Monday, June 13, 2022

Remembering Jose Fernandez

Photos by Stacie Joy

Friends came out today to pay their respects to longtime LES resident Jose "Joe" Hernandez, who died late last week. He had been hospitalized with liver disease. Hernandez was 71.

In recent months, Hernandez was among the handful of unhoused residents living in tents along Ninth Street between Avenue B and Avenue C, a stretch of sidewalk that has been a frequent target of the Mayor's encampment sweeps. (This was at least the eighth time in recent months where the city conducted a sweep here.)
Hernandez, pictured above, told this to EVG contributor Stacie Joy in April:
I've been here for four months now. I am looking for a one-bedroom apartment for my wife and me. I'm retired now. I was a superintendent and building manager for buildings on the Lower East Side. When I was younger, I worked for the Board of Education on Eldridge Street and Forsyth. A friend of mine was sleeping here on Ninth Street, and he was leaving his tent, so I took it. I get a pension and Social Security. Being homeless is not easy, including with the police department. They are very rude. They want us out of here. My wife is Amalia Jordan; we're common law. She’s staying at Masaryk Towers. 

During the vigil today, the NYPD and other city agencies returned to this sidewalk space and tossed the belongings of the individuals here.

Here's more from 1010 WINS, in a bad-look story for the city administration, "Cops sweep East Village homeless encampment during vigil for dead resident."

Mourners, including residents, neighbors, activists and a reverend from the church across the street, were outraged that police had chosen to carry out the sweep during the vigil.

And... 

After police and sanitation workers had finished destroying the camp, the vigil continued as planned, though maybe tinged with more anger and bitterness than it otherwise would have been.

As 1010 WINS noted, "After getting robbed twice in city shelters, Hernandez decided he preferred to live on the streets — where he spent his final years as his health failed."

He lost all his clothes and stockpile of food during a sweep in March.

"The sanitation truck stands there, and they start throwing everything in the truck," he said. "I was living there… They throw all the stuff out, clothing. They were begging but they didn't care."
Hernandez's "loved ones remember him as a kind, gentle and loving person, who, despite having very little, took immense joy in giving."  

East Village Loves NYC issues a fundraising appeal to help continue feeding New Yorkers in need

East Village Loves NYC — the local volunteer group formed in the spring of 2020 to feed people in need during the pandemic — is on the brink of shutting down.

The group put out a last-ditch fundraising appeal on Friday — they need $36,000 to keep going from their HQ at the Sixth Street Community Center.


Some positive news: Since sounding the alarm this past Friday, EV Loves NYC has raised more than half its fundraising goal of $36,000.

From an Instagram post on Saturday:
"The support we've received from our community over the past day has been absolutely incredible. Hundreds of calls, texts, voicemails, to let us know that you refuse to see us go.

We don't want to go. We want to keep helping the city we love, while building lasting memories with you and our community. We want to continue spreading love and helping those who need it most."

You can find the GoFundMe link here.  

In the spring of 2020, a handful of friends got together to prepare meals for neighbors. Early on, Ali Sahin, the owner of C&B Cafe on Seventh Street near Avenue B, donated his kitchen on Mondays for the group to cook its meals. By June 2020, they had outgrown the space and started assembling deliveries at the Sixth Street Community Center between Avenue B and Avenue C. 

Eventually, the group became known as East Village Loves NYC with 1,400-plus volunteers. In year one alone, the group cooked more than 100,000 meals for New Yorkers  ... not to mention donated 325,000-plus pounds of groceries and 7,000-plus pantry bags.
 

Image via @evlovesnyc

Report: Office building for 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place moving forward after developer secures $70-million loan

The 9-floor office building for the northeast corner of Third Avenue and St. Mark's Place has new life after the developer received a $70-million loan.

As The Real Deal first reported, Parkview Financial is providing the loan for the refinancing and construction to developer Real Estate Equities Corp. (REEC) for the 61,000-square-foot building at 1 St. Marks Place. 

Per TRD, REEC plans on 53,000 square feet of office space and some 7,700 square feet for retail.

Parkview CEO Paul Rahimian said in a statement that 1 St. Mark's Place could be in "high demand from the growing number of tech companies in the area."

Here's more from TRD on the project, slated for a summer 2024 completion, and the office-market outlook:
As of 2019, REEC was shooting for top-dollar rents at the boutique office building, planning to ask for around $150 per square foot. It's not clear what the developer will be seeking when the project finally comes to fruition. The office market has been decimated in the wake of the pandemic. A recent analysis predicted that by 2029, the city's office stock will drop in value by 28 percent, or roughly $49 billion, due to lease revenue falling and remote work rising further.
Last August, TRD reported that Madison Realty Capital was moving to foreclose on REEC's leasehold interest:
Madison has owned the $48 million loan package backed by REEC's East Village property since 2019. The real-estate private equity firm acquired the debt from South Korean financial services firm Hana Financial group, which provided REEC $79.1 million of debt and sold the $48 million portion to Madison Realty Capital.
Madison filed a complaint with the state Supreme Court in Manhattan, alleging that REEC defaulted on the $48 million mortgage, which combines an acquisition loan and construction loans.

In any event, expect work to ramp up again after months of inactivity. Last October, workers removed the barriers around the work site... allowing pedestrians to use the sidewalks again — for the first time since the barricades arrived in June 2020. 

A smaller building, and stacks of wheatpaste ads 

As you may recall, a 10-story office building had been in the works here. In October 2020, the City Council's Zoning Subcommittee voted down REEC's application to transfer air rights from the landmarked 4 St. Marks Place to the new building across the street.

With the air-rights transfer, REEC would have been allowed to build 8,386 square feet larger than the current zoning allows.

REEC picked up the 99-year leasehold for the corner properties for nearly $150 million in November 2017. The previous assemblage, which included retail tenants such as Korilla BBQ, the Continental and McDonald's, was demolished in 2019.

For the past year-plus, this gateway to the East Village — with the "RIP St. Marks" greeting on the west-facing wall at No. 5 — has served as prime wheatpaste ad space...
... and beware of falling wheatpaste ads! (photo by Steven)...

Updated: Raclette will reopen on July 29

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Updated 6/26: Signage at the restaurant states they will now reopen on July 29.

Raclette has closed at 511 E. 12th St. 

Multiple readers told us about the "closed" sign on the door here between Avenue A and Avenue B. Owner Edgar Villongco also confirmed the news to Eater. There isn't any mention of the closure yet on the restaurant's social media properties. 

The restaurant, which served French and Swiss Raclette, Croques and Tartine, opened in a 14-seat space on Avenue A in February 2015... before moving to these larger confines in September 2016...
No. 511 was previously home to Northern Spy (2010-2016).

The all-new 360 Bowery is in the piledriving and jackhammering phase

Foundation work is underway on the 21-floor office building coming to 360 Bowery at Fourth Street. 

This means, in recent days, that workers are jackhammering away at the base of the previous tenant, B Bar & Grill... there's some piledriving happening too...
The B Bar (b 1994) never reopened after the PAUSE in March 2020. Our previous posts have more background on this Midtown-friendly development via Bowery Hotel owner Eric Goode. 

New signage era for Temakase on 2nd Avenue

Saturday saw the arrival of new signage at Temakase, the Japanese restaurant specializing in handrolls at 157 Second Ave. between Ninth Street and 10th Street. (Thanks to Steven for the photos!

Gone is the more minimalist storefront... and in — a colorful red and yellow crab...
Temakase opened in the summer of 2020. Haven't heard any reader reports on this place since then.

Team behind Ichibantei eyeing 100 3rd Ave.

CB3's SLA committee meets tonight at 6:30. (Find the Zoom link here.)

There are just a handful of applicants this month, including MayRee on First Street and Gen Korean BBQ House on 14th Street and Third Avenue.  

Here's another item of interest. The team behind the 12-year-old Ichibantei on 13th Street is looking to open a bar-restaurant serving Japanese cuisine at 100 Third Ave. 

The questionnaire on file at the CB3 website shows the still-unnamed concept would feature room for 24 tables/98 seats spread over two floors... with proposed hours of 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. during the week; a 4 a.m. close Thursday through Saturday. (The 69-page questionnaire also includes a sample menu.)

No. 100 between 12th Street and 13th Street last housed the vowel-deficient club VNYL, which shut down at some point during the pandemic. Until September 2015, the renovated building featured the second iteration of Nevada Smiths. 

Sunday, June 12, 2022

Flashback to 2 years ago today: June 12, 2020

This video clip via the EVG Twitter account is from early Friday evening on June 12, 2020... on St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue... People viewed the clip more than 5 million times... with news outlets in the U.K., France and Japan asking permission to post the video.

And among the retweets... Earlier this week in June 2020, NYC reopened for the first time with workers in construction, manufacturing and retail being allowed to return — this after a nearly three-month lockdown, giving reason for some hope. 

Many Twitter users condemned the actions of the partygoers on the street, many of whom were not wearing masks... and at a time when some residents were still wiping down canned goods purchased at the grocery. 

In June 2020, bars and restaurants were still barred from allowing patrons inside but were OK'd to dispense to-go drinks. Eight days later, on June 20, NYC launched its Open Restaurants program, allowing restaurants to expand to sidewalks, curbside spaces and backyards.

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a celebration of Hare Krishna Friday in Tompkins Square Park — photo by Stacie Joy) ... 

• Questions and concerns remain over private security detail outside the former P.S. 64 (Tuesday

• Gaia Italian Café set to debut on 3rd Street (Monday

• RIP Bobbie Hondo (Monday

• Come, let's drive along some side streets between Avenue C and Avenue D in 1987 (Friday

• A look inside Globe Slicers, one of the most unique storefronts on the Bowery (Thursday

• Ray's is ready to crank out the ice cream all summer long (Friday)

 • 'Happy 35th Gay Anniversary' to Linda Simpson and My Comrade at Howl! Happening (Saturday

• Astor Place Greenmarket returns (Tuesday

• First red-tailed chick takes maiden voyage (Tuesday

• At the last day of self-defense class (Wednesday

• State of the art: Blick is now open in new 4th Avenue home (Monday

• Best wishes to John Flansburgh of They Might Be Giants (Saturday)

• 'Room With Stars' at Theater for the New City (Wednesday

• Demolition complete on the NE corner of 2nd Avenue and 2nd Street (Wednesday

• Gen Korean BBQ House next for 14th Street and 3rd Avenue (Monday

• Openings: Emilia by Nai (Wednesday

• Chick-In to bring Korean-style chicken to Allen Street (Monday

• Akina Sushi has not been open lately (Thursday

• Milk Burger signage arrives on Houston (Wednesday

• The Nook NYC announces itself on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday

• Your first look inside the new East Village Taco Bell, opening NEXT WEEK on 3rd Avenue (Friday)

• El Churro for Allen and Houston? (Thursday

• Wood you believe another smoke shop is opening (Tuesday) ... New smoke shop called Smoke Shop debuts on 3rd Avenue (Monday)

---

Follow EVG on Instagram or Twitter for more frequent updates and pics.

At the East Village Queer Market

Photos by Stacie Joy 


Milk Money Kitchens, 50 Avenue A between Third Street and Fourth Street, hosted the Market. The sponsors were the East Village Independent Merchants Association3rd and B'zaar and Exit9.

While this was a one-day event, there is an online shop here for more Pride-related items. 

EVG contributor Stacie oy stopped by for part of the afternoon... 

Sunday's opening shot

Prepping for the Puerto Rican Day Parade today... photo from Third Street yesterday by Stacie Joy...

EVG Etc.: A post with links to stories about Lou Reed, Henry Winkler; more!

Midtown view Friday evening

• 19-year-old woman was attacked and stabbed early Friday morning at the Delancey Street subway stop (CBS 2) ... Police released video footage of the suspect (ABC 7)

• A year after state lawmakers established the Housing Our Neighbors with Dignity Act (HONDA), not a single hotel has been converted to housing in New York City (City Limits

• A tour of the "stunning" Lou Reed exhibit at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts (Variety

• A memorial show for the late Howie Pyro at the Bowery Ballroom on July 23 (Official site

• Court tosses the new Assembly district maps, though it won't impact this year's races (Gothamist

• More on Carlina Rivera's Congressional bid (Gotham Gazette

• Spectacular pics of the red-tailed hawklets in Tompkins Square Park (Laura Goggin Photography)

• The team behind the 11th Street Bar is reopening Mugs in Williamsburg (Greenpointers

• The unlikely success story of Manhattan's only Burmese restaurant — Little Myanmar on Second Street (Saveur ... previously on EVG

• Let's check out the East Village closet of Sunflower Bean's Julia Cumming (Coveteur ... previously on EVG

• NYC's burger shops are weighing how to respond to calls to boycott the company behind Martin's Potato Rolls (Eater

• The "intrepid playfulness" at Nudibranch on First Avenue (The New Yorker

• Henry Winkler meets fans while dining at Katz's (Thrillist

• A look at the new hotel Nine Orchard on the Lower East Side (Vogue)

... and a video making the rounds this weekend ... riding into Williamsburg on a J/M/Z train...

Saturday, June 11, 2022

Saturday's parting shot

Amsterdam views today on Zesde Straat by Derek Berg... 

'Happy 35th Gay Anniversary' to Linda Simpson and My Comrade at Howl! Happening

Photos by Stacie Joy 

This summer, Howl! Happening is celebrating Linda Simpson's photographs and her groundbreaking magazine, My Comrade

Here's more about "My Comrade Magazine: Happy 35th Gay Anniversary" at the space, 6 E. First St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery:
My Comrade magazine was founded by drag queen Linda Simpson in 1987 during the dark era of the AIDS crisis and served as a symbol of hope and frivolity to the East Village gay scene and beyond. Armed with a tongue-in-cheek "revolutionary" agenda, the magazine glorified heroic drag queens and sexy guys in a cut-and-paste mishmash of articles and photo spreads. Lesbians got their due when the flip side became Sister! The sporadic publishing schedule produced a total of 11 issues until 1994. It was revived in 2004 for two more. 

The exhibit features reproductions and enlargements of My Comrade's black-and-white pages. Notable contributors to the magazine included photographers Jack Pierson and David Armstrong, painter Stephen Tashjian a.k.a. Tabboo!, and drag stars RuPaul and Lady Bunny. The exhibit also features Simpson's color photos of the era from her acclaimed 2021 photo book, "The Drag Explosion," published by Domain. 
EVG contributor Stacie Joy went to the opening last weekend, where she took these photos... including of Linda...
The First Street gallery is open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. "My Comrade Magazine: Happy 35th Gay Anniversary" will be up through July 17.

You can check out this feature at Dazed for more history.

The bands playing in Tompkins Square Park this afternoon

There's a slate of bands on tap this afternoon in Tompkins Square Park... headlined by the high-energy rock of InCircles — one of the show's organizers.

Other bands: 95 Bulls ... The Vansaders ... No Grudges ... and (get there early for) Jade Tourniquet

The show is expected to run from 1:45 to 6 p.m.

Best wishes to John Flansburgh of They Might Be Giants

ICYMI... John Flansburgh (above left), one-half of They Might Be Giants along with John Linnell, was seriously injured in a car crash early Thursday morning coming home from a show at the Bowery Ballroom. 

According to the Daily News: "Flansburgh, 62, was taking a car service back to his Upper East Side home after the band had a show at the Bowery Ballroom at about 12:45 a.m. Thursday when the Ford he was riding in was T-Boned by a 2016 Honda near the corner of Park Avenue and East 102nd Street." 

Flansburgh and the 32-year-old livery driver were taken to Cornell Hospital. The guitarist broke seven ribs. (The driver's condition is not known.) 

Per reports, 26-year-old Bronx resident William Mota was charged with drunk driving, resisting arrest and refusing to take a Breathalyzer test. Police told the Associated Press that Mota ran a red light, jumped a curb and plowed into the gate of a housing complex, hitting two cars along the way. 

Flansburgh wrote about the collision in a lengthy Instagram post...

 

The collision occured after the first night of TMBG's pandemic-delayed tour celebrating the 30th anniversary of Flood (a great record BTW). The shows will likely start up again later this summer. 

While Flansburgh diffused the situation with some humor, Streetsblog pointed out that through June 5, "there have been 41,772 reported crashes (roughly 270 per day), injuring 1,542 cyclists, 3,495 pedestrians and 13,644 motorists" in NYC. 

They Might Be Giants were regulars in the East Village in the 1980s... you can read our interview with the band's other John, John Linnell, right here

And while were here...

 

Friday, June 10, 2022

Friday's parting shot

Eiffel Tower views on Place Saint-Marc today... photo by Derek Berg ...

Details about a LES Pride Book Crawl tomorrow (Saturday!)

Details via the EVG inbox... 
Several bookstores of the LES and East Village are participating in a bookstore crawl, the focus of which is Pride Month. 
The crawl starts at noon on Saturday, June 11, and each store is offering giveaways and prizes. 

Participating stores: 
• Bluestockings Cooperative Bookstore at 116 Suffolk St. 
• Book Club Bar at 197 E 3rd St. 
• Sweet Pickle Books at 47 Orchard St.
• Yu & Me Books at 44 Mulberry St. 
• McNally Jackson at 52 Prince St. 
• Pillow-Cat Books at 328 E 9th St.

'Cheap' thrills

 

There's a new video out today via Surfbort, hanging here in Times Square. "Cheap Glue" is off the band's Keep on Truckin' release.

Details about the East Village Queer Market on Avenue A tomorrow

Photos by Stacie Joy

Look for a special Pride event tomorrow (Saturday!) at the East Village Queer Market, an event spotlighting queer makers and gay-owned businesses producing consumer goods.

A handful of local vendors will be participating tomorrow in this "celebration of Queer Makers" from noon to 6 p.m. at 50 Avenue A between Third Street and Fourth Street. Find more details here. You can also shop online here.

The sponsors are the East Village Independent Merchants Association3rd and B'zaar and Exit9, with co-owner Charles Branstool pictured below.