Monday, April 20, 2015

Hey, the T-Mobile has opened on 14th and 1st


[Photo Saturday by EVG 14th Street correspondent Pinch]

On the southeast corner of 14th Street and First Avenue… and you'd think that T-Mobile could afford more than three grand-opening balloons. Unless they are saving $$$ for rent, which one tipster told us was $56,000 a month.

The previous tenant, The Pizza Bagel Cafe, closed for good this past Nov. 3.

Previously on EV Grieve:
That recognizable warm, pink glow of the new business coming to 14th Street and 1st Avenue

Reader report: Pizza Bagel Cafe yielding to a T-Mobil store on 14th and 1st

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Week in Grieview


[Tompkins Square Park yesterday]

Icon Realty serves the Stage an eviction notice (Tuesday, 54 comments)

Stage owner Roman Diakun responds to allegations of illegally siphoning gas (Thursday)

Man sentenced to 14 years in prison for rape of East 7th Street resident (Wednesday)

First look at the revamped East Village Radio studio on First Avenue (Friday)

A No Catcall Zone on St. Mark's Place (Wednesday, 54 comments)

Teaser site arrives for the Altes House, 11 boutique condos for East 4th Street (Monday)

Full Stop Work Order issued for 117 Second Ave. for 'testing and taking apart gas lines' without permits (Saturday)

Joey Ramone: May 19, 1951 – April 15, 2001 (Wednesday)

The Black Rose opening in the former Odessa Cafe and Bar space (Tuesday, 70 comments)

[Photos] At Sunday night's Second Avenue benefit concert at Theatre 80 (Tuesday)

Out and About with Diane McLean (Wednesday)

Long-stalled 16-story residential building still stalled on 3rd Avenue (Tuesday)

Long Bay now serving Vietnamese cuisine on East Sixth Street (Tuesday)

Two weeks left to enjoy Lan Cafe (Thursday)

Reader report: Pit bull attack on Avenue A (Sunday, 58 comments)

Agavi Juice opens on East Seventh Street (Wednesday)

Harry and Ida's Meat & Supply Co. coming to Avenue A (Monday)

Ellie & Jack's Bar & Kitchen looking for lodging in the former Kabin (Thursday)

After midnight, workers remove the Moishe's Bake Shop sign (Saturday)

Looking at 67 Avenue C, where the condo views are spectacular and surreal (Tuesday)

Marcha Cocina announces itself on Avenue C (Wednesday)

The Dunkin' Donuts space on East 14th Street is for rent (Monday)

Have you tried Makki Deli & Grocery?



We have not… the small deli at 440 E. Ninth St. just west of Avenue A has been open for several weeks now… one reader said that he got a large portion of rice, chickpeas and spinach, and roasted okra (as well as two of the $1 vegetarian samosas) for $8.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Live from A-1 Records...



Starting today (Record Store Day!) you can now tune into A-1 Records' live feed of the great vinyl that they play in the store ...



You may listen here.

The shop is at 439 E. Sixth St. between Avenue A and First Avenue.

Giant green baby alert: All American Temper Tot arrives on the Houston/Bowery Mural Wall



Here's a look at the all-new Houston/Bowery Mural Wall, where Ron English began work yesterday on what's he's calling All American Temper Tot…



And here is some of the official news release on the mural via wall curators Goldman Properties:

Jessica Goldman Srebnick, CEO of Goldman Properties, creators of the international outdoor street art museum, the Wynwood Walls, in Miami, has announced that Ron English will be the next artist whose work will adorn their famed Houston Bowery Wall in lower Manhattan. English joins an elite group of artists Goldman Properties has personally curated to paint one of the most sought after mural walls in the United States.

Describing his work as “Popaganda” – a mash-up of high and low cultural touchstones, from superhero mythology to totems of art history and his own original characters, English has enjoyed a successful career as a street artist as well as a fine artist. He will begin working on the Wall on Friday April 17 and the mural, entitled All American Temper Tot, is expected to be completed by Wednesday, April 22.

… and here's a photo from late yesterday afternoon via EVG contributor James Maher



Animal NY, BoweryBoogie and Gothamist have more pics.

Previously on EV Grieve:
The Houston/Bowery Mural Wall has been boarded up

The mural wall will remain on the Bowery and East Houston

Os Gêmeos: (Almost) day by day

5 years later, Os Gêmeos returning to the Houston/Bowery Mural Wall

Peeling off the layers through the years of the Houston/Bowery Mural Wall

After midnight, workers remove the Moishe's Bake Shop sign


[Photo by Paul Kostabi via Instagram]

Multiple EVG readers let us now that in the late night/early morning hours, workers took down the familiar Moishe's Bake Shop letters at 115 Second Ave. (EVG reader Ryan spotted the work happening at 1:30 a.m.)



While this retail space has been for lease since last summer, there hasn't been any mention of a closure from the owners of Moishe's. (The only sign in the window states that they are closed on Saturdays and open on Sundays.)

There is a complaint on file with the Department of Buildings dated April 11 (in the DOB's ALL-CAP style):

FROM THE RT. SIDE, YOU CAN SEE THE NEW BUILDING HAS "SHIFTED" & THE WALLS HAVE MANY HOLES. THE BENDED CANOPY IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE WALL & IS COMPLETELY SEPARATED FROM THE WALL, AT LEAST BY 4 INCHES.

The DOB issued an Environmental Control Board (ECB) violation for "failure to maintain front facade." So perhaps this is the first step in renovating the storefront to meet the DOB's standards.

The bakery, which opened in 1978 (or maybe 1972), returned last Sunday after being off for the Passover holiday. Moishe's is one of the many merchants whose business tailed off in the days after the Second Avenue explosion.

In a widely circulated Associated Press photo from March 27, owner Moishe Perlmutter was seen offering the FDNY some of his baked goods...




Updated 9:13 a.m.



Updated 4/20

Several readers spoke with Moishe at the shop yesterday... he reported that the sign will return after the facade repair... and that they are not going anywhere.

Full Stop Work Order issued for 117 2nd Ave. for 'testing and taking apart gas lines' without permits



The DOB yesterday served a full Stop Work Order at 117 Second Ave. ... right across Seventh Street from the site of the deadly gas explosion on March 26.

The building is owned by Maria Hrynenko, who is also the landlord at 121 Second Ave., the site of the blast.

According to DOB records:

WORK WITHOUT A PERMIT - TESTING & TAKING APART GAS LINES



Here's more detail from documents on file with the DOB:

FULL STOP WORK ORDER - WORK WITHOUT A PERMIT; INSPECTION TIME 11:07AM
AT TIME OF INSPECTION I OBSERVED GAS PIPING IN THE RESTAURANT IN GROUND FLOOR AND CELLAR DISCONNECTED, CAPED AND BEING PRESSURE TESTED BY THE PLUMBERS NO PERMITS WITH DOB

As a result, San Marzano, the restaurant here, had to close yesterday after reopening on April 10...



San Marzano's owners left a note for patrons saying they will be closed until further notice…


[Image via @anoop]

San Marzano was closed from March 26 through April 9. No. 117 was under a full vacate order from the DOB.

The Times looks into the real-estate holdings of the Hrynenko family


[2nd Avenue photo yesterday by EVG reader Daniel]

The New York Times dispatches three reporters to dig into the real-estate holdings of the Hrynenko family.

Maria Hrynenko is the landlord who owned 121 Second Ave., where a gas explosion on March 26 killed two men and injured more than 20 other people.

Per the Times:

Officials are investigating the cause, which they believe may have been a gas line being improperly tapped to supply newly renovated apartments on the floors above a sushi restaurant in the building, and an effort to cover up the misuse.

Hrynenko owns 121 and 119 Second Ave., which was also destroyed. According to the Times, she also owns 117 Second Ave., 46 E. Seventh St. and 96 Second Ave.

Here are a few passages from the article:

Ms. Hrynenko’s husband, Michael Hrynenko Sr., who died in 2004, went into real estate in the 1970s, long before the East Village was chic. The buildings he bought remain a family enterprise. But as the investigation into what went wrong has unfolded, the Hrynenkos have not spoken publicly, and few on Second Avenue seem to have known them well.

Each real estate company of which Ms. Hrynenko is now the principal seems to bear a form of her children’s names — Crystal Apartments L.L.C. for her daughter Crystal, 31; Nasher Realty Corporation may be for two daughters, Natasha, 21, and Sherry, 22. One, M.A.H. Realty L.L.C., may refer to her son, Michael A. Hrynenko, known as Mischou. Another company’s name consists of the initials of all four children’s first names.

And:

In the East Village, Ms. Hrynenko built personal relationships with some tenants. [117 Second Ave. tenant Billy] Calanca said she doled out hugs when they passed her on the street. Her office was across the street from Sushi Park, the restaurant on the ground floor of 121 Second Avenue.

Hyeonil Kim, who owned Sushi Park, recalled swapping details with Ms. Hrynenko about their personal lives, particularly the loss of her husband. “If you hear her life story in the past, you will know it is a tearful story,” he said.

But Mr. Kim also said Ms. Hrynenko was out of touch with what went on her buildings. He described her as in over her head.

You can find the article, which will appear in tomorrow's paper, here.

Friday, April 17, 2015

7th Street reopens west of 2nd Avenue



Workers removed the barricades early this evening... opening up Seventh Street west of Second Avenue to traffic again for the first time since the deadly gas explosion on March 26...



Updated 4-18


Spring break



Here's Manchester UK-based Spring King with "City" … off their new EP "They’re Coming After You!"