Monday, April 16, 2018

Champion Coffee opens Wednesday on 14th Street


[Photo from Sunday]

Champion Coffee debuts Wednesday morning at 319 E. 14th St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue... this is one of three new Manhattan locations for Champion Coffee, which started in 2006 in Greenpoint.

Per their website:

All of our beans are blended to be representative of classic, delicious coffee without hype or trendiness.

We currently roast our beans in Maspeth, Queens.

They will be open daily here from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Champion took over the space from Madman Espresso, which has three other NYC locations, including on University Place.

Post updated to reflect change in grand opening from today to Wednesday.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Champion Coffee taking over the Madman Espresso space on 14th Street

Bakeri closing at the end of the month on 6th Street


[Image via Instagram]

With the opening of one Brooklyn-based coffee shop in the East Village ... comes news of another like-minded establishment closing.

The owners of Bakeri NYC announced yesterday that they are closing their cafe-bakery at the end of the month at 627 E. Sixth St. between Avenue B and Avenue C.

They didn't provide a reason for the closure, saying on Instagram: "We are so grateful to have been part of such a lovely neighborhood! Thank you all for all the love and support."

Bakeri, with locations in Williamsburg and Greenpoint, opened in October 2016 and sells homemade bread and pastries as well as Counter Culture Coffee.

It is a good place... foot traffic is tough on the block, though. There's also construction on both ends of the block (here and here).

Previously on EV Grieve:
Brooklyn-based Bakeri now serving bread, croissants and coffee on East 6th Street

The past and future of the Merchant's House Museum

The Wall Street Journal's real-estate section (Mansion!) checked in with a feature on The Merchant's House Museum on Fourth Street, NYC's only 19th-century family home preserved intact.

The story is behind the paper's paywall. Here's an excerpt:

For nearly 100 years it was the residence of hardware merchant Seabury Tredwell and his family. Equally significant, it is the only such building to have intact servants’ quarters, giving a rare glimpse into the everyday lives of the Irish immigrant girls. The late Federal/Greek Revival residence was among the first 20 buildings to be landmarked under the city’s new landmarks law in 1965.

And...

The story of the house begins in 1831. Hatter and real-estate speculator Joseph Brewster bought two adjacent lots for $3,550 and $3,000 in the booming Bond Street area to build two townhouses. He sold one home and moved into the other at 29 E. Fourth St. in 1832. Three years later he sold his townhouse for $18,000 to Seabury Tredwell — about the time Mr. Tredwell was leaving the hardware business for other ventures at age 55. He moved in with his wife, Eliza, and seven children. Their eighth child, Gertrude, born in 1840, was the last occupant. She lived there until she died impoverished at 93. The other townhouse was demolished in 1988.

The Journal asked asked broker Peter Sommer to estimate the listing price if the home were to go on the market today as a single-family residence with six bedrooms, one full bathroom and three half-baths. The answer: $6 million, maybe $9 million with a renovation.

The article doesn't address the pending development next door — an 8-story hotel. Museum officials and preservationists worry that the construction may cause damage to the historical home here between the Bowery and Lafayette.

The developers have promised to take extensive measures to ensure that the neighboring structure will not be harmed during the hotel construction.

As previously reported, CB2 held a public meeting (standing-room only, apparently) last Wednesday evening to discuss the proposed construction. The Board will make its decision on May 9. (Will update time and place later.) You can read the Merchant’s House call to action here.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Concern again for Merchant's House Museum as developer moves forward with hotel next door

Image from 2008 via Wikipedia Commons

New restaurant plans for 304 E. 6th St. and 117 Avenue A

Restauranteur Huey Cheng, who currently operates Raku on Sixth Street and Kura on St. Mark's Place, is the applicant of record for two proposed establishments seeking new liquor licenses in front of CB3's SLA committee this month.

Here's a look:

• Entity to be formed by H Cheng, 117 Ave. A (pictured above)

There's not too much information about the unnamed project here between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place. According to the questionnaire on file at the CB3 website (PDF here), the establishment will serve "New Age American food."

The proposed hours: noon to 2 a.m. daily. The seating chart shows 14 tables to accommodate 62 guests as well as a 14-seat bar.

The previous occupant, the Black Rose, closed last April after nearly two years in business. No. 117 was the longtime home, until August 2013, of the Odessa Cafe & Bar.

• Entity to be formed by Huey Cheng, 304 E 6th St

Cheng's name is also attached to an application at 304 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue. Again, not much information on the questionnaire for view at the CB3 website. (PDF here.)

The food is described as "New Age American/Pan-Asian." The proposed hours are daily from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.

This address is currently Mayahuel Mariposa, which was Mayahuel. There was some reported conflict over rent and naming rights after Ravi DeRossi and Co. departed and building owner Keith Siilats reopened the space under the same name. (Eater has a recap here.) Now it appears Siilats has a new team taking over the operation.

The CB3-SLA meeting is tonight at 6:30 in the Public Hotel, 17th Floor, Sophia Room, 215 Chrystie St. between Houston and Stanton. Other applicants this month include Bubbleology Tea and the team behind Entwine eyeing the former Golden Market.

By the way, this is the second of the CB3-SLA committee meetings this month. Last Monday's meeting at the Perseverance House Community Room on Fifth Street included the license upgrade for Club Cumming.

Previously on EV Grieve:
The Black Rose, 'a neighborhood rock and roll bar,' opening in the former Odessa Cafe and Bar space (73 comments)

Suffolk Arms now closed for renovations and 'mechanical upgrades'


[Photo by Vinny & O]

Last Monday we first noted that Suffolk Arms, the cocktail lounge on Houston at Suffolk, has been closed of late.

There's now signage on the front door noting the temporary closure for "renovation and mechanical upgrades." The bar's social media accounts have disappeared, though the website is still operational.

Neat Pour reported that Suffolk Arms "would reopen at a later date with a new concept, but the same staff." Neat Pour also had that co-owners Ruben Rodriguez and Giuseppe González are "at odds with one another."

The upscale bar, lined with portraits of famous New Yorkers, opened in February 2016.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

April 15



EVG reader Emily Mauney spotted this rather sprightly tree discarded on Avenue B and Second Street earlier today ... and sooo close to Earth Day... and Memorial Day...

Week in Grieview


[Photo on 4th and B via Vinny & O]

Stories posted on EVG this past week included...

RIP Anthony Pisano (Wednesday)

New-look Alphabet Scoop reopens (Friday)

CB3 to hear request of support for low-income housing at former 2nd Avenue church site (Monday)

Concern again for Merchant's House Museum as developer moves forward with hotel next door (Tuesday)

Paradiso has closed on Avenue B (Wednesday)

Construction watch: 298 E. 2nd St. (Thursday)

A call to help preserve Theatre 80 on St. Mark's Place (Friday)

Scumbags & Superstars closing this month on Clinton Street (Monday)

Beijing-based hot pot chain taking over the former Dunkin' Donuts storefront on 14th Street (Monday)

A look at the other OTHER hawk in Christo's life (Tuesday)

Soft openings on 12th and 2nd: Lumos Kitchen and Dunhuang East Village (Monday)

Karma Books now open on 3rd Street (Wednesday)

Suffolk Arms has not been open lately (Monday)

First Avenue fruit vendors return (Friday)

Team behind West Village wine bar Entwine eyeing former Golden Market space (Thursday)

A warning about off-leash dogs in Tompkins Square Park (Thursday, 28 comments)

More about Bubbleology Tea, possibly coming soon to 1st Avenue (Tuesday)

New locations for OddFellows and Morgenstern's (Wednesday)

On the David Bowery (Thursday)

... and this past week, someone placed this memorial outside the now-closed Webster Hall on 11th Street in honor of DJ Jess (aka Jess Marquis aka Jesse Immler), a house DJ and party promoter at the venue... he died on April 9, 2015. (The cause of death was not made public.)





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Noted


The photographer, Alexi Lubomirski, lives in the East Village — reportedly in Molly Ringwald's old place. This article at Town & Country has more on him, if it's of interest.

Spring in Tompkins Square Park



As a follow-up to the previous post on the overflowing Big Bellies... I appreciate Debbie the gardener’s dedication to keeping the grounds in Tompkins Square Park looking like this...

Warm weather aftermath in Tompkins Square Park


[Yesterday morning]

Several residents have pointed out the over-flowing Big Belly trash cans in and around Tompkins Square Park after two days of warm weather...











The new solar-powered trash cans arrived last July as part of the mayor's $32-million plan to combat vermin in rat-popular neighborhoods, like this one. The Daily News reported at the time that each can costs $7,000.

The city delivered eight more Big Bellies to the Park last fall, and they don't seem to be helping with the overflow of trash, especially during nice days.

H/T Vinny & O and JG!

Previously on EV Grieve:
Looking at the Big Belly 1.0 and 2.0 in and around Tompkins Square Park