Monday, February 13, 2017

1st sign of Ikinari Steak, the quick-serve, no-seat steakhouse coming to 10th Street



The signage has arrived for Ikinari Steak at 90 E. 10th St. between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue...



This will be the first U.S. location (there are more than 100 worldwide) for the popular Tokyo-based restaurant. The concept: Diners stand and basically eat really quickly.

Here's more on Ikinari Steak and its owner, restaurateur Kunio Ichinose, via The Financial Times:

Customers stand at 1m-high tables and order the precise number of grammes desired. The cost — Y5/gramme for rib-eye to more than Y10/g for sirloin — gives customers what Mr Ichinose claims is a vital sense of control.

Everything is calculated for speed of throughput and optimal use of limited ground floor spaces in key city locations. The height of the tables, Mr. Ichinose demonstrates by jumping up and miming, has been calibrated so that diners are unlikely to put their knives and forks down between mouthfuls. He pulls out a smartphone, which funnels him real-time CCTV footage of all the restaurants, to show this happening.

Press materials for this first U.S. location note the following:

The idea behind Ikinari Steak is to serve “super thick” high quality meats quickly and economically, therefore people stand while consuming their steaks. It’s a fun, interactive, communal, and brand new experience for New Yorkers! This is what is called "J-Steak" (Japanese style steak), a phrase coined by, and being introduced to New York by Ikinari Steak. Three cuts of Choice Beef are offered at a minimum of 12 or 14 oz.: ribeye, sirloin, and filet, cooked on an open-fire, served with corn, and presented sizzling on a cast-iron platter. Guests can choose to add more to their steaks at an extra cost. Therefore, any tenth of an ounce increment above the minimum is possible, as all steaks are cut to order. Lunch will offer a set meal of a 14oz Chuck Eye Steak with salad, soup and rice for $18.

The restaurant, designed by Idea+ Corporation in Tokyo, Japan, and Goodspeed Architects in NYC, has 40 standing stations and 10 table seats. The same loyalty program, so popular in Japan, will also be offered in New York. It's a "beef mileage card" app that allows diners to track how many pounds of steak they’ve eaten and ranks them against other regulars.

The original opening date was November... so not sure what the new date is. Soon?

This address was home to the steakhouse Prime & Beyond until last summer.

Previously on EV Grieve:
On 10th Street, Prime & Beyond has closed; popular Japanese steakhouse coming

The Empire has officially fallen: Former Biscuit shop for rent on Avenue A



A for rent sign arrived on Friday at 198 Avenue A between 12th Street and 13th Street, marking the official end of Empire Biscuit.

The quick-serve biscuiteers were only open a few days in 2016. They announced reduced hours in January 2016, and then never reopened. Empire Biscuit owner Jonathan Price promised a return in March. That same month, someone there posted a disposable plate on the front window noting that they were peelin' potatoes.



Legal documents from the landlord arrived on the front door back in the fall. According to that paperwork, the Biscuit owner was in arrears on rent and back taxes to the sum of $106,000.

Meanwhile, the for rent sign stipulates no bars or restaurants.

Empire Biscuit opened, originally 24/7, to some fanfare in the fall of 2013. Several near-by residents were turned off by their slogan — Breakfast Lunch Dinner Drunk.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Incoming Empire Biscuit on Avenue A launches Kickstarter campaign (122 comments)

Report: Empire Biscuit opens today (65 comments)

More renovations for Whole Foods Market® Bowery

A few weeks ago I noted some renovations underway at the Whole Foods Market® Bowery. For starters, a new bakery is going into the store's northeast corner at the Bowery/Houston entrance.

There are more renovations on the way. In addition to the bakery, parts of the area adjacent to the salad bar region were recently boarded up ... the sign promises more prepared foods...





I recall a sushi station here... and a pizza stand, which is still there... and what else was back here?

Anyway, some Whole Foods Market® Bowery regulars and semi-regulars have noted the 10-year-old store is seeming a little tired these days.

Back in January, the Post went in for a look at the dining area on the second level.

Substance abusers, drug dealers and homeless people are turning the sunny cafe area, where shoppers can dine on pulled pork or Vietnamese sandwiches, into their own private social club for the cost of a cup of coffee or nothing at all.

During five visits to the store in recent weeks, a reporter saw a modern-day Bowery bum sleeping in the fetal position, another nodding out in an obvious drug-induced haze, a few who appeared to be drunk, and one smearing toothpaste on his face and mumbling to himself.

A new era of Bowery bums, plus more workout choices



Over the weekend the Post checked in with a feature on the boutique gyms and studios that continue to pop up along the Bowery and various side streets.

The article, titled "Bowery, once gross, now bursts with boutique gyms," provides an overview of the new spaces, such as New York Pilates, who use some butt sidewalk signage for their studio at 262 Bowery.

Meanwhile! There are more gyms on the way ... coming-soon signage has been up since November for Rumble, which will offer boxing-inspired, group-fitness classes on Broadway at Fourth Street (there's a location on West 23rd Street)...



Also on Broadway... the new Equinox Fitness at Bond Street looks close to opening is now open (thanks commenters!)... (the entrance is on Bond)...


Sunday, February 12, 2017

Week in Grieview


[Photo Wednesday in Tompkins Square Park by Derek Berg]

Stories posted on EVG this past week included...

A look at the Moxy Hotel coming to 11th Street (Monday)

Report: Raphael Toledano selling major EV portfolio; foreclosure proceedings underway (Tuesday)

Lottery open for below-market rate apartments in Stuy Town (Wednesday)

Clay Pot, from Hong Kong to St. Mark's Place (Tuesday)

Out and About with Lola Sáenz (Wednesday)

A Valentine's Day rally to get some love for the former PS 64 (Friday)

Tsukimi bringing sushi to 10th Street (10th Street)

It snowed (Thursday)

Blue 9 Burger has not been open lately (Friday)

A state-of-the-art Quad Cinema expected to open this spring (Friday)

A visit to Uogashi on First Avenue (Friday)

Sugar Cafe has closed (Monday)

Work underway on 10-story condoplex at 4th Avenue and 10th Street (Tuesday)

Report of a fire at 86 E. 10th St. (Tuesday) ... Black & White looks to reopen early next week (Saturday)

Construction watch: 253 E. 7th St. (Wednesday)

196 Orchard's 'Culture & Cuisine' (Monday)

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Check out the new Turntable Lab location today

Last Sunday was the last day on Seventh Street for Turntable Lab.

After 16 years the vinyl-and-stereo shop moved to a larger space at 84 E. 10th St. between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue.

And they are ready to open the doors today with a soft opening starting at noon...

Report: Man in wheelchair tased, robbed on Avenue D

A man in a wheelchair waiting for a bus late Thursday night on Avenue D was robbed by three men who shocked him with a stun gun.

According to NBC 4, the men took $100 from the victim, who is 60.

The incident occurred near 10 Avenue D at 1 a.m.

The NBC 4 report did not include any descriptions of the suspects.

Image via Google Street View

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Updated: Report of a fire at 68 2nd Ave.


[Photo by Russell K.]

Multiple EVG readers have pointed out a large FDNY presence on Second Avenue late this evening... the @FDNY feed points to No. 68 ...



...this is the building on the southeast corner that houses Queen Vic...


[Reader submitted]

Will update there's any more info...

Updated 10:30 a.m.

Walked by this morning... no one was around... the sidewalk gates were up... there was a post-fire smell coming from the basement... couldn't really tell the extent of any damage...

Christo and Dora, sitting in a tree...



A moment with the red-tailed hawks today in Tompkins Square Park (Christo on the left, Dora the right)... photo by Steven...

[Updated] Black & White looks to reopen early next week



The Black & White has been closed since the fire Tuesday afternoon on an upper floor here on 10th Street between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue.

The low-key bar, which recently recently celebrated its 17th anniversary, provided an updated via their Instagram page:

Thanks for all the well wishes. Everybody got out safely and the bar sustained little damage. We should be open sometime soon after the weekend. Check here for updates.

[UPDATED 2/14: The bar is back open tonight.]

As for the rest of No. 86... here's a look at the damage...



...the fire apparently started in the third-floor apartment...



Patch reported that emergency responders evaluated two people at the scene for injuries. There wasn't any other information about cause or the extent of the damage.

According to public records, an LLC going by Elk Mas 86 East 10th owns the building. The third-floor unit, listed at two bedrooms, was asking $5,645 a month, per Streeteasy. The space above Black & White previously housed the company behind the Governors Ball Music Festival and Wiz Kid Management.