Wednesday, November 14, 2012

The inside story of Con Ed and Superstorm Sandy

I've been curious about some of the events of Oct. 29, when the East River was flooding Avenue C... and before the lights went out for the next 4-5 days. I'm trying to even remember what happened that night. It seems like longer than 16 days ago. Maybe that's a good thing.

What I recall. About 6:30 that Monday night, with the storm on the way, I decided to take a walk around the neighborhood. Maybe get a drink. See what was going on. Take some pictures. Great idea!

I stop by a few places. Not many people around. At this point, I'm just inside Vazac's. Before entering the second set of doors, I pause and quickly glance at my phone/email. There's an email from EVG reader faces from 7:01 p.m. saying that 14th Street and Avenue C was under water. He sent this photo:


It is now much later than 7:01. I leave and head east on Seventh Street... About a third of the way from Avenue C, I encounter the water rising on the street. I talk with a few people. No one is panicking. So far. I figure I can go back to Avenue B, and head south for a better vantage point. I'm right near that big Tompkins Square Plaza apartment complex at 190 E. Seventh St. when the sky to the southeast lights up in that greenish tint ... an explosion from somewhere. I heard a variety of WHOOOOAAAAAAAAs and WOOOOOOOOOssss and WTFs.

EVG regular William Klayer took this shot at nearly the moment he heard the explosion about 8:13 p.m. or so:


Figure it might be a good time to go home now. And you know the rest, after the second explosion...

Anyway, Stephen Gandel at Fortune has published a detailed account of what happened at Con Ed the night of Superstorm Sandy... and how the utility eventually restored power to the city.... an excerpt...

By the time [Con Ed CEO James] Burke reached the command room, word was already circulating through the media and among his staff that Con Ed's 13th Street sub-station, one of the largest in the city, had blown up.

In the room, John Miksad, one of Burke's top lieutenants, was on the phone with a crew at one of the lower Manhattan power stations that had been turned off getting a report on the flooding when the lights in the command center went off and on. Miksad looked up at one of the three giant screens at the front of the room that displayed the number of Con Ed customers who had lost power. Before the lights went off it was about 100,000. When the screen came back on a moment later, the number had jumped by more than 200,000.

John McAvoy, another one of Burke's top lieutenants, was already on the phone with workers at the 13th Street station when Miksad came over. Everyone was okay. They didn't see any fires. Power was out. The first floor control room was still dry but outside the streets had turned into rivers. Water was pouring over the wall. They wanted out.

Miksad, though, wanted in. His computers weren't telling him anything. He would need to get into the plant and look at the equipment to know what had happened, but he couldn't leave the command center. He told McAvoy to send an engineer on the rescue mission.

Shortly after that, Miksad got an e-mail with a link to the now-infamous youtube clip of the 13th Street substation. That was the first time he saw the flash. Technically, the plant hadn't blown up. It was what they call an arc, kind of like the spark you sometimes get when you plug something into an outlet, except much more powerful. Arcs happen. But the flashes are only supposed to last fractions of a second before breakers divert the current away from the problem. The flash Miksad saw in the video went on for 30 seconds, and it seemed to come in waves. He watched the video again and again. "That's when I knew we had a problem," says Miksad. "And it was a very, very big one."

Read the whole article here.

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.

Editor's note: We originally had the following Out and About scheduled for Oct. 31. In the aftermath of the Superstorm Sandy, we suspended the column for two weeks...


By James Maher


Name: Tamara Hey
Occupation: Musician
Location: 9th Street Between 2nd and 3rd Avenues.
Time: 3:45 pm on Monday, Oct. 22

I’ve lived here since 1998, between 1st and A on 9th street.I’m from the Bronx and then I moved to the Upper East Side for five years. The Upper East Side was boring, so I came here.

Mostly when I’m out walking around it’s because I have a dog. As soon as I got a dog I learned a lot more about the neighborhood and met a lot more people. Sometimes I work at Puppy Love, Kitty Cat. I’ve got a Jack Russell terrier, who was made for killing rats. It’s a problem, because our block is filled with them. She’s killed a couple. At night, when we go for a walk, I have to pick her up and bring her a couple blocks away or she’ll kill more.

My husband and I are both musicians. He plays the piano. We have a baby grand piano in an under 700-square-foot apartment. I’m a singer and songwriter and I teach. I’m on my way to teach right now on the Upper East. I’ve played around the neighborhood. These days, I tend to play at Rockwood Music Hall. I do a kind of storytelling pop. I wrote a song called "Alphabet City" about the neighborhood:

Walking my dog down Avenue A

NYC on the first spring day

Everybody in their shorts and their shades

Tompkins Square Park on their rollerblades

Iced coffee to go from Pick Me Up Cafe

Walking my dog down Avenue A.

ABC ALPHABET CITY

ABC ALPHABET CITY

You're good to me,

ALPHABET CITY

ABC ALPHABET CITY

OH, ALPHABET CITY


Avenue B watching my laundry go 'round

Near the M9 bus stop to Chinatown

Horseshoe Bar, Lakeside Lounge

Saturday night bridge and tunnel crowd

Lucky me, I can just stay in

Or Avenue B and watch my laundry spin.


(Chorus)


Got a place in my heart for Avenue C

Where the C-note open mic used to be

Friday nights playing my guitar

Singing my songs for Ira at the bar

He'd give me a wink like I was a star

Avenue C, you got a place in my heart.


(Chorus)

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

Sandy spoils the Surprise Garden

Back on Oct. 16, we posted this photo of the robust-looking Surprise Garden on East 14th Street between Avenue B and Avenue C ...

[Bobby Williams]

Given that this stretch of East 14th Street spent time flooded by the filth muck of the East River during Superstorm Sandy ... we were expecting the worst at this tiny plot... Indeed, things aren't looking so good at the moment...



We're hopeful that the Surprise Gardeners will be able to bring this back to life in the spring...

Previously on EV Grieve:
The Surprise Garden and how it got that way on East 14th Street

Naked Pizza is on vacation

An EVG reader said that she thought Naked Pizza on East 14th Street near East Third Street had gone out of business...


According to their website, this location of the chain is on vacation "until after" next Tuesday...


The second NYC location of Naked Pizza opened last November... the place has some deep pockets, having been backed by Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of the Dallas Mavericks, and The Kraft Group...

By the way, has anyone ever tried this gluten-free pizza? Never seems all that busy to me. But it may just be when I happen by...

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Pecking order


Rat dining in Tompkins Square Park this afternoon. Photo by Bobby Williams.

[Updated] S'MAC seeking help

From the EV Grieve inbox... via S'MAC at 345 E. 12th Street just west of First Avenue...
In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, like all downtown restaurants, we sustained heavy losses due to spoiled inventory and loss of business, and are working with our insurance carriers to see how much we can recover.

In the meantime we have decided to carry a full payroll for our staff for the week that we were forced to shutdown, but in order to do this we need your help.

If you intend to eat at S'MAC at any time in the next year, we ask that you consider putting that amount on a S'MAC gift card and use that card when you come in to eat in the future.

Please consider using S'MAC gift cards to fulfill a part of your Holiday gift-giving this year. And please buy that gift card now rather than wait until later in the year.

Either of these ideas will allow us to collect cash, that you had intended to spend at S'MAC, up front and use it for employee payroll now.

To purchase a S'MAC gift card, please go here.

Updated 9:27

DNAinfo has a piece on S'MAC's gift-card campaign tonight... Per the article by Serena Solomon, owner Sarita Ekya estimated that her Sandy-related losses were $90,000.

S'MAC, which first opened in 2006, has three locations — East 12th Street, East 33rd Street and a small kiosk on First Avenue and 1st Street — that were not damaged in the storm but were all forced to close. The East Village and Murray Hill locations were shut for eight days and the kiosk for 11 days.

S'MAC also decided to pay workers for the time the restaurants were closed during the hurricane.

However, now the bills have started arriving and rent on the shops is overdue by more than 10 days, she said.

Happy No. 35

East 11th Street residents meeting tomorrow to discuss 'the big changes coming'

From the EV Grieve inbox...


With the threat of a super-size 7-Eleven at the south corner at 500 E 11, the loss of our community's wonderful flea market and its impending replacement with a huge luxury residential complex along Avenue A, residents on 11th Street have organized to let their voice be heard. If we can't stop these developments, we can still make a difference to prevent the worst. Join us!!

Block Association Meeting
Wednesday, November 14, 7 pm
@ Father's Heart Ministries
545 E 11th St

Anyone living on 11th Street is a member of the 11th Street A-B-C Block Association.
So come and be heard.

[Photo via James C. Taylor]

Nublu moving up Avenue C; restaurant in the works for new space


We continue to look at this month's CB3/SLA committee agenda. Here's another item of considerable interest: Nublu, the eclectic cosmopolitan music venue, is planning to move from its current home at 62 Avenue C to 151 Avenue C between East Ninth Street and East 10th Street, according to paperwork on file with CB3.

Plans call for a "restaurant/music performance space" with daily hours of 9 a.m. to 4 a.m. seven days a week. According to the paperwork, "a sidewalk cafe license application will be made at a later time."

Starting in August 2011, Nublu had to temporarily relocate to under Lucky Cheng's on First Avenue ... it's a complicated story that features a liquor license snafu involving the club's proximity to the Jehovah's Witness Kingdom Hall across the street. (You can read more about it at the Voice in this Q-and-A with Nublu owner Ilhan Ersahin.) Nublu, which opened in 2002 with a location now also in Istanbul, moved back to No. 62 in January.

Ersahin and three friends bought 62 Avenue C, as a feature in the Times from June 2011 points out, making it safe from the usual club killers. (High rents, etc.) However! "[I]t's my dream to move the club into a larger space nearby and then make Nublu into a recording studio. That's what we need to be even more productive," Ersahin said at the time.

As we noted back in August 2009, 151 Avenue C and its "4,186 buildable square feet of additional air rights" hit the market for $2.3 million. The space was billed as "a rare opportunity for ... developers."

City documents show that the two-story building at 151 Avenue C was purchased in June by 151 Ave C Holdings LLC (with an address of 62 Avenue C) for $1.75 million.

Saints Tavern appears on St. Mark's Place


The Typhoon Lounge closed back in May on St. Mark's Place just west of First Avenue. And now the bar that is taking its place has revealed itself  — Saints Tavern.

The proprietors went before the CB3 back in August to to open a bar and "American grill." They previously were licensed for the bar The Brews Brothers on Second Avenue in Yorkville from January 2009-2011.


The hours were expected to be 4 p.m. to 4 a.m. No word on an opening date just yet.

Please keep this tree house's living room tidy

Spotted on First Avenue near East 14th Street...




...and pick up your CDs too.

It sure is dark on Avenue A and East Houston

A few readers have noted how dark it is now at the East Houston-Avenue A-East First Street intersection....


The streetlights on both sides of the Avenue are out... (and it doesn't help that the corner business, the former Nice Guy Eddie's, is still boarded up during renovations...)


To the always popular Grievestrator...


One reader said that he reported the outage to 311, though changing lightbulbs may not top the city's post-Sandy priority list at the moment... so take notice: This is always a dicey intersection, made even more so without proper lights...

Monday, November 12, 2012

Sandy vs. East Village Fruit & Vegetable



Monday evening, Oct. 29 on Avenue B at East 14th Street. Video by Karla Murray.

East Village gas shortage over ...?

You've seen the long lines for gas the last 9 days or so... A quick look tonight found that one car was waiting at the BP on Second Avenue at East First Street...


...while the Mobil on East Houston and Avenue C was out of gas at the moment...


However, there weren't any cars waiting. And the NYPD still had a presence at both stations.

Acme-Indochine owners aiming to take over Lucky Cheng's space


We now know who the unnamed applicant is for the Lucky Cheng's space on First Avenue. According to documents on file with CB3, the owners of the new apparent hipspot Acme on Great Jones — Jean-Marc Houmard (co-owner of Indochine) and Jon Neidich (who used to manage the bar at the Standard Hotel's Boom Boom Room) — are aiming to open a still-unnamed restaurant-lounge.

Per CB3 paperwork, the establishment will serve Asian cuisine, with planned hours of noon to 4 a.m. Hui Chi Le, an owner of Indochine and Republic, is the other partner named in the new project.

The applicants will appear before the CB3/SLA licensing committee next Monday at 6:30 p.m.

Lucky Cheng's recently relocated to Times Square.

2 weeks later: The lingering effects of Hurricane Sandy in the East Village


On East 11th Street and Avenue B yesterday. Photo by Goggla.

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On East 11th Street near Avenue C Saturday. Photo by Shawn Chittle.

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East 14th Street near Avenue C yesterday.

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Avenue C just past East 14th Street yesterday.

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Near East 10th Street yesterday.

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Avenue C at East Ninth Street Friday night. Photo by Andrew Adam Newman on Ave C.

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East Eighth Street near Avenue C yesterday.

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East Ninth Street near Avenue C Saturday.

Are you getting a rent abatement?

From the EV Grieve inbox...

Dear Residents,

We are writing to you after one of the most devastating storms in New York City’s
history. While most of our tenants were largely unaffected by the storm, those of you receiving this letter had to endure a lack of electricity, heat, hot water, and, in some cases, cold water as well. Many of you were lucky enough to have friends and family who could provide you with shelter during this time. Others were able to find hotel rooms. Some of our residents had nowhere to go aside from a city shelter. Regardless of your specific situation, we want to express our sympathy for all that you went through last week.

As we’re sure you know, all of your building superintendents remained onsite for the duration of the blackout. They did an amazing job making sure that the buildings remained secure and checking in on all of our tenants, especially those who are elderly or infirmed. They continued doing their jobs with a great attitude and exceeded our expectations in every way.

In addition to the supers, we know that many of you checked in on your neighbors during this time. Some of you even invited your neighbors over to your homes. Because of your empathy for others, you are helping to build real communities within your buildings. We thank you for your good humor and good spirits during a tough time.

While we recognize that there are plenty of people who are far worse off than you, we wanted to do our own small part to compensate you for the headache caused by the storm. On your December rent bill, you will see that we have abated your rent for the period of time that your building was without power. For 229 East 12th Street, 339-345 East 12th Street, 75-81 Orchard Street, and 101 Avenue D, your rent will be abated for 5 days. For 201-207 West 11th Street, your rent will be abated for 6 days.

We hope that you are all comfortably back in your homes and back to your normal routines. We also hope that all of your friends and family members are safe and sound.

Best regards,

Dermot Realty Management Company

Anyone else care to share how his or her landlord is handling the days without power? I've heard from a few tenants who said their landlord is doing something similar to the above. I've also heard from tenants who don't even think their landlord realized that there was a hurricane...

Meanwhile, Curbed has a handy, post-Sandy when-you-should-pay-rent guide right here.

Fundraising campaign under way for Kasadela on East 11th Street


Several readers have pointed us to the crowdsourcing fundraiser under way for Kasadela, the popular Japanese cafe on East 11th Street near Avenue C ... an intersection that was hit hard by Sandy's storm surge.

Per Go Fund Me:

As many of our fans know, we've sustained about 70% worth of damage. Damages include: sewage all over the entire basement, inventory destroyed ... broken kitchen appliances, two freezers, a refrigerator, the gas line is malfunctioning effecting the stove, fryer, broiler, and grill, the dining room's warped wood floor, soiled furniture, records and paperwork, computer, fax machine, printer/scanner, the list is endless seriously; we had a pretty big basement so we kept pretty much everything down there.

It is mind boggling to write this we have no idea what to do with ourselves. Our goal of $50,000 is to clean and sanitize the premises, adequately replace inventory, repair appliances worth salvaging replace those unworthy, renovate the floor, and return most things back to normal at least enough to get back on our feet.

[W]e will continue to put forth our best efforts to re-open but have faced several challenges and a lack of support from our Insurance co. We were reluctant to use this website, but friends & fans insisted that we accept their support now more than ever instead of relying on the system. Thank you for your continued support since 2003 ...

Here's the site with more information on the fundraising campaign.

51 Astor Place puts away its giant crane

You know that big crane over at 51 Astor Place...


On Saturday morning, workers disassembled the thing...





Another ceremonial step in the construction of the 430,000-square-foot tower... after workers packed it up...


... we jogged alongside, waving and tossing flower petals as it headed out of the neighborhood ...


Previously on EV Grieve:
51 Astor Place demolition begins July 1; 17 months to build new black-glass tower

East Village — the new Midtown?

Zoltar officially welcomed to the East Village


Awww...

EV Grieve Eatery Etc.: Blue Ribbon Fried Chicken says hello (sort of); Flea Market Cafe closes for renovations

Didn't notice this one... On Avenue A, the concepts keep changing at the former Avenue A Sushi, which closed in the spring of 2010. It has been the Avenue A Bistro Bar. The Avenue A Bistro Cafe. Anyway, it's now called La Lune, a hookah bar serving Lebanese cuisine...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Avenue A Sushi is confusing us

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The first sign of the incoming Blue Ribbon Fried Chicken has arrived on the northwest corner of Second Avenue and East First Street...


The Blue Ribboners are aiming for a beer-wine license at this month's CB3/SLA meeting next Monday...

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Oh. Just a photo of these guys repainting the Phebe's sign on the Bowery at East Fourth Street on Saturday...


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And on Avenue A, the Flea Market Cafe is closed for renovations, as the sign shows...


To be honest, we've lost track of what's happening with the cafe. There have been a lot of rumors about its future, including new ownership.

Halloween City unceremoniously closes

Well, like many area businesses, Halloween City in the Shoppes at Red Square on East Houston closed on Oct. 28 pre Sandy's arrival.

And the store never reopened.


The store seemingly didn't move too much merchandise. No last-minute Halloween shoppers this year. We thought they would have at least thrown some post Oct. 31 sales. What else do you do with, say, all those Mitt Romney masks?


Freak On, Halloween City...