Monday, January 9, 2012

Has Duke's closed?

[EVG file photo]

That's what a reader asked after this weekend on Avenue C near East Eighth Street ... the place didn't look open (you know — locked door, drawn curtains, no lights) ... and we spotted this note on the window late Saturday afternoon...


Back in August, East Village Eats wondered if the bar was on its last legs. EVE noted that, earlier in the summer, the bar lost access to the basement and had to pull all of their taps and only serve bottled beer. At the time, a manager confirmed that the place was on the way out...

If so, then this is too bad... Duke's is/was a nice, normal neighborhood bar... without the showy cocktails or general stupidity of some East Village bars...

Looking at the Free Cooper Union truck


Easier to read when the truck is parked... not so much when driving down the street...

Photo by Dave on 7th.

Previously.

Unloading WIlliam Gottlieb's real-estate empire


Yesterday, the Post had a feature on William Gottlieb, the unlikely real-estate baron who died from a stroke at age 64 in 1999. His portfolio of more than 100 properties — with an esitmated value of $1 billion or so — has been locked up in a family legal battle ever since then. (You can read the article here for all that intrigue.)

Anyway, his nephew Neil Bender, 56, now has control of the properties, and has began unloading them. Properties in our area owned by the new Gottlieb empire: The Houston Street Mystery Lot that recently hit the market, as The Lo-Down reported in November, as well as 104 E. 10th St., which explains why playwrite-poet-artist Edgar Oliver is no longer living there. (Read Jeremiah's post on this address and Oliver here.)

As the Post noted, Gottlieb, who was born in Coney Island, "looked like a bum, drove a station wagon with busted windows and carried his important papers in a shopping bag." He was also a lawyer who often did repairs on his properties himself.

The article points out the sale of these assorted properties could "remake downtown in the process."

At least Gottlieb slowed down the rate of change in some neighborhoods.

"Without a doubt, had it not been for Bill Gottlieb there's a lot of buildings in the West Village and Meatpacking District that would have been torn down and replaced with sort of very generic and forgettable new construction, but instead kind of lived to face another day," Andrew Berman, executive director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, told the paper.

For further reading:
Check out Curbed's coverage of the Gottlieb drama here.

BareBurger is now open at former Sin Sin space

Back on Aug. 19, we first reported that an outpost of the organic hamburglar BareBurger is opening on Second Avenue at the site of the former Sin Sin space.

This past weekend, several readers told us that the place had opened... and EV Grieve Pedro ventured inside the two-floor restaurant at East Fifth Street ...





...and the final product, the BareBurger Supreme...


BareBurger is on tonight's CB3/SLA committee agenda for a beer/wine license.

Check out their menu here (PDF)

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Today in photos of a man being swarmed by pigeons in Washington Square Park





Photos by Bobby Williams.

Noted

At the Chase branch this afternoon on the Bowery at East First Street...


Oh thank heavens?


A little bit ago on the Bowery.

ConEd back in transformer action on Avenue A today


They ConEddies are back in action today on Avenue A. Yesterday, workers gingerly removed a (100 ton?) transformer from the substation on Avenue A between Sixth Street and Fifth Street ... today, the workers will be putting the new transformer(s) in place.

And all together now...

Something evil's watching over you
Comin' from the sky above
there's nothing you can do

Prepare to strike
There'll be no place to run
When your caught within the grip
Of the evil Megatron

Transformers
More than meets the eye
Transformers
Robots in Disguise

Reminders today: Day 2 of MulchFest in Tompkins Square Park


So, at least while we were around, it was a fairly low-key — but productive! — day of mulching yesterday... we didn't spot any politicos in protective eyewear... there wasn't a radio station sponsor like last year (the now-defunct WRXP, who seriously played "Laid" by James at the start of the festivities). Read our report from last year here.


Anyway, so — wait...sir? Sir! Watch out for the mulcher while walking and texting...


As we were saying, all the action was on Avenue A yesterday. Apparently transformers are cooler than mulchers.

Photos by Bobby Williams.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Today in photos of ConEd putting in a new transformer on Avenue A

If you walked along Avenue A today, then you likely noticed the cranes, flatbeds, ConEd workers, etc., hanging around... the crew was on the scene to put in a new transformer in the ConEd substation between Fifth Street and Sixth Street... today, ConEd removed the old transformer; tomorrow, they'll put in the new replacement (which will actually be four smaller transformers, according to one of the 300 workers on the scene...) Photos here by Bobby Williams...