Forum for "On the Bowery," the 1956 documentary directed by Lionel Rogosin.



Our friends at This Ain't the Summer of Love have more on the film here.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

It's electric



Wow. The talented and amazing James and Karla Murray took this storm shot this evening over the East Village...

The wrath of CAAN


This just arrived in our inbox from the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation (GVSHP):

The Community Action Alliance on NYU 2031 (CAAN 2031) — a coalition of community groups GVSHP helped found to respond to NYU’s massive development plans following the suspension of the Borough President’s Community Task Force on NYU — continues to grow. CAAN 2031 continues to urge elected officials and the local Community Board, which will be voting or weighing in on NYU’s plans, not to approve or support zoning changes or landmarks approvals NYU is seeking which would negatively impact the character of our neighborhoods. CAAN 2031 has also written to various city officials urging that the public green space on Bleecker, Mercer, and West 3rd Streets and LaGuardia Place which NYU is asking be given to it for development as part of its NYU 2031 Expansion plan be turned into permanent public parkland (read the letter HERE).

CAAN 2031 now also has a website, which you can visit HERE. Both the CAAN 2031 website and GVSHP’s NYU webpage now also have useful documents including a summary of the NYU 2031 Land Use proposals, NYU’s Overview of their 2031 Expansion Plan, and NYU’s History of the development of and regulations governing the superblocks, which they are seeking to dramatically change.

On Monday, Community Board #2’s Zoning and Institutions Committee will be holding a joint public hearing on the NYU 2031 plan and the various zoning, land use, and landmarks approvals NYU is seeking for nine blocks east and south of Washington Square, to allow an additional 2 million square feet (the equivalent of the Empire State Building) of development there.

HOW TO HELP:

* Come to the Community Board #2 Public Hearing on the NYU 2031 Plan on Monday at 6:30 pm at PS 41, 116 West 11th Street, and speak during the public session regarding the serious problems with the NYU plan and the viable alternatives the University, Community Board, and elected officials should be considering.


By the way, the CAAN site included a link to video from NYU move-in day this past Aug. 29...

[Updated] Aces and Eights temporarily shuttered on Avenue A



Thanks to an EV Grieve reader for this shot... apparently Aces & Eights on Avenue A was shut down yesterday by the Health Department... One source said the bar was cited by the DOH last night for not having the proper paperwork... and that Aces & Eights would reopen next week.... Meanwhile, the source noted that the ownership has changed hands.... the people behind the Aces & Eights uptown are no longer involved here... which means that you can expect a name change one of these days ...

[Updated] The Lo-Down has more on the shuttered Aces & Eights:

[T]he bar never obtained permission to open its doors, according to city officials.

On Tuesday, the city’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene shuttered the 18-month old watering hole for lack of a valid operating permit. It had been cited for the same violation in April 2010, and ordered not to reopen until the permit was issued, according to the health department’s public affairs office.


Uh, oops?

Previously on EV Grieve:
Aces & Eight GM offers some clarification on previous posts, comments

Emotions in motion on the Second Avenue bike lane



Via Craigslist:

You were riding your bike down 2nd ave. Chastizing a cab as he turned - m4w (East Village)

Date: 2010-09-16, 10:01AM EDT

The cab was making a left on 6th street I believe and you turned slightly while shouting at him to recognize the bike lane. I told you I empathized. It's happened to me a few times. Then you rode south on 2nd Ave. You're feisty and beautiful. Hope you I hear from you.


Too soon to rename the bike lane Lover's Lane?

On First Avenue, the machines are taking over!

EV Grieve reader Creature notes this sight this morning on First Avenue between Second and Third Street...




Will one of these things microwave breakfast burritos?

'Confessions of an Indie Bookstore Clerk'



Our friend Karen Lillis has a memoir in progress titled, "Bagging The Beats At Midnight:
Confessions of an Indie Bookstore Clerk." Here's an excerpt via Undie Press.

"From age 27 (the age that rock stars die) to age 35 (the age that women stop stating their real age), I had the privilege of working at St Mark’s Bookshop in Manhattan’s East Village. During my short decade as a bookstore clerk, books were the stuff of my daily life: My friends were bookshop employees and bookstore hounds, and my friendships revolved around the books we recommended to each other, enthused about, lent out, insisted be read, threw across the room, and gave each other with heartfelt inscriptions. When I was in the red, I looked for ways to sell books on the side of my dayjob as a bookseller. My retirement account was a pile of stowed-away first editions which I hoped would increase in value. Days off were often spent at used bookstores. Weeks off were spent in the bookstores of other cities."


Keep reading here.

Bus shelter move has Second Avenue residents concerned

Here on Second Avenue between 14th Street and 13th Street... the M15 stop near the KFC...



... will soon be relocated a few hundred feet to the south...



...right smack in front of the entrances of several apartment buildings..




...a move that is making several residents along here uneasy.... As one resident here told me, given: "the fratty bars, the KFC, and the bus...it makes for a lot of strange lingerers and plenty of litter." And noise.... any course of action for residents to fight against the move of a bus shelter? Doesn't seem to be much of a 311 call...

So what's the least expensive apartment now for sale in the East Village?



That would be at 99 Avenue B between Sixth Street and Seventh Street... (At least according to Streeteasy listings.) This is a 265-square-foot unit going for $225,000 (that's $849 per square foot).

Here's the listing for the home that has been on the market for 147 days:

WELCOME HOME to this Prime East Village Gem! Situated just steps from Tompkins Square Park and the beautiful "6th & B" community garden, this darling studio apartment is the perfect oasis in the middle of it all. Located in a renovated pre-war elevator co-op, this first floor unit features hard wood floors throughout, exposed brick walls, track lighting, updated pullman kitchen, windowed bathroom, and a generously sized private storage unit. Building amenities include a common courtyard space, landscaped roof deck with fabulous views of Manhattan, laundry room, and bike room. Pied-à-terres and parents buying for children are permitted, and pets are allowed. Don't miss out on this wonderful opportunity and fantastic VALUE!





And no mention in the listing of being so close to one of the better bars around — Manitoba's?

No sign of a condo as flea market returns to the Mary Help of Christians

As I mentioned, The Mary Help of Christians Church Flea Market comes back this Sunday to 11th Street and Avenue A



Reminders! No drugs and porn!



Anyway, the return of the flea market here on a regular basis makes me wonder whatever happened to the deal to develop this space?

A tree for Harry



During the Howl! Festival this past weekend, the Howl! Board honored outgoing Tompkins Square Park supervisor Harry Greenberg. The city has planted a tree in his honor. Next week, Greenberg retires after 20-plus years on the beat... you can read a profile of him here in The Villager.

[Photo courtesy of Stacie Joy]

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

The former De La Vega Museum is now called....

An EV Grieve reader sends along a photo this afternoon of the new signage at the former De La Vega Museum on St. Mark's Place.... freshly painted....



Junk!




Soon to be home to an outpost of the Williamsburg store. This store has nothing to do with the Williamsburg location... they just borrowed the same name...

South Brooklyn continues East Village invasion



Eater is reporting that South Brooklyn Pizza is taking over the Ruben's space on First Avenue between Seventh Street and St. Mark's. This should not make the neighbors happy.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Rumors!: Will PJ Hanley's be opening a pizza shop on First Avenue?

A Stop Work Order for the P.J. Hanley's pizza parlor on First Avenue

Opposition to South Brooklyn Pizza's liquor license

[Photo via Eater]

'Draconian regulations' for 2 Coop's pool and club



A tipster passes along the following from 2 Cooper Square:

New draconian regulations for roof deck, pool and club level at 2 Cooper Square. Airlines can take some pointers from these guys. Seriously, Bernie Madoff doesn't even have this many rules in prison.





We're still going over the ample rules. Hmm. Two guests per unit per day? Guests must wear Guest Wrist Bands? Bathers must shower before entering the pool? NO SMOKING or GLASSWARE OF ANY KIND!

Pool partiers will have to take it to the A Building then...

Something sweet from Something Sweet for free today



EV Grieve First Avenue correspondent Blue Glass notes that Something Sweet at 11th Street will be giving out a free small dessert today between 1 and 3... good chance to sample a neighborhood staple...

UPDATE: Oh, per the comments, I didn't know this was so widespread, this dessert giveaway. Here are more details.