Thursday, June 22, 2023

Salter House bringing the sustainable housewares and clothing to 2nd Street

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Salter House, a shop offering sustainable housewares and clothing, is opening an outpost at 34 E. Second St. just west of Second Avenue.

Sandeep Salter and her husband, Carson, opened the first Salter House (which includes a tea shop) in 2018 in Brooklyn Heights.
No word on an opening date.

The previous tenant here, Anyway Cafe, closed this past February after 28 years of serving a lot of vodka.

H/T Garth

Chrissy's Pizza taking over the former Superiority Burger space on 9th Street for its first pizzeria

Chrissy's Pizza, which gained a large following last year through a unique system (DMs via Instagram and made in the kitchen of chef-owner Chris Hansell), is popping up in the East Village next month in a familiar space. 

Hansell will make pies from the former Superiority Burger (and Salads Days!) space at 430 E. Ninth St. between Avenue A and First Avenue. (SB's Brooks Headley kept the lease on the storefront after the move to 119 Avenue A.) 

Hansell reportedly started making about 20 pies per week from his Bushwick apartment in late 2021.

The results, per The Infatuation
The crust is impossibly crisp, the sauce is rich and sweet, and the cheese ratio is ideal. There's also some secret ingredient that gives this pizza a little something extra. Love? Magic? You’ll have to try it for yourself. 
Follow the Chrissy's Pizza IG account for updates.

Closings: Sauced Up! on 2nd Avenue

After two-and-a-half years of serving wings, sandwiches, fries, etc., Sauced Up! has gone belly up at 77 Second Ave.

The gate has been down here between Fourth Street and Fifth Street in recent weeks. Google lists them as "permanently closed," and the phone is out of service.

Sauced Up! opened in December 2020 and was a welcome presence for some readers tired of the many empty storefronts along this corridor. 

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Watch Kim Petras (or her stand-in!) walk around the East Village in medieval-style armor


As we noted on June 10, history-making Grammy winner Kim Petras filmed a video in the East Village to promote her upcoming world tour. 

Locations included Tompkins Square Park and Ben's Deli, 32 Avenue B between Second Street and Third Street. 

Check out the video, which features Kim's body armor stand-in Cait ... and a generous supporting role for Haas behind the counter at Ben's...

   

The "Feed the Beast" tour is in support of Petras' debut studio album of the same name ... which will be released on Friday.

Mid-morning juvenile hawk watch

Photos by Derek Berg 

One of Amelia and Christo's 2023 kids was out and about in Tompkins Square Park this morning...
See our previous post for more background on the red-tailed hawks.

Openings: Caffe Corretto on 12th Street

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Caffe Corretto debuted at 511 E. 12th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B last Wednesday. 

East Village residents Colin Vickery and Leah Blewett, partners in business and life, are behind this project that they say is inspired by the all-day cafes of Rome.
Caffe Corretto serves breakfast, lunch and dinner six days a week, Wednesday through Monday (closed on Tuesdays).
Chef Nicole Dakwar prepares the breakfast pastries and lunchtime pizza al taglio ... while the evening menu features a variety of pasta dishes, seasonal salads, and other entrees via Chef Alessandro Urbisci. You can find menus here.
Hours: 8 a.m. to midnight. You can keep tabs on Caffe Corretto via Instagram.

1 St. Mark's Place looking a little close to beaming up

Photos by Steven

Yesterday's post on 360 Bowery at Fourth Street reaching the 21st floor prompted questions about the new office building slated for four blocks to the north... on Third Avenue at St. Mark's Place. 

Well, still no sign of the 9-story structure above the plywood just yet. 

As these photos (through the plywood blogger portals) from yesterday show, the foundation work is still coming along, with a steel beam looking ready to ascend the street level...
Real Estate Equities Corp. plans on 53,000 square feet of office space and some 7,700 square feet for retail here at 1 St. Mark's Place. 

Workers started on the foundation for each project last summer.

About the new tenant at 37 Avenue A

Photos by Stacie Joy

In recent weeks we've seen activity in one of the long-empty storefronts in the retail spaces of the city-owned First Houses on Avenue A between Second Street and Third Street.

The new tenant is the project management team behind the renovations on Avenue A at Second Street... in a space that looks restaurant ready with the kitchen hood, countertop, and stools...
They say they are doing roofing and façade-repair work and will only be in the space until the project is finished... (and if you were looking for the taco cart) ...
The storefront, 37 Avenue A, has been vacant since Angelina Cafe closed in the spring of 2019 when Rafik Bouzgarrou opened Bin 141 on the next block.

While this stretch has been considered a "vacancy hotspot," East Village Buyers moved to 39 Avenue A in April. Perhaps a cafe or restaurant could take over 37 Avenue A after the construction wraps up. 

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

A subway ride from Union Square to Coney Island on this day in 1987

 

In case you haven't seen this clip from 1980s NYC nightlife videographer Nelson Sullivan ... it has made the rounds through the years ... and it seems appropriate on its 36-year anniversary...

Here's the description:
Enjoy the sights and the graffiti as Nelson, photographer Liz Lizard and her family, Michael Musto and Albert Crudo, take the subway from Union Square to Coney Island on June 20, 1987...
Sullivan's video archive was donated to NYU's Fales Library & Special Collections in 2012.

Iconic gay dive bar the Boiler Room is closing later this year ahead of a move to a new East Village space

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

After 34 years at 86 E. Fourth St. near Second Avenue, the Boiler Room will likely be closing by the end of the year, management confirmed to EVG. (H/T Queer Happened Here.) 

However, there are plans to relocate the popular gay dive bar a short distance away to 45 Second Ave. between Second Street and Third Street. More on that later in the post.

According to management, the building's landlord had them in a two-plus-year court battle over pandemic-related back rent payments. A judge ruled in favor of the landlord, who is requiring a lump-sum payment — without any negotiations for current and future rent. 

Bar manager Randy Weinberg, whose brother Neil is the Boiler Room's owner, said they have a lease until September, with a month-to-month arrangement through the fall and, perhaps January, until the new space is ready.

Here's a look inside the space, which New York magazine described as a "friendly, unobtrusive, post-gay gay bar that helped put the queer East Village bar scene on the map."
The bar is collecting signatures of support for a new liquor license for the currently vacant 45 Second Ave., which was previously home to the Moroccan specialty shop Timbuktu.
At least one element of the new space will look familiar: Randy Weinberg said they'll take the well-worn bar with them...

Reaching the top at the 21-story 360 Bowery project

Workers have reached the top of the 21-story office building on the SW corner of the Bowery and Fourth Street (360 Bowery). 

Several American flags are on-site to mark the occasion... 
Façade installation is underway now... with the first floor-to-ceiling window panels arriving...
Also! Part of Kendall Jenner's elbow remains visible on the mostly-obscured Marc Jacobs billboard on the building next door ...
This development — offering full-floor office suites — replaces the single-level B Bar & Grill (1994-2020) on property that was previously a gas station.

The developers of this project within the Soho/Noho rezoning area are reportedly a collaboration between SK Development, Ironstate and CB Development. 

The East Village Panda Express is hiring

The opening of the Panda Express outpost at 237 First Ave. at First Avenue inches forward.

Recently, a help-wanted sign arrived on the storefront. Depending on the role, hourly wages run anywhere from $17.50 (service team) to $38.19 (general manager)... 
This pre-grand opening has been a lengthy process. We were the first outlet to report that Panda Express was coming to this corner in January 2022In April, a PE rep said that the projected opening date was around June 5. 

As noted late last summer, there were issues with permits — as in waiting for the city, Con Ed, etc., to approve them. (One tipster told us that management here was very late in completing the necessary paperwork for the various licenses, etc.)

Panda Express launched in California in 1983 ... with more than 2,000 locations today, including a handful around NYC.   

A transformation for the Ugly Duckling on 3rd Avenue and 13th Street

The Ugly Duckling closed earlier this month so the owners can rebrand the multi-level space on the NW corner of Third Avenue and 13th Street. (H/T EVG reader John!)

A rep for the Dream Hospitality Group confirmed the closure... and the new concept — a French-themed establishment.

The Ugly Duckling, which offered a Saturday special called "Boujee Brunch," debuted in late 2021... taking over the space from the Brazen Fox (same owners), which closed during the pandemic after nearly seven years in business.

Monday, June 19, 2023

Noted

When the crime blotter and grocery list collide... reported on the Citizen app along the East Fourth Walk in the Wald Houses...

[Updated] Someone placed an ad for AMC's 'The Walking Dead: Dead City' over the George Floyd mural on Houston and the Bowery

The George Floyd mural by @fumeroism arrived in early June 2020 on the southwest corner of the Bowery and East Houston... and has remained in place these past three-plus years. 

Hopefully, it will return: The AMC ad looks to be temporary — some kind of peel-and-stick mural. "The Walking Dead: Dead City" premiered last night. 

As a reader noted, bad timing for covering the George Floyd memorial on Juneteenth.

Updated 6/20 

Overnight, someone peeled off the AMC ad to reveal the George Floyd mural once again...

'Make Me Famous,' a documentary on 1980s-era East Village-based painter Edward Brezinski, debuts in NYC

"Make Me Famous," a documentary that will be of particular interest to East Village/LES residents, is making its theatrical debut.

The official recap:
A madcap romp through the 1980's NYC art scene amid the colorful career of painter, Edward Brezinski, hell-bent on making it. What begins as an investigation into Brezinski’s legacy and mysterious disappearance becomes a sharp, witty portrait of NYC’s 1980s downtown art scene resulting in an irresistible snapshot of an unknown artist that captures the spirit of an iconic era.

 

Here are some NYC screenings dates-times (Updated 6/23: The Roxy has more dates now through the weekend of June 30-July 2.) 

• June 22, 23 and 24 at Roxy Cinema, 2 Avenue of the Americas, Cellar Level

• June 24 and 25 at New Plaza Cinema, 35 W. 67th St.

• June 26 and 28 at Alamo Drafthouse, Lower Manhattan 

Follow the film's Instagram account for updates.

And read an interview with director Brian Vincent and producer Heather Spore Kelly, at The Moveable Feast. Here's another piece via The Village Voice.

The Regal Union Square multiplex is not closing after all

ICYMI: Last Thursday, Regal announced that the company had signed a new lease with Related to continue the operation of the multiplex theater on Broadway and 13th Street. (News release here.)

In JanuaryCineworld, the parent company of Regal Cinemas, the second-largest chain of movie theaters in the United States, announced that it was closing 39 locations, including the Regal Union Square Stadium 17, as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings. 

From the news release: "In cooperation with our partners at Related, we are excited to enter into a long-term lease agreement for this premiere entertainment destination providing moviegoers from the area the best place to watch a movie for many years to come," said Cineworld CEO Mooky Greidinger. 

The theater underwent a multi-million-dollar refurbishment in early 2020. 

Those pre-pandemic enhancements included the arrival of a bar... and the Pepsi 4DX auditorium, "where the on-screen visuals of action-packed blockbusters are enhanced through special effects including motion-synchronized seats, wind, fog, rain, lightning, snow, bubbles, vibration and scents." (The way "Cocaine Bear" was meant to be experienced!) Not to mention the ScreenX auditorium, "where movie fans go beyond the frame of the movie screen by expanding feature films to the left and right walls of the theater." (It takes some getting used to, IMO.)

The theater debuted in November 1998 as part of the United Artists family. 

Photo from January in case you were wondering why "Plane" is showing... and H/T Simon.

Monday's opening shot

At the Orthodox Cathedral of the Holy Virgin Protection, 59 E. Second St., on this Juneteenth holiday.

Sunday, June 18, 2023

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a photo of LaMama's iconic founder Ellen Stewart on Fourth Street yesterday by Derek Berg) ... 

• How these East Village volunteers finally made Wi-Fi a reality for asylum seekers (Monday

• Report: East Village musician Jesse Malin paralyzed from the waist down after spinal stroke (Wednesday

• 18-year-old cyclist killed in collision on 1st Avenue at 17th Street (Friday)

• Police: Woman dies after jumping from 3rd Street residential building (Sunday

• Sunny has retired, but her popular flower shop remains in the family (Wednesday)

• Birthday wishes for Rossy on 3rd Street (Thursday

• Goodbye for now to HaveAHeart Studio, the rehearsal space below New Double Dragon (Thursday)

• Cafe Mogador provides a free meal to asylum seekers staying in the East Village (Friday

• Signage arrives for Downtown Burritos Cocina Mexicana on 1st Avenue (Monday)

• Community group urges Mayor Adams to reacquire the former P.S. 64/CHARAS 'now' (Tuesday)

• Saturday afternoon with Tits Dick Ass (Tuesday

• Celebrating downtown nightlife legend Brian Butterick, aka Hattie Hathaway (Wednesday

• Documentary on collage artist Michael Anderson to debut at the Anthology Film Archives (Saturday

• Taking a look inside the incoming Target on Union Square (Wednesday)

• Signage alert: Hokkaido Baked Cheese Tart on 2nd Avenue (Tuesday

• Tree limb down in Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday

• Sauce returns to service on 12th Street (Thursday

• At 188 Allen St., a curbside dining demolition like no other (Friday

• Almost-opening report: Memphis Seoul on 1st Avenue (Tuesday

• Yet another broker for 20 St. Mark's Place (Monday)

• Plywood report: Ghost signage disappears again on Avenue A (Saturday

• Closings: Yifang Taiwan Fruit Tea, Wild Mirrors (Tuesday

• A Tacombi takeover on 12th Street (Monday)

... and those Balenciaga ads are getting more elaborate, as seen on First Street and First Avenue...
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Follow EVG on Instagram or Twitter for more frequent updates and pics.

Police: Woman dies after jumping from 3rd Street residential building

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

Law enforcement officials said a 35-year-old woman who lived in Brooklyn died Thursday night after jumping from the roof of an East Third Street building. 

According to the officials, the woman entered 233 E. Third St. between Avenue B and Avenue C before moving across rooftops to where she leaped from 227 E. Third St.
Officials said that this is being treated as a suicide. 

Witnesses said that she survived the fall, landing on a vehicle outside No. 227. Emergency responders rushed her to a hospital, where she died from her injuries. 

It was not immediately known if she knew anyone in the Third Street buildings or why she was in the East Village. Nearby residents said that the woman was not familiar to them.

If you or someone you know is at risk of suicide, please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255, text TALK to 741741 or visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources