Showing posts sorted by date for query Holiday. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Holiday. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Monday, July 7, 2025

St. Mark’s Place corner vendor hub demolished

Workers have finished demolishing the building extension on the southwest corner of St. Mark's Place and Second Avenue...
We haven't received any updates on the plans for the newly created space. (Perhaps sidewalk cafe space for tenant Poetica Coffee?) 

As we first reported on June 9, the longtime vendors here left earlier in the year... as the building's new-ish landlord planned for removal.

For decades, vendors sold items such as sunglasses, floppy hats, wigs, umbrellas, and novelty holiday merchandise from outside the corner mainstay Gem Spa. (These items are still available outside Funky Town, mid-block, and at the kiosks closer to Third Avenue.)

Prior to the vendors, the wall housed a bank of payphones (which we also miss!) — a location for New York Dolls photo shoots

Here's a bonus mid-demolition shot, courtesy of Steven...
Previously on EV Grieve

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Construction firm owner pleads guilty to wage theft over emergency repairs at 642 E. 14th St.

642 E. 14th St. as seen in December 2023 

A construction company owner has pleaded guilty to stealing wages from engineers and laborers working on a city-funded emergency project and has repaid the workers in full, the Manhattan D.A.'s Office announced last week.

Anthony Martucci, 60, owner of Tuccimar, Inc. in Westchester County, admitted to underpaying six workers — three professional engineers and three laborers — during a project on East 14th Street in late 2023. 

As part of his plea to one count of petit larceny, a misdemeanor, Martucci paid $36,786 in restitution and agreed to a three-year ban on receiving New York City contracts. 

The case centers on emergency stabilization work at 642 E. 14th St., a 16-unit building where nearly 30 tenants were forced to evacuate just days after Thanksgiving 2023. On Nov. 28, 2023, the Department of Buildings ordered tenants to vacate after excavation work on Madison Realty Capital's (MRC) neighboring 24-story tower compromised 642's foundation, resulting in severe structural cracks. 

The tenants, displaced from their homes at the start of the holiday season, were placed in city shelters while the city worked to stabilize the building. 

Having submitted the lowest bid, Martucci's company was awarded the emergency shoring contract by the Department of Housing Preservation and Development in December 2023. Work on the building began on Dec. 16 and was completed by mid-January 2024. 

However, according to prosecutors, Tuccimar submitted certified payrolls that falsely stated all workers had been paid, while sign-in logs confirmed their hours on-site.

One underpaid engineer received payment during the investigation, but the remaining five workers were still owed more than $36,000. Martucci repaid that amount to the D.A.'s Office last month as part of the plea agreement. 

"With this resolution, hardworking New Yorkers will be paid what they rightfully earned," District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in a statement. "The unscrupulous owner of a construction company will not be able to bid on City contracts for three years."

The state of 642 E. 14th St.

Meanwhile, the full demolition order from 642's landlord, reportedly Second Avenue Deli owner Jeremy Lebewohl, remains on hold, dated from last July 18, as per DOB records. His lawyers told the Times last November that the costs to make necessary repairs exceed the building's value.

For their part, 644's developer, MRC, cast blame next door, telling the Times that "the landlord had neglected the property and did not support Madison's efforts to make the building structurally sound." 

As for the tenants at 642 who had rent-stabilized apartments, the Cooper Square Committee worked with MRC to find units in its portfolio of East Village properties. 

One of the former 642 tenants recently told EVG that they were initially given temporary lease agreements for four months, commencing at the end of February 2024, with the actual leaseholds set to begin on July 1, 2024. 

As we reported here, Madison Realty Capital is now in foreclosure on Raphael Toledano's one-time 17-building portfolio. 

So once again, the 642 residents find themselves facing an uncertain housing future. 

Any assistance from local elected officials? After a December 2023 rally, they've moved on, the tenant said.

Meanwhile, next door to 642, here's a look at MRC's 24-floor story residential building at 644 E. 14th St., called The East, set to open in the fall...
As far as the 642 tenant knew, none of the former residents had been offered any of 644's 197 units.

Previously on EV Grieve



Friday, June 27, 2025

Demoliton awaits the longtime sidewalk vendor space on St. Mark’s Place

Workers yesterday erected plywood around the building extension on the southwest corner of St. Mark's Place and Second Avenue, ahead of the demolition of the structure. (H/T Steven!

As we reported on June 9, the longtime vendors here left earlier in the year... as the building's new-ish landlord planned for removal. 

For decades, vendors sold items like (cheaply made) sunglasses, floppy hats, wigs, (cheaply made) umbrellas, and novelty holiday fare from the kiosks. They were a familiar and welcome presence here. 

Previously on EV Grieve

Monday, June 9, 2025

A belated farewell to a familiar fixture of St. Mark’s Place

For years, the southwest corner at Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place buzzed with several sidewalk vendors selling everything from cheap sunglasses and floppy hats to wigs, umbrellas, and novelty holiday fare — items that were more functional than fashionable but always there when you might need them. 

The vendors disappeared earlier this year. (Photo below by Steven from 2020.)
We haven't seen the vendors since late February or early March here in the spaces outside the current tenant, Poetica Coffee.
A reliable source informs us that the newish landlord plans to demolish the structure that housed these vendors. 

In a sale announced last July, Ryco Capital purchased the three buildings at 127-129 Second Ave. and 36 St. Mark's Place from Jonis Realty (which is run by Citi Urban Management, also owned by the Helegua family) for $29 million. 

For decades, until 2020, the corner housed Gem Spa, the candy shop-newsstand. The wall was lined with payphones in the 1970s and 1980s... (and well-known for New York Dolls photo shoots)...

 

We attempted to establish a more precise timeline of how the corner space evolved but only came up with fragments. 

Ray Patel bought Gem Spa in 1986, and he eventually removed a wall, replaced it with glass, and began selling goods such as T-shirts and hats outside. The adjacent kiosk was said to have arrived about the same time. (Photo below from 2019 by Stacie Joy.)
Buying something here was a bit of a rite of passage — mostly touristy, the kind of stop longtime residents might scoff at or avoid altogether. But in a sudden downpour or after a few drinks, it was often where you found yourself. And you knew that you could get the $20 asking price in half by starting to walk away. 

You can still find sidewalk hats and scarves from the kiosks that remain on the southeast corner of St. Mark's Place and Third Avenue (as well as outside Funky Town mid-block). 
Still, for those who remember the cluttered charm of that southwest corner, its absence leaves the block feeling just a little less alive — and familiar. 

Monday, May 26, 2025

Monday's opening shots

Photos by Stacie Joy 

An observance of Memorial Day, and likely the Fourth of July, at Key Food on Avenue A...
We do not know what might remain of the Key Holiday Decorating Budget for the remainder of the year.

Also, we still need to post the updates on the new self-checkout scanners and "cakes for all occasions" signage, whose place is being kept warm by the Heritage American flag bunting.

Monday, January 13, 2025

Playing Santa, Arnold Schwarzenegger looks for his magic bag outside Veselka

Crews were set up today outside Veselka on Second Avenue and Ninth Street, filming scenes for Amazon MGM's holiday movie, "The Man With the Bag." 

An EVG reader shared these photos...
... including a quick shot of Arnold Schwarzenegger in costume as — Santa Claus...
The plot for the action comedy, per IMDB: "When Santa's magic bag is stolen, he turns to his naughty list to find Vance, a former thief, to help him get it back." 

Production trucks were also set up along Tompkins Square Park today. 

Veselka, whose location credits include "Ocean's 8," will be closed today. 
 
Previously on EV Grieve:

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Week in Grieview

Posts this last week include (with a photo by Derek Berg on 2nd Avenue) 

• Why School for the Dogs abruptly closed in the East Village (Tuesday

• Tompkins Square Park upgrades: When will the field house and restrooms reopen? (Monday

• Reader report: Car crashes into Blink Fitness on Avenue A; driver flees (Monday

• Reflections on owning and closing The March Hare on 9th Street (Friday

• These 3 East Village venues are hosting concerts to benefit L.A. wildfire relief efforts (Saturday) ... Both Emma locations accepting clothing donations (Sunday

• Barn fire temporarily KOs a Tompkins Square Park Greenmarket favorite (Sunday

• Signs of construction life at former East Village parking garage that will yield to condos (Wednesday

• What are they now? The fate of several unlicensed cannabis shops in the East Village (Monday

• About the free activities for people 60+ at the John Paul II Friendship Center on 7th Street (Wednesday)

• Sunday Morning will sell cinnamon rolls every day of the week on Avenue B (Tuesday)

• 2025 development watch: 360 Bowery, future home of Chobani House (Friday

• Openings Fomo Momo on First Avenue (Friday) ... Sinsa on 2nd Avenue (Friday)

• Signage alert: Alison on St. Mark's Place (Monday

• Core workout: New building prep on 1st Avenue and 2nd Street (Wednesday)

•  Some history of a now-vanished 3rd Avenue block (Sunday)

• Coffee at the Holiday Cocktail Lounge (Wednesday

• Where to still find a curbside dining structure on the Lower East Side (Friday)

• Arnold Schwarzenegger filming Amazon MGM's holiday movie 'The Man With the Bag' in the East Village (Sunday

Arnold Schwarzenegger filming Amazon MGM's holiday movie 'The Man With the Bag' in the East Village tomorrow

Photos by Steven 

Crews for Amazon MGM's holiday movie, "The Man With the Bag," will film in parts of the East Village tomorrow.

We've spotted filming notices along Avenue A from Seventh Street to 10th Street... and St. Mark's Place, Ninth Street, and 10th Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue...
The plot for the action comedy, per IMDB: "When Santa's magic bag is stolen, he turns to his naughty list to find Vance, a former thief, to help him get it back." 

Arnold Schwarzenegger plays Santa and "Reacher"'s Alan Ritchson is Vance. (The production has been filming around NYC in recent weeks.) 

And thinking about other large-scale shoots in the neighborhood in the last 30+ years... Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson filming on Avenue A and Tompkins Square Park for 1995's "Die Hard With a Vengeance."

   

Also, Keanu Reeves and Al Pacino at Most Holy Redeemer on Third Street for 1997's "The Devil's Advocate" ... and Sean Penn and Nicole Kidman on 10th Street/Stuyvesant Street for 2005's "The Interpreter." What else?

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Coffee at the Holiday Cocktail Lounge

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

Back in November, The Holiday Cocktail Lounge announced that it was opening at 8 a.m. for coffee and breakfast items in a new venture titled Holiday Coffee Lounge

We're always looking for a stress-free coffee option. As you undoubtedly noticed, the rise of hybrid and remote work has turned coffee shops into impromptu offices during the week. People camped out for hours, laptops open, and long coffee cups empty. Our favorite: the people taking part in Zoom/Teams meetings in a crowded space. (This is above my pay grade, so let's put a pin in this until we can get our ducks in a row and get buy-in from upstairs!)

Balancing a café's role as a workplace and a welcoming space for all has become a pressing challenge. (Maybe have no laptop hours?) 

Given that some of our favorite places can be overrun during the week, we decided to check out the morning service here at 75 St. Mark's Place between First Avenue and Second Avenue. 

During two recent visits, there were plenty of open tables...
The daytime service features espresso from local Superlost Coffee, tea and juice, pastries, croissants, mini beignets, breakfast items, and sandwiches. There's also free Wi-Fi. 

We also tried the grilled cheese for lunch (solid!).
The Holiday serves coffee from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. when the liquor service starts. 

For now, the place remains a safe haven for those seeking a quiet retreat during the day... (and sorry if we blew up your spot with this post!).

Sunday, January 5, 2025

Week in Grieview

Posts from this holiday-shortened week include (with a Jimmy Carter tribute in Tompkins Square Park — photo by Derek Berg)... 

• When former President Jimmy Carter helped rebuild an East Village tenement building (Sunday) ... Remembering Jimmy Carter on 6th Street (Wednesday

• A look at the work-in-progress Night Club 101 at the former home of the Pyramid on Avenue A (Tuesday) ... A residency for Voyeur at Night Club 101 (Friday

• Your congestion pricing reader (Saturday

• Regenerative agriculture in the East Village (Wednesday

• Openings: Love Zakka Mini Mart on Avenue C (Thursday

• B Cup Café debuts today in new Avenue B home (Monday

• When we found out about a mysterious early-morning transport on 2nd Avenue (Friday)

• With a new 10-year lease, Nowon temporarily closes for a kitchen upgrade (Monday)

• Let's take a look at the Cinnabon/Carvel combo storefront opening soon on 14th Street (Thursday)

• Offside Tavern has closed on Avenue A (Monday

• Soft openings: Boongs Café on 12th Street (Thursday

• Lidl watch for 2025 (Monday) • Three Kings Tattoo has left 10th Street (Monday)

• The 10 most-viewed EVG posts from 2024 (Tuesday

... and the corner of Avenue A and Houston has become a wheatpaste ad hotspot... possibly supplanting Second Avenue and Seventh Street...
Boulton & Watt closed here last July, and the owners plan to open something new in the year ahead.

Monday, December 30, 2024

6 posts from December

A mini month in review (with a photo from 1st Avenue the other evening) ... 

• Why this new condominium remains tenant-free in the East Village (Dec. 19

• Housing lottery is underway for 21 apartments in the East Village (Dec. 17

• Scrooged: 14th Street Trader Joe's employees say their hours are being cut this holiday season (Dec. 12

• Strand employees reach a tentative agreement, return to work pending ratification vote (Dec. 11)

• At the 33rd annual Tompkins Square Park Holiday tree lighting (Dec. 9

• St. Marks Veterinary Hospital is closing this month (Dec. 11)

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Week in Grieview

Posts from this holiday-shortened week include (with a photo yesterday from Tompkins Square Park by Derek Berg) ...

• A fundraiser for ABC No Rio's late director, Steven Englander (Monday

• Rai Rai Ken, a longtime East Village ramen shop, has closed (Friday

• Ferns announces February closing date (Monday

• Coming attractions: Buddies Coffee on 3rd Street (Monday)

• Ops watch at 176 2nd Ave. (Monday

• A visit to Cafewal (Thursday

• Getting chippy: Merry Christmas, now let's mulch your tree (Tuesday)

• Fluffy Fluffy bringing the souffle pancakes to 1st Avenue (Tuesday)

• Openings: Tipsy Shanghai on 2nd Avenue (Tuesday

• Taverna East Village remains closed while waiting for a Con Ed inspection (Monday

• No Joe for now at Joe's Wine Co. (Monday

• A warmup (with lines) for Danny & Coop’s Cheesesteaks on Avenue A (Monday

• Merry Clintmas! (Tuesday

If you want to start getting into the Valentine's spirit, you'll be in luck at the Target on 14th Street and Avenue A (thanks to Edmund John Dunn for the photo).

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Wednesday's parting shots

If you have three hours and 35 minutes (with intermission) to spare to see "The Brutalist" this holiday season, then I recommend seeing it in 70mm at the Village East by Angelika on Second Avenue and 12th Street. (Theater link here.)

The film, which opened on Dec. 20, is showing in the classic Jaffe Art Theatre in VistaVision, which Paramount Pictures developed 70 years ago. ("The Brutalist" is also shown here at other times, though not in 70mm.) 

The acclaimed film tells the story of Holocaust survivor and Hungarian-born Jewish architect László Tóth (Adrien Brody) as he begins a new life in America. 

The lobby includes a display of buildings that Tóth's character designed...

Dec. 25's opening shot

Safe travels to all who are traveling this holiday season... Photo from Saturday at 13th Street at Avenue A.

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Christmas Eve's parting shots

A Clint Mario Holiday special on Second Avenue at Seventh Street... Merry Clintmas!

Getting chippy: Merry Christmas, now let's mulch your tree

Once your holiday season is wrapped, bring your Christmas tree (no artificial ones, please) to Tompkins Square Park as MulchFest officially kicks off on Thursday*. 

Chipping Weekend takes place Jan. 11-12 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. According to NYC Parks: "Bring your tree to a chipping site on Chipping Weekend to take home a tree-mento! We'll chip your tree and give you your very own bag of mulch to use in your backyard or to make a winter bed for a street tree." 

Parks officials say that 46,626 trees were recycled last year.

* While MulchFest begins the day after Christmas, there's no rush to part with your tree. In fact, you could wait to drop it curbside until July or August, hoping it'll make headlines on a local news site.

Friday, December 20, 2024

Friday's parting shot

Photo by Stacie Joy 

Santa (Claus) will visit the 9th Precinct tomorrow (Saturday) from 9 a.m. to noon on Fifth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue for the station house's annual holiday event.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Wednesday's parting lights

Photos by Kevin Frech 

A look at the annual holiday extravaganza at 327 E. Fifth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue...
Amazing that it's already Dec. 18... and just a week from today is... the release of "Babygirl."

The wild project is fundraising to purchase its home on 3rd Street

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

The performance venue wild project is looking to secure its future in the East Village with a capital fundraising campaign to purchase its building located at 195 E. Third St., between Avenue A and Avenue B.

I recently met with operations manager Chris Moseley (pictured above) to tour the space and learn more about the campaign called Root Us in the LES.
Wild project is known for supporting diverse independent theater, film, music, visual arts, and spoken-word performers. It seeks to solidify its permanent home and protect one of NYC's eco-friendly theater spaces. 

The 89-seat, ADA-compliant venue stands out with its environmentally conscious features, including solar panels, a rooftop garden, LED lighting and repurposed bamboo risers. 
However, if the necessary funds are not raised by February to purchase the $5 million building, the space may be sold to the highest bidder, potentially closing another arts venue in downtown Manhattan.

The campaign received a boost last year with a $1 million grant from former Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney and a $250,000 grant from the LoCAP fund, facilitated by State Sen. Brian Kavanaugh. To secure a low-cost mortgage and complete the purchase, wild project must raise an additional $1 million through federal, state, local, community, and foundation support. 

Since 2007, wild project has hosted over 55,000 patrons and supported more than 12,000 artists through programs like Wild Culture, Sound Stage and MainStage. These initiatives emphasize theater access and outreach for LGBTQ+ and BIPOC artists, offering free or affordable venue space to theater companies supporting 1,200 to 1,500 creators annually.
As NYC's community continues to face rising rents and venue closures, the wild project represents more than just one theater's survival — it's a fight to preserve the spirit of independent arts in the East Village.
I talked with Mosely more about the wild project's prospects and hopes for the future.
Why is it important for the wild project to be able to buy the space, and why now? 

The downtown theatre ecosystem cannot afford to lose another space there simply aren't enough left. Earlier this fall, our neighbors at the Connelly Theater were forced to close, putting the community at a serious crossroads. 

But the harsh reality is that over the past several years, the theater landscape has experienced devastating losses in affordable space for artists. Local artists can feel this urgency. We need to ensure our legacy in the East Village by providing free and subsidized space to our independent artists and resident companies.

Our capital campaign is called Root Us in the LES because we want artists, patrons, and all our supporters to know we are putting down permanent roots in the community. We have nurtured our theater for so long that planting roots will provide us a solid foundation to serve artists and members of our community for generations to come. 

Artistic Director Ana Mari de Quesada, Director Tom Escovar, myself, and our entire staff of technicians and front-of-house employees — we have all lovingly put so much hard work and dedication into wild project. This fast-approaching deadline of February 2025 may seem like a high mountain to climb, but it is achievable with the help of our community! 

We are determined to meet our goal and preserve the history and future of the East Village and Lower East Side as welcoming and accessible places for all artists. 

How is the wild project involved in the East Village and LES community, and how will this purchase affect the neighborhood in the future? 

Beyond being a space for artists, wild project has always been embedded in our neighborhood. We partner with Sixth Street Center's Climate Justice Program to give young people in our community hands-on experience with gardening on our green roof. We host an annual Halloween block party with our small-business partners to provide local families a fun and safe place to celebrate the holiday. We lend our audio equipment to the folks at the Miracle Garden across from us for poetry readings. We host a summer camp in partnership with the Educational Alliance that provides local students from PS 140 with workshops that teach artists about the various aspects of theater to inspire the next generation of artists. 

We have this unique opportunity to purchase our building, continue our legacy in the East Village, and keep fostering this community in our corner of New York. If we are unsuccessful and our building is put on the market, another apartment complex of unaffordable housing will likely go up in its place. 

How can people help? 

Donations to our capital campaign are the most tangible way to help. If just 4,000 people donated $250, we could secure a down payment for an affordable mortgage. People can also help by spreading the word! By talking to their friends and family about wild project, posting about it on social media — simply telling the people in their lives helps move our story forward.