Showing posts sorted by date for query Lower East Side. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query Lower East Side. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with an opossum pic in Tompkins by Clay Roberts)... 

• The Loisaida CommUnity Fridge on 9th and B needs a new home — here's why (Monday

• RIP Hettie Jones (Tuesday

• A happy retirement to Jane and Billy, closing Katinka after 45 years in the East Village (Wednesday)

• Printed Matter/St. Marks is leaving St. Mark's Place (Thursday

• Gov. Hochul makes a splash with funding for new in-ground swimming pool at Tompkins Square Park (Friday

• German supermarket powerhouse Lidl is opening an outpost on the Lower East Side (Monday

• The multipurpose courts in Tompkins Square Park are closed for painting (Monday) ... Painting it black on the TF in Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday

• NYU buys dorm on Cooper Square that everyone already thought was an NYU dorm (Tuesday)

• Renovating 82 2nd Ave. for the arrival of Kebabwala from the Unapologetic Foods team (Tuesday

• At a 6th & B Garden Variety performance with Angela Di Carlo and Dirty Martini (Thursday

• A look inside Castellano Electric Motors on the Lower East Side (Thursday

• A late summer refresh for Bin 141 (Wednesday

• A signage setback at Ben's Deli (Wednesday

• A lot of hoop-la for this high-tech basketball backboard in Tompkins Square Park (Friday)

• '24 comeback for Elvis on Great Jones (Monday

• UWS hotspot Bánh Vietnamese Shop House opening a new restaurant in the East Village (Monday

• A quartet of murals for 2nd and A (Wednesday

• Summer ends on a positive note as the shopping soundtrack of our lives returns to Key Food (Friday

... and a reader shared this photo of some comfy new seats to wait for the M9 on Avenue C...

Thursday, August 29, 2024

A look inside Castellano Electric Motors on the Lower East Side

Photos and text by Stacie Joy

Castellano Electric Motors Inc. has long captured my attention. Nestled in a modest, single-level building at 147 Ridge St., between Houston and Stanton, it stands as a relic of a bygone era.

Established in the late 1950s and operating at this location for over 40 years, Castellano Electric Motors harkens back to a time when the area was home to more independent service providers like this  ... and before most single-level buildings were transformed into high-end housing.

Jimmy, the owner, shared that he has no intentions of selling the building that houses the electric motor repair service. He satisfied my enduring curiosity by allowing me to photograph the interior (from a distance, anyway) ...

Monday, August 26, 2024

The Loisaida CommUnity Fridge on 9th and B needs a new home — here's why

Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy 

On the heels of our story that the 12th Street and First Avenue East Village Neighbors Community Fridge at S’MAC was being forced to close, we received word from Trinity Lutheran Parish that the Loisaida CommUnity Fridge and Pantry at Ninth Street and Avenue B also needs to shutter. 

I spoke to Pastor Will Kroeze from Trinity Lower East Side Lutheran Parish about the situation. 

"Over the winter, we received violations from the Department of Health because of an increased number of rodents in and around our garden where the fridge is located, which jeopardizes our ability to fulfill our primary mission — to serve the community through our daily free lunch and food pantry," he said. "It is imperative that we maintain high standards of cleanliness and hygiene so that we can do this work, as we are regularly inspected by the Department of Health and have always been proud of the high marks we receive." 

He said that the church is now seeking a new location for the fridge "so that it can continue to be a resource for our community." 

"Given that the East Village Neighbors fridge on First Avenue is no longer operating, we feel particularly strongly now that the Loisaida Community Fridge must continue on; we are seeking the community’s support in securing a new location nearby."

The fridge arrived here in June 2021.

"It's been such an honor for Trinity to host the fridge since its inception. The fridge has been a natural extension of the work we've done for over 40 years to address food insecurity in our community, and we're proud of the many thousands of pounds of food that have gone directly into the hands of those who need it the most," Pastor Will said. "The success of the fridge is a testament to the dedication of the tremendous group of community leaders and volunteers who have poured their hearts into it in service to our neighbors." 

While the CommUnity structure remains in place for now, the East Village will soon be without any community fridges. The plant-based one outside Overthrow on Bleecker Street near the Bowery is currently MIA, with an Instagram post from last December stating a new fridge was on the way.

German supermarket powerhouse Lidl is opening an outpost on the Lower East Side

Lidl, the German supermarket chain with 12,000 stores worldwide, is opening a branch on Grand and Clinton on the Lower East Side. 

On Thursday, Lidl US officially announced that it had agreed on lease terms with affordable housing nonprofit Grand Street Guild for the 23,000-square-foot space at 408 Grand St. that previously housed a Rite Aid. (There were rumors of this pending arrival earlier last week, per the East of the Bowery Instagram account.)

There are several Lidl outposts around NYC, including Queens and Staten Island. When the Grand Street grocery opens next summer, it will be the third in Manhattan. There's one in Harlem now, with a location opening in Chelsea. (And more groceries are on the way.) 

Lidl US first arrived in Virginia in June 2015. The U.S. expansion hasn't been smooth, per a June 24 post on Grocery Dive
Renowned across Europe for the potent mix of low prices and high-quality goods that defines its thousands of colorful stores, Lidl arrived stateside with deep pockets, a highly developed private label strategy and a disciplined focus on efficiently running a complex business in a highly competitive environment. 

But instead of steadily growing its U.S. footprint as it had originally intended, Lidl US has moved ahead in fits and starts, prompting questions about why its value-focused business model has trouble gaining traction on American soil.
This retail space is on the other side of Grand and Clinton from Target, which opened in August 2018. (And yes — there's a Trader Joe's nearby too.)

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included... (with a photo of the Moon and Kendall Jenner's elbow above the Bowery)... 

• Remembering Harold Meltzer (Wednesday)

• Prepping Theatre 80 for its next chapter on St. Mark's Place (Monday

• A new East Village home for Gizmo (Thursday

• That's all for the East Village Neighbors Community Fridge on 12th Street and 1st Avenue (Tuesday

• The new 24-story residential building on 14th and C begins its ascent (Tuesday

• Dedicating Raphael Sadonte Ward Jr. Way on the Lower East Side (Tuesday

• Why you'll be shopping at Key Food on Avenue A without hearing a random song from the 1980s (Sunday

• A second Rogue vintage clothing shop opens on the Lower East Side (Friday)

• Trash fire engulfs car on 4th Street (Saturday)

• On the CB3 docket this month: a new era for Lucy's, another operator for Lamia's Fish Market (Monday
 
• Veselka reopens front counter for dining-in customers (Monday

• About the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival (Saturday

• With help from some friends, The Hard Quartet pays homage to the Stones on St. Mark's Place (Tuesday

• 9th Precinct issues headphone-theft warning (Monday)

• At the annual Festival Calle 6 (Monday)

• Get well soon, Currant! (Tuesday

• Tree down on Avenue A (Wednesday

• This week in lines (Friday

• A look inside the shuttered Starbucks on Astor Place (Wednesday

• FYI: It's NYU's Welcome Weekend (Saturday

... and from our ongoing Classic Cars of Avenue C collection...

Friday, August 23, 2024

A second Rogue vintage clothing shop opens today on the Lower East Side

Photos by Stacie Joy 
Above from left: Gabriel Celik, Kelsey Jenik and Sophia Romulo 

Today marks the grand opening of the second LES outpost of Rogue at 313 E. Houston St., between Clinton and Attorney. 

This offshoot of vintage clothing entrepreneur Emma Rogue's Allen Street shop offers more clothing options (this weekend with a bin sale of $5 to $20 items) as well as an events space.
This weekend also marks the official drop of the Rogue Zip-Off Jean Jorts (only 100 made), which promise to be a hot item.
Rogue, who was out of town when we stopped by, started selling clothes from her childhood bedroom on Depop and opened her first shop stocked with Y2K and 1990s vintage and secondhand at 53 Stanton St. in June 2021. 

She recently relocated to a larger space nearby at 154 Allen St., where she also showcases other up-and-coming designers. (You can read more about her in this Teen Vogue feature.) 

And info about the opening weekend...

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Dedicating Raphael Sadonte Ward Jr. Way on the Lower East Side

On Saturday afternoon, community members and local elected officials came together to unveil Raphael Sadonte Ward Jr. Way along the stretch of Rivington Street east of Columbia Street on the Lower East Side. 

Raphael Sadonte Ward Jr. was born on Aug. 18, 1996. An avid baseball player, he dreamed of playing for the New York Yankees. According to family members, Raphael's unique comedic talent and his signature behind-the-back throw to make a double play left an indelible mark on all who knew him. 

On Jan. 4, 2013, 16-year-old Raphael was shot and killed at the intersection of Columbia and Rivington near where he lived with his mother and younger brother in the Baruch Houses while on his way to grab a slice. 

In August 2014, 19-year-old Timothy Montalvo was sentenced to 15 years to life for reportedly supplying the gun used to murder Raphael. According to press reports, Montalvo refused to help the NYPD find his accomplices, who shot Raphael for his Marmot coat.

Raphael's mother, Arlene Delgado, founded The Sadonte Foundation in her son's memory. This nonprofit is dedicated to elevating, empowering, and educating youth and is committed to reducing gun violence in local communities.

The street sign is on the SE corner of Rivington Street and Columbia Street. 

Monday, August 19, 2024

At the annual Festival Calle 6

Photos by Stacie Joy

The annual Festival Calle 6 celebrated the Lower East Side's diversity and heritage on Saturday afternoon on Sixth Street between Avenue D and the FDR. 

Here are a few scenes from the family-friendly event presented by the Lower East Side Hispanic Committee...

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

A look at the ongoing renovations at First Houses

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

We've fielded several queries about the extensive renovations at the city-owned First Houses on Avenue A between Second Street and Third Street, both in the residences and above the strip of retail spaces.
For starters, a little history of the eight four-story and five-story buildings with the residential entrances on the south side of Third Street between Avenue A and First Avenue. First Houses was the first publicly funded low-income housing project in the U.S., opening in December 1935 under the auspices of the just-created New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA). 

First Houses was originally planned to house 120 to 122 families, and all apartments had steam heat, hot water and were equipped with the modern amenities typically found in middle-class housing. Within two months of opening a rental office for the project, the Housing Authority received between 3,000 and 4,000 applications. Prospective tenants were carefully selected by a team of social workers, with preference given to the inhabitants of the worst slums and relatively small families. All but one of the families chosen were residents of the Lower East Side. 

First Houses became a NYC Landmark in 1974. 
In recent decades, the buildings have shown their age, revealing ongoing bureaucracy issues plaguing the NYCHA.

In 2011, City Limits documented many of the residents' issues here. There were stories of mice eating their way through the worn floorboards and a resident battling the NYCHA for 15 years over a persistent leak. 

Fast forward to the start of the renovations last year. According to an architect working on the $24.8-million roofing replacement and exterior restoration:
[The] project is for restorative work throughout all of the facades of buildings within the complex, including rebuilding brick parapets in kind, repointing masonry and replacing brickwork, precast coping stones and metal lintels. 

Entrance porticos will be temporarily removed to allow for the replacement or restoration of green-painted cast iron columns and railings. Work on porticos includes the replacement of portico copper roofs, copper cornices, new concrete entrance stairs, landings, and footings, and replacement of nearby concrete or asphalt pavers pathways. Roofs of all buildings will be replaced with new liquid-applied roofing membrane over new insulation. 
In addition, the construction site manager told us: "We are replacing the roof and doing masonry restoration. We've also started on the interior work, which includes drywalling and lead and asbestos removal." 

Here's a look around the complex earlier this summer...
As you may have noticed, many tenants have moved out, including the local folk hero known as The Chillmaster, known for blasting classic R&B from his open window (year-round).

Local Assemblymember Harvey Epstein told us that tenants were temporarily relocated to other complexes, including the Jacob Riis Houses and the Wald Houses, and some public housing further away from the Lower East Side. 

Epstein said that all tenants can return to the First Houses upon completion of the work, set for 2025, per the posted signage.

Saturday, August 10, 2024

TLK by Tigerlily Kitchen closing tomorrow as demolition looms on 3rd Avenue

TLK by Tigerlily Kitchen closes for good after service tomorrow at 58 Third Ave.

The closing arrives as demolition looms for six buildings on the west side of the avenue between 10th Street and 11th Street. 

Despite being on a desolate-looking stretch of Third Avenue with neighboring boarded-up retail spaces, TLK cheerfully remained in service this year mid-block, offering solid, veggie-friendly cuisine. 

Owner Michelle Morgan's menu draws inspiration from her mother, who was born in Hong Kong, and her travels throughout Asia. 

In announcing the closing date on Instagram, TLK also reported that they will continue with delivery and catering along with a pop-up dinner residency this fall on the Lower East Side (you can follow their Instagram account for updates)...
The restaurant opened here in late 2021

TLK opens today and tomorrow at 2 p.m. (Reservations here.) 

As we first reported, a residential complex is expected to rise along this parcel — 50-64 Third Ave. Only one building will remain on the block after the demolition — 48 Third Ave., the 5-story property owned by Isfahany Realty Corp. on the northwest corner of 10th Street with Healthy Greens Gourmet in the retail space. 

We'll have more about the development on Monday.

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Have you been to the new location of Sammy's Roumanian Steak House?

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Sammy's Roumanian Steak House returned to the Lower East Side to much fanfare in April. 

However, since opening at its new home, 112 Stanton St., between Essex and Ludlow, we haven't heard too much (where are the reader reports?) about the NYC institution that spent 47 years through the start of the pandemic serving up ice-encased vodka, smeared pitchers of schmaltz and enormous platters of meat from the lower level at 151 Chrystie St. 

Sammy's announced its closure in January 2021, vowing to return to the neighborhood. 

In June, Matthew Schneier, chief restaurant critic at New York Magazine, wrote that "things are as they ever were." 

These photos are from before Sammy's opened for service for the evening—even before the bottles of schmaltz were placed on all the tables and Dani Luv fired up the keyboards.
It's hard to replicate a classic, as Schneier noted. 
All is not identical. Sammy's now finds itself at street level, though it approximates the cave quality of the original by covering its front windows. The room is long, narrow, and black, like a high-school black-box theater, albeit with some of the worst acoustics I have ever experienced in a restaurant. It was so hard to hear that everyone at my table spent the entire meal screaming in vain at one another, in the great Jewish tradition. 
Still: "Forty-nine years after its founding, Sammy's is a tradition unto itself." Sammy's expanded the hours of service earlier in the summer. 

The listed hours are Sunday, Wednesday, and Thursday: 4-11 p.m., with an 11:30 p.m. close on Fridays and Saturdays.

Sammy's does reservations (recommended) the old-fashioned way: 1-646-410-2427 or sammys157@yahoo.com

Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Updated: Virginia is safe and back with her family

Updated 

Per Trinity: "Thank you to all who shared our posts with your networks! We are so grateful to know where she is and are happy for her safe return to her family! Thank you for your love and support!"

Sunday, August 4, 2024

Week in Grieview

Posts that past week included (with a Friday evening photo from 4th and A)... 

• Details on the arrests for the deadly shooting in Tompkins Square Park on July 12 (Friday

• Former St. Emeric property will yield to housing for seniors and formerly homeless individuals (Friday

• A few more details on the future of East Village classic bar Lucy's (Thursday

• Scoop: After nearly 30 years, Starbucks is closing its Astor Place location (Sunday) ... Farewell to the Astor Place Starbucks, now officially closed (Monday) ... Before (and after) Starbucks on Astor Place (Tuesday

• Report: Whole Foods leasing the former Associated space on 14th Street in Stuy Town (Monday

• ICYMI: Mount Sinai receives conditional approval from the state to close Beth Israel (Monday

• Report: RYCO Capital buys 6 East Village rentals in $103-million deal (Wednesday

• Reopening day at International Bar (Thursday

• Oh no! O'Flaherty's has departed its gallery-performance space on Avenue A (Friday)

• A broken window at Two Boots (Tuesday

• Cuts & Slices bringing its acclaimed oxtail pizza to the Lower East Side (Wednesday

• A new restaurant for the former Mighty Quinn's space on 2nd Avenue (Tuesday

• Aoi Kitchen closes on 6th Street; owners announce new concept for the space (Monday

• EV restaurant roundup: Four Four South Village, Don Chicken, De La Soul donuts and more (Wednesday

• Sammy's Halal reopens on 1st Avenue (Tuesday

• The J. Crew-Jack's Coffee combo has opened in NoHo (Monday

• Buy Me Flowers pushes up daisies on 7th Street (Thursday)

• These are the opossum days of summer in Tompkins Square Park (Thursday)

• Curbside advice about discarded couches (and other large items) (Tuesday

... and on the heels of recent posts about East Village NYC T-shirts for sale at a Forever 21 in San Diego and a neighborhood named for the East Village in Downington, Pa., ... a reader shares this signage from Barcelona, home to a well-reviewed vintage shop called Loisaida...

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Cuts & Slices bringing its acclaimed oxtail pizza to the Lower East Side

Photos by Stacie Joy 

The owners of the popular Bed-Stuy pizzeria Cuts & Slices plan to open an outpost at 321 E. Houston St. between Attorney and Ridge. 

Per posted paperwork on the vacant storefront, the owners are applying for a liquor license for the space, formerly Milk Burger.
This will make the third location for the brand that first opened in Brooklyn in 2018. 

Described by Eater as a "Trinidadian-leaning pizza parlor," husband-and-wife owners Randy and Ashley Mclaren have built a loyal following through social media. Their unique slice offerings include chopped cheese, curried oxtail and jerk shrimp. (Read a rave review about the pizza at Eater.) 

In a feature from April, the Times called Cuts & Slices "New York's Most Exciting Pizza."

 

Monday, July 29, 2024

ICYMI: Mount Sinai receives conditional approval from the state to close Beth Israel

This past Thursday, the New York State Department of Health conditionally approved Mount Sinai's quest to close Beth Israel. 

According to Health Department officials, Mount Sinai must operate a new 24/7 urgent care center near the hospital on First Avenue at 16th Street for at least three months and reach an agreement with New York City Health + Hospitals to invest in expanding Bellevue Hospital's emergency room and psychiatric emergency department. 

Politico's Maya Kaufman first reported on the latest development here: 
"The conditional approval of the closure plan submitted by Mt. Sinai Beth Israel Hospital is based on careful and extensive review of the plan and delineates several conditions to help ensure that patients receive quality care at nearby hospitals and other primary care providers," Department of Health spokesperson Erin Clary said in a statement to Politico
A Mount Sinai spokesperson did not provide a new tentative closure date for Beth Israel, saying the hospital will "remain open and accepting patients" for the time being, per NY1

Mount Sinai's plan to close on July 12 was previously postponed

The Community Coalition to Save Beth Israel Hospital and the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary's lawsuit is still pending. A Mount Sinai spokesperson said they hope for an expedited review of the case. 

Crain's reported that Mount Sinai "has spent at least $72,000 in the last year to lobby state health officials about its plans" to shutter the facility.

Community activists pointed to the lobbying behind Mount Sinai's closing push in a statement
We are shocked and deeply dismayed that New York State Health Commissioner James McDonald has succumbed to a high-pressure lobby campaign by Mount Sinai Health System to approve the closure of Beth Israel Medical Center without even agreeing to meet with community leaders and members and our local elected public officials, despite long-standing requests. 

Commissioner McDonald's action will now turn much of Lower Manhattan into yet another hospital desert in our city, leaving tens of thousands of people without access to hospital care. We call on him to immediately rescind and reconsider his decision and then sit down with us to hear our concerns, something he has so far refused to do. 

The "conditions" Commissioner McDonald has attached to his approval provide meaningless protections for Lower Manhattan residents and workers — they would be laughable were the results not so serious. 
Meanwhile, on Friday evening, local elected officials spoke out about the decision to allow Beth Israel to close, saying the conditions fall well short of providing the assurances "our communities need and deserve"... In the spring, The New York Times reported that patient care was suffering at Beth Israel, where cuts have meant the hospital can't care for critically ill new arrivals. 

Mount Sinai officials have previously said Beth Israel lost $1 billion in the last decade, and only $29 million remains in cash reserves. 

Beth Israel was founded 143 years ago on the Lower East Side and moved to its current location in 1929.