Friday, December 29, 2017
Thank you for 35 years of reheating leftovers and other microwaving activities
Someone discarded their microwave on 12th Street and Avenue A last evening... but not before leaving a note of appreciation on the appliance... "Broken. 35 yrs of service. RIP."
Thanks for @PerJennifer for the photos!
Images and stories 2017, Part 1
Here's a sampling of the stories and photos from the past year... January through June... thanks to everyone who contributed during 2017!
A snow shot above Avenue A via jdx ...
Ray celebrates No. 84 ... via Stacie Joy...
A presidential piñata on Fourth Avenue ... via Derek Berg...
At the Women's March on NYC ... by Derek Berg
A Monday morning ... via Bobby Williams...
M2M closes on 3rd Avenue ...
Valentine's night at Sunny's ... via @EdenBrower
At the rally for the former PS 64 at City Hall ... via Peter Brownscombe ...
No roundup is complete without an abandoned mannequin photo... via Steven...
Snowfall on Avenue A ... via Grant Shaffer...
After 40-plus years of serving vegetarian cuisine in the East Village, Angelica Kitchen announces its closure...
The snow car of Fourth Avenue via Derek Berg
Fire jumping at La Plaza ... via Ryan John Lee...
Cyclist Kelly Hurley dies after being struck by a box truck making an illegal turn on First Avenue at Ninth Street...
The Tompkins Square Park Art Bar... photo by Daniel...
Good Friday on Third Street ... via Stacie Joy...
A spring scene in Tompkins Square Park... via Bobby Williams...
Love and shrooms for Gregg Allman outside the former Fillmore East on Second Avenue ...
At the DanceFest in Tompkins Square Park ... via Stacie Joy...
News arrives that the Sunshine Cinema on East Houston will close in January ...
Feeding time in Tompkins Square Park with Dora and her latest red-tailed hawk offspring... photo by Bobby Williams
Report of an early-morning fire at 328 E. 14th St., home of Artichoke Basille’s Pizza ...
The Sean Spicer lawn ornament in Tompkins Square Park... via Steven...
East Village tenants pay landlord Raphael Toledano a visit at his Upper West Side home...
At the 2017 Drag March... via Stacie Joy...
A two-alarm fire on Broadway at Eighth Street as seen from Astor Place... photo by Grant Shaffer...
San Loco closes on Second Avenue...
Ranger Rob brings a new red-tailed hawk to Tompkins Square Park ... via Goggla ...
Lenin returns.... via Steven...
McDonald's on Third Avenue at St. Mark's Place closes after 20 years ... via MP...
A morning scene at Houston and Avenue A... via Aaron...
Summer rain in Tompkins Square Park... via Bobby Williams...
January
A snow shot above Avenue A via jdx ...
Ray celebrates No. 84 ... via Stacie Joy...
A presidential piñata on Fourth Avenue ... via Derek Berg...
At the Women's March on NYC ... by Derek Berg
February
A Monday morning ... via Bobby Williams...
M2M closes on 3rd Avenue ...
Valentine's night at Sunny's ... via @EdenBrower
At the rally for the former PS 64 at City Hall ... via Peter Brownscombe ...
No roundup is complete without an abandoned mannequin photo... via Steven...
March
Snowfall on Avenue A ... via Grant Shaffer...
After 40-plus years of serving vegetarian cuisine in the East Village, Angelica Kitchen announces its closure...
The snow car of Fourth Avenue via Derek Berg
Fire jumping at La Plaza ... via Ryan John Lee...
April
Cyclist Kelly Hurley dies after being struck by a box truck making an illegal turn on First Avenue at Ninth Street...
The Tompkins Square Park Art Bar... photo by Daniel...
Good Friday on Third Street ... via Stacie Joy...
A spring scene in Tompkins Square Park... via Bobby Williams...
May
Love and shrooms for Gregg Allman outside the former Fillmore East on Second Avenue ...
At the DanceFest in Tompkins Square Park ... via Stacie Joy...
News arrives that the Sunshine Cinema on East Houston will close in January ...
Feeding time in Tompkins Square Park with Dora and her latest red-tailed hawk offspring... photo by Bobby Williams
Report of an early-morning fire at 328 E. 14th St., home of Artichoke Basille’s Pizza ...
The Sean Spicer lawn ornament in Tompkins Square Park... via Steven...
East Village tenants pay landlord Raphael Toledano a visit at his Upper West Side home...
June
At the 2017 Drag March... via Stacie Joy...
A two-alarm fire on Broadway at Eighth Street as seen from Astor Place... photo by Grant Shaffer...
San Loco closes on Second Avenue...
Ranger Rob brings a new red-tailed hawk to Tompkins Square Park ... via Goggla ...
Lenin returns.... via Steven...
McDonald's on Third Avenue at St. Mark's Place closes after 20 years ... via MP...
A morning scene at Houston and Avenue A... via Aaron...
Summer rain in Tompkins Square Park... via Bobby Williams...
Year-end closures: The Grassroots, Paquito's, Noho Star and Republic
[20 St. Mark's Place the other morning]
The Grassroots Tavern
The 42-year-old bar at 20 St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue is closing after service on New Year's Eve. The owner of the bar was also the owner of the building and apparently sold the business without getting a favorable rent, according to some insiders. A "rent increase" is the official reason for the closure. The owner of the Ginger Man on 36th Street is taking over the space in 2018.
Paquito's
The 25-year-old Mexican restaurant at 143 First Ave. near Ninth Street shuts down tomorrow. However, Paquito's will maintain a to-go counter and delivery service in the space next door to the restaurant. The owners didn't provide a reason for the closure.
Noho Star (and the Temple Bar)
Both establishments on Lafayette Street will close after service on Sunday, as Jeremiah Moss first reported. There weren't any official reasons given for the closures of Noho Star (opened 1985) or the Temple Bar (1989).
Republic
The 20-year-old noodle shop is closing this weekend on Union Square. A steep rent increase is reportedly behind this shutter. As Eater noted about Republic and soon-to-close Blue Water Grill, "these restaurants contribute to the neighborhood increasing in value, which in turn causes landlords to raise rents to unsustainable highs once a lease is up."
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Noted
Free Christmas Tree Therapy on Lafayette at Houston. Get it before it's mulched. Photo today by Derek Berg.
The opossum of Tompkins Square Park — now on video
[Photo from Dec. 20 by Cheyenne]
Here's your weekly report on
Goggla has some photos and videos of the opossum, interacting with some squirrels, a rat and Christo, the red-tailed hawk. Head on over here for all the opossum action.
Meanwhile, here's one of the videos showing some dining action...
So mulch for your tree: TreeCycling to happen Jan. 6-7
If you are one of those people who don't like to wait until October to toss your Christmas tree, then this info is for you.
The city is holding its annual MulchFest/TreeCycle on Jan. 6 and 7 (2018!) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tompkins Square Park is once again serving as a chipping location. Workers will chip your tree, and give you your very own bag of mulch
The drop-off pen should be up in the Park for early discarding. Find more details here.
Labels:
bad puns,
Christmas trees,
Gruber MacDougal,
holiday trees,
MulchFest
Residential conversion underway at 180 2nd Ave.; the Ninth Ward expected to return
Gut renovations continue at 180 Second Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street...
According to the previously approved work permits on file with the city, workers are converting the building to residential use and adding two floors in the process. Permits show that there will be one residential unit on each floor. (Condos?)
As for the ground-floor retail space, the Ninth Ward was the previous tenant. That New Orleans-themed bar closed in February 2016. Earlier this year, co-owner Robert Morgan told me via email that the Ninth Ward would be returning to this space after the gut renovations.
"We recently opened a updated version of Ninth Ward in London and it’s doing fantastic across the pond. We’ll be bringing that incarnation of Ninth Ward back to 180 Second Ave.," he said in June. In the meantime, the Ninth Ward's wooden beams and original bar are "resting peacefully in a barn in Massachusetts."
The Chicago-based Polish National Alliance was the previous owner of No. 180. The building housed the Józef Pilsudski Institute of America, which is the largest Polish-American research institution specializing in the recent history of Poland and Central Eastern Europe. (They found a new home in Greenpoint.) An LLC bought the building for $6.75 million in June 2014, per public records.
Previously on EV Grieve:
2nd Avenue bar Ninth Ward is closing for good on Feb. 14; building rumored to be demolished
[No. 180 from August]
Report: 9th Street resident battling with Kushner Cos. to clean up black mold infestation
The Daily News has an update on Uta Winkler's ongoing legal fight with Kushner Cos. to clean up a black mold infestation in her Ninth Street apartment. (DNAinfo previously reported on her legal battle in December 2016.)
Winkler, a rent-stabilized tenant, said in court papers that her kitchen was destroyed several days before Thanksgiving in 2013 by construction workers renovating an unoccupied unit above her apartment.
To the News:
Winkler had to endure more mayhem when she came home in late 2013 to find that a construction worker carrying dirty water and debris on the floor above hers had crashed through her bedroom ceiling, landing on her bed, court document said.
The fall destroyed her bed and other furniture, but Kushner's management firm, Westminster, refused to reimburse her for the damage or even return her calls, court papers said.
Without a response, Winkler withheld her monthly rent, which reportedly prompted Kushner to sue her for the unpaid rent in 2015 in Manhattan Housing Court. DNAinfo previously reported that the company also sued tenants in two other units, include new market-rate residents, in the building for also withholding rent because of the disruptions from construction. (Those two other tenants then each filed counter-suits against Kushner.)
Winkler's "suffering with Kushner" reportedly started shortly after Kushner bought the five-building parcel on Ninth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue in 2013.
The Kushner Cos. now own some 30-plus apartment buildings in the East Village
Per the News:
Now even the lawyers Kushner worked with are taking the company to court. Several weeks ago, the News reported that Cornicello, Tendler & Baumel-Cornicello, a law firm that represented Kushner Cos. in dozens of eviction and housing court cases, is now suing Kushner for unpaid bills totaling more than $100,000.
As for Winkler: "For four years, they’re dragging me around, wasting money. I’m paying my lawyer constantly. It just makes no sense and it is so obnoxious."
Previously on EV Grieve:
Tenants claim: Kushner and Westminster want to destroy this building's beautiful garden
Reports outline how Kushner Companies is aggressively trying to empty 170-174 E. 2nd St.
Local politicos join residents of 2 Jared Kushner-owned buildings to speak out about poor living conditions, alleged harassment
Jared Kushner's residents at 118 E. 4th St. would like gas for cooking and some heat
Jared Kushner's East Village tenants wish he'd resolve issues closer to home
Winkler, a rent-stabilized tenant, said in court papers that her kitchen was destroyed several days before Thanksgiving in 2013 by construction workers renovating an unoccupied unit above her apartment.
To the News:
During the past year she has been locked in a legal fight in Manhattan housing court to get [Jared] Kushner’s real estate firm, Kushner Cos., to remediate the mold.
Even though an inspector she hired detected the spores in March, Winkler said she had to go to court several times before Kushner Cos. agreed to conduct its own mold test in the fall.
It took more court dates to get Kushner to agree to pick a remediator who will actually get rid of the mold — which has been shown to cause respiratory problems and to inflame allergies.
It’s still unclear when the remediator will actually make the fix, Winkler said.
“It’s harassment to get me out,” she said. Kushner Cos. did not respond to requests for comment.
Winkler had to endure more mayhem when she came home in late 2013 to find that a construction worker carrying dirty water and debris on the floor above hers had crashed through her bedroom ceiling, landing on her bed, court document said.
The fall destroyed her bed and other furniture, but Kushner's management firm, Westminster, refused to reimburse her for the damage or even return her calls, court papers said.
Without a response, Winkler withheld her monthly rent, which reportedly prompted Kushner to sue her for the unpaid rent in 2015 in Manhattan Housing Court. DNAinfo previously reported that the company also sued tenants in two other units, include new market-rate residents, in the building for also withholding rent because of the disruptions from construction. (Those two other tenants then each filed counter-suits against Kushner.)
Winkler's "suffering with Kushner" reportedly started shortly after Kushner bought the five-building parcel on Ninth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue in 2013.
The Kushner Cos. now own some 30-plus apartment buildings in the East Village
Per the News:
Tenants in several of these buildings have accused Kushner Cos. in court records of trying to drive them out through harassment, construction and dilapidated conditions.
State records also show that, in the past five years, the agency that oversees rent-stabilized and rent-controlled apartments has penalized Kushner Cos. in at least 11 instances over diminished services or poor conditions at one of its buildings in the city.
In those cases, the state Division of Housing and Community Renewal has ordered the monthly rent reduced for one or multiple rent-regulated units in the building until the problems were fixed.
Now even the lawyers Kushner worked with are taking the company to court. Several weeks ago, the News reported that Cornicello, Tendler & Baumel-Cornicello, a law firm that represented Kushner Cos. in dozens of eviction and housing court cases, is now suing Kushner for unpaid bills totaling more than $100,000.
As for Winkler: "For four years, they’re dragging me around, wasting money. I’m paying my lawyer constantly. It just makes no sense and it is so obnoxious."
Previously on EV Grieve:
Tenants claim: Kushner and Westminster want to destroy this building's beautiful garden
Reports outline how Kushner Companies is aggressively trying to empty 170-174 E. 2nd St.
Local politicos join residents of 2 Jared Kushner-owned buildings to speak out about poor living conditions, alleged harassment
Jared Kushner's residents at 118 E. 4th St. would like gas for cooking and some heat
Jared Kushner's East Village tenants wish he'd resolve issues closer to home
Labels:
black mold,
Jared Kushner,
Kushner Cos.,
Kushnerville
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
Today in epic poems discarded on 2nd Avenue
Derek Berg spotted a copy of "Hermann and Dorothea" up for grabs on Second Avenue... hard to read the inscription, dated 1883, because of the lack of emojis...
Out and About in the East Village 2017 recap and news about 2018
On Aug. 1, 2012, we introduced a new feature by East Village-based photographer James Maher called Out and About in The East Village. The feature, which provided a snapshot of someone who lives and/or works in the East Village, is going on hiatus. Here's more from James:
And now, here's the 2017 recap...
Jan. 11 — Ali Sahin
Jan. 18 — Eric Rignall
Feb. 1 — Lola Sáenz
Feb. 8 — Lola Sáenz, Part 2
Feb. 15 — Delphine Blue
Feb. 22 — Delphine Blue, Part 2
March 1 — Mark Seamon
March 8 — Merle Ratner
March 22 — Jennifer Brodsky
April 5 — Terry and Harmony
April 12 — Elizabeth Atnafu
April 19 — James, the Leather Man
May 3 — anonymous
May 18 — Gustavo Roldan
May 24 — Jerry Shea
June 1 — Roberta Bayley (and Stella)
June 14 and June 21 — Miss Joan Marie Moossy
June 28 — Sierra Gilboe Zamarripa (and Cecilia)
July 12 — Grace Kang
July 19 — Brian Breger (and Molly)
Aug. 9 — Puma Perl
Aug. 16 — Heidi
Aug. 23 — Felix Velazquez
Aug. 30 — David Anderson
Sept. 20 — Pepe Flores
Sept. 27 and Oct. 4 — Nancy Blum
Oct. 18 — Jay Yang
Oct. 25 and Nov. 2 — Siobhan Meow
Nov. 8 — Margie Segal
Nov. 15 — Ronald Rayford
Dec. 6 — Holly DeRito and Tulip
And previous recaps by year:
• 2012 here
• 2013 here
• 2014 here
• 2015 here
• 2016 here
Thanks everyone for helping create this nearly five-and-a-half-year Out and About project. I'm going to have to step back from it for awhile as my wife is due soon with our first child, which we're really excited about.
It's been an incredible experience that has taught me so much more about the spirit of this neighborhood. I can't imagine there are many other places where I could run outside for 30 minutes or an hour and come across such inspiring and interesting people, week in and week out, so willing and enthusiastic to stop and chat about their lives and the neighborhood.
There were many weeks where I was overworked or tired and not feeling like standing on a street corner, and those were always the times where I came back having shared a small moment with the most incredible people. I would often walk back feeling so much more inspired and energetic than when I had walked out the door.
Thanks to everyone who has stopped for an interview and opened up to a complete stranger. I hope I did you all justice — I definitely tried my best. Thanks to everyone's comments each week, of which I read every one of them. And thanks to Grieve for the sharp editing and advice. It's been a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
And now, here's the 2017 recap...
Jan. 11 — Ali Sahin
Jan. 18 — Eric Rignall
Feb. 1 — Lola Sáenz
Feb. 8 — Lola Sáenz, Part 2
Feb. 15 — Delphine Blue
Feb. 22 — Delphine Blue, Part 2
March 1 — Mark Seamon
March 8 — Merle Ratner
March 22 — Jennifer Brodsky
April 5 — Terry and Harmony
April 12 — Elizabeth Atnafu
April 19 — James, the Leather Man
May 3 — anonymous
May 18 — Gustavo Roldan
May 24 — Jerry Shea
June 1 — Roberta Bayley (and Stella)
June 14 and June 21 — Miss Joan Marie Moossy
June 28 — Sierra Gilboe Zamarripa (and Cecilia)
July 12 — Grace Kang
July 19 — Brian Breger (and Molly)
Aug. 9 — Puma Perl
Aug. 16 — Heidi
Aug. 23 — Felix Velazquez
Aug. 30 — David Anderson
Sept. 20 — Pepe Flores
Sept. 27 and Oct. 4 — Nancy Blum
Oct. 18 — Jay Yang
Oct. 25 and Nov. 2 — Siobhan Meow
Nov. 8 — Margie Segal
Nov. 15 — Ronald Rayford
Dec. 6 — Holly DeRito and Tulip
And previous recaps by year:
• 2012 here
• 2013 here
• 2014 here
• 2015 here
• 2016 here
Neapolitan Express pulling into 29 2nd Ave.
Late last month we noted that a pizzeria was coming to the empty retail space at 29 Second Ave.
Reps for Neapolitan Express are on CB3's SLA committee docket in January for a beer-wine license for the space between First Street and Second Street. As of now, only the application, which doesn't provide as many operational details as the questionnaire, is on the CB3 website.
Neapolitan Express, a growing chain that started as a food truck in 2013, is also opening an outpost adjacent to the Ed Sullivan Theater in Midtown. Their other locations are in East Harlem and on Wall Street.
Here's more about them via the Neapolitan website:
Originally launched in 2013 as the world’s first Eco Friendly Food Truck, Neapolitan Express was officially introduced by lead investors, energy innovators and business tycoons T. Boone Pickens of Clean Energy Fuels. Powered entirely by alternative energies, the Neapolitan Express pizza truck reduces greenhouse gases by up to 99%. Our patent-pending fueling technology fully powers truck operations, while simultaneously cuts down pollutants to a fraction.
The Cock moved moved a few blocks north from No. 29 in December 2015.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Pizza in the mix for former Cock space on 2nd Avenue
Classic Man Barber Lounge coming to 9th Street
A small sign is up for Classic Man Barber Lounge on one of the renovated storefronts at 445 E. Ninth St.
Here's more about them via their Facebook page: "A premium barber shop offering New York's professional and progressive gentlemen excellence glooming services in a therapeutic and multicultural environment." The shop's website points to an early 2018 opening.
This will be the fourth business to take up occupancy in Icon Realty's renovated storefronts here along Ninth Street at Avenue A ... joining Poke N' Roll, Beetlebug and Mahalo New York Bakery. GelARTo anchors the corner slot.
As for Classic Man, they will provide another option in a fairly crowded nearby hair-cutting market, including Neighborhood Barbers a few doors away at 439 E. Ninth St. Bonefade Barbers recently opened at 115 Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place. Also nearby: Three Seat Espresso & Barber at 137 Avenue A between St. Mark's and Ninth Street and Ben's Barbers at 217 Avenue A between 13th Street and 14th Street. There are three barbers/salons on Seventh Street between Avenue A and First Avenue as well as Ace of Cuts on Sixth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.
Thanks to Steven for the photo!
Here's more about them via their Facebook page: "A premium barber shop offering New York's professional and progressive gentlemen excellence glooming services in a therapeutic and multicultural environment." The shop's website points to an early 2018 opening.
This will be the fourth business to take up occupancy in Icon Realty's renovated storefronts here along Ninth Street at Avenue A ... joining Poke N' Roll, Beetlebug and Mahalo New York Bakery. GelARTo anchors the corner slot.
As for Classic Man, they will provide another option in a fairly crowded nearby hair-cutting market, including Neighborhood Barbers a few doors away at 439 E. Ninth St. Bonefade Barbers recently opened at 115 Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place. Also nearby: Three Seat Espresso & Barber at 137 Avenue A between St. Mark's and Ninth Street and Ben's Barbers at 217 Avenue A between 13th Street and 14th Street. There are three barbers/salons on Seventh Street between Avenue A and First Avenue as well as Ace of Cuts on Sixth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.
Thanks to Steven for the photo!
Crunch time at the Kellogg's NYC Café on Union Square
The Kellogg's NYC Café has been up and running on the northern section of Union Square since Dec. 14.
The space on the second level of 31 E. 17th St. (above the AT&T store) offers bowls of cereal (there's a a DIY cereal-creation station) as well as Pop Tarts and a variety of coffees and teas.
EVG reader Harry Weiner stopped in for a quick look...
Harry said that the cafe wasn't crowded ... other observations: "actually an inefficient use of space in terms of seating... and merchandise for sale. I wasn’t tempted to eat anything. I can’t imagine that sales will cover the rent."
Here are the current specialty bowls of cereal via the Kellogg's NYC Café website...
Previously on EV Grieve:
Oh Gr-r-reat! Kellogg's cafe opening slightly delayed on Union Square
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