Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Wednesday's parting shot

New work in First Street Green Art Park... a collaboration between stencil-art legend Blek le Rat (@blekleratoriginal) and Tkid Alegend (@tkid170) ...

Blek has a new show at West Chelsea Contemporary on 10th Avenue through Sept. 25. 

Reports: Dan Goldman is the Democratic nominee for the 10th Congressional District

Dan Goldman, former House impeachment counsel, has been declared the winner in New York's newly drawn 10th Congressional District, which includes the East Village and Lower East Side. 

The Associated Press called it just after midnight... Goldman also declared himself the Democratic nominee for the open seat... According to published reports, Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou trails by a little over 1,000 votes. She has yet to concede the race, waiting until all the absentee ballots are counted, per Gothamist

The crowded field for the open seat saw Mondaire Jones (18.09%) in third and local City Council member Carlina Rivera (16.87%) in fourth, as City & State reported

Rivera posted her speech to her supporters from last night... Meanwhile, here's a breakdown of how people voted in the different neighborhoods making up the 10th Congressional District...
City & State has more election-night coverage here.

The next iteration of the Knitting Factory coming to the East Village

Photo of cumgirl8 at the Knitting Factory Brooklyn from 10/21 by Stacie Joy 

After 13 years of hosting live music and comedy on Metropolitan Avenue in Brooklyn, the Knitting Factory shut down on Sunday night. 

In the Instagram post announcing the live music venue's closure in June, the company ended with: "Don’t fret, you'll see us again in the coming months." (Management said the landlord wanted to double the rent in Williamsburg.) 

Multiple tipsters have told us that the Knitting Factory would be opening a concept in the East Village in the months ahead. Morgan Margolis, president and CEO of Knitting Factory Entertainment, confirmed to EVG that the Knitting Factory will be coming to the neighborhood. 

However, Margolis, who was born and raised in the East Village, was not ready to reveal where just yet, stating that an announcement would be coming later this fall. 

In June, he told Brooklyn Magazine that the next iteration is "going to be a little different in that it's going to be more of a neighborhood bar … we're partnering up, so it's not just going to be Knitting Factory." 

Michael Dorf and Louis Spitzer opened the original Knitting Factory in 1987 on Houston Street near Mulberry. The venue decamped for Tribeca before moving to Brooklyn in 2009. (Read more detailed history here.) 

Today, the Knitting Factory's operations include venue ownership and management, festivals and events, artist management, recorded music production, and distribution.

A retail wine and spirits store is in the works for the former Black & White space on 10th Street

A wine and spirits retail store is coming to the ground-floor space at 86 E. 10th St. between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue.

Christopher Freund, formerly the head sommelier at Gotham Bar & Grill on East 12th Street and Betony on West 57th Street, is behind the retail concept. In an Instagram message, he confirmed that he had applied for a license for the storefront. He didn't have an opening date right at the moment.

Neighborhood bar Black & White was at the address for more than 20 years, closing in October 2020 with plans to relocate (those plans haven't materialized to date). 

And not sure at the moment who's renting the second-floor office — space that was once used by Wiz Kid Management (onetime manager of the Strokes).

Here's more about Rabbit and the Fragile Flour, opening next month on 7th Street

Ravi DeRossi's Overthrow Hospitality has two new establishments opening on Seventh Street between Avenue A and First Avenue on Sept. 7. 

A rep for the plant-based hospitality group shared more details about each concept at 122 E. Seventh St. ... 

Rabbit: 
Exploring the world of raw vegan cooking, Executive Chef Xila Caudillo, takes a global approach offering a 13-course tasting menu, aided by hospitality veterans, Lo Serrano (sous chef) and Katy Blank (GM). 

The space explores the opportunities of raw ingredients; complimented by a small but intentionally curated beverage program with low-ABV cocktails, non-alcoholic options including fresh juices and infused-waters, and a curated wine list featuring Latinx winemakers. 

Rabbit seats 12 indoors at the chef's counter. It will be open Wednesday to Sunday, with seatings at 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. You can find the Rabbit website here ... and some food pics @rabbit.newyork
The Fragile Flour: 
The dessert and wine bar offers plated desserts, wine pours from across the world (from Brazil to Italy), and light savory bites. The 12-seat space ... is led by Pastry Chef Lady Ashton Warren, with wine selections from Overthrow's wine director, Drew Brady. 

The Fragile Flour website is at this link ... and the Instagram account is here
No. 122 previously housed Overthrow's Cadence, which moved across the street to a larger space in the spring. The Fragile Flour space was previously slated to be a Cadence annex.

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

The Li'l Park Drag Show takes the stage at La Plaza Cultural

Photos by Stacie Joy 

On Saturday afternoon, La Plaza Cultural on the SW corner of Ninth Street and Avenue C was the setting for the latest (and last for the summer) Li'l Park Drag Show — "an outdoor celebration of queer performance & gender nonconformity." 

Double Mx.Ectomy served as the host for the show, billed as the Gender Euphoria GRAND FINALE...
Aside from sets by Claudi from Pinc Louds ... featured performers included Dimez...
... Oliver Herface ...
... Lena Horné... 
... Bertha Vanayshun... 
... Om3n Onyx...
Other performers were Bad News Bear and Glitter Macabre. You can follow the @lilparkdragshow on Instagram for updates.
Previously

City removes several abandoned curbside dining structures in the East Village

Late last week, the Department of Transportation removed the curbside dining structures from outside several now-closed East Village restaurants, including a five-car-long one at the Ainsworth on Third Avenue and 11th Street.

The paperwork attached to the businesses reads in part:
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the authorization granted by the City of New York's Open Restaurants Program is HEREBY TERMINATED.

As observed by a City inspector on several instances, the seating area in front of your restaurant is deemed abandoned and, as a result, violates the terms and conditions of the Open Restaurants Program.
Other removals included outside Dia at 58 Second Ave. between Third Street and Fourth Street...
... and Baker's Pizza at 201 Avenue A between 12th Street and 13th Street (H/T Steven) ...
Last Thursday, a sledgehammer-toting Mayor Adams announced that a few dozen abandoned outdoor shelters would be demolished citywide. (City press release here.) 

Standing before a deserted shed in Manhattan, Adams emphasized his support for making outdoor dining a permanent fixture of city dining — an outcome officials have been working toward for months. But he said its longevity had to be safeguarded in a manner that is "safe, clean, and respectable to our neighbors and those who live in the communities."

In addition to removing structures that belong to now-shuttered restaurants, Adams pledged to crack down on repeat violators of city outdoor dining regulations. Thirty-seven sheds are currently being investigated, according to his office.
The Open Restaurants program has been operating since June 2020. 

A group of city residents filed an Article 78 lawsuit to end renewals of the emergency executive orders that authorize NYC's temporary Open Restaurants program and to end its operation.

"If the City wants to make an improved or expanded sidewalk café program, we're all for it. We'd love to be part of that discussion," said Leslie Clark, a petitioner in a legal action challenging the Open Restaurants program, in an advisory sent last week to local media outlets. "Communities throughout the city should have access to sidewalk cafés. But the Temporary Open Restaurants program has become a blight on our city, and it needs to end."

In any local dining-shed news, the still-open Amigo by Nai removed its structure at 29 Second Ave. between Second Street and First Street...
Elsewhere, the Parkside Lounge on Houston at Attorney moved its structure away from the curb to accommodate the new eastbound bike lane... (photo Sunday by Stacie Joy)

Thoughts on a new tenant for a former laundromat

A for-rent banner hangs across the front of the former New Phoenix Laundromat, which closed in the spring at 199 First Ave. between 12th Street and 13th Street. 

A sign on the door makes an appeal for the next tenant (thanks to Steven for the top two pics) ...
Someone! Please open this laundromat!! We need one!!! 

Meanwhile, while this won't be of help to the residents who live around the former New Phoenix... a new laundromat (Laundry Mart!) opened in early July at 60 Avenue B between Fourth Street and Fifth Street (just realized that we never noted this arrival)...

Delicore: The line to see Diplo at Katz's After Dark Sunday night

We received some curious queries about the long lines outside the venerable Katz's Delicatessen on Sunday night... as lines of partygoers stretched in both directions here on Houston and Ludlow. (Thank you to Lisa Holiday for the top pic!)

This was billed as "Katz's After Dark" — "Invite only, for the industry by the industry" — and presented by Red Bull, as part of their Summer Sessions series, and the clothing brand Mr. Saturday

Attendees received complimentary Red Bull cocktails from 11 p.m. to 4 a.m. ... and the usual Katz's fare.

There were four DJs on the bill, Joey Saturday, Mona Matsuoka, Gonnie Garko and headliner Diplo ...
This appears to be a one-time event, though there is a Katz's After Dark Instagram account in case there's ever a next time.

Katz's previously hosted Vogue's Pre Met Party this past spring. 

Signs of dinner life at Prune

An EVG reader shared this photo, noting "more activity picking up at Prune. There was what appeared to be a private event there the other night."

Prune officially remains closed to the public at 54 E. First St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue — as it has since the NY PAUSE of March 2020. 

The website for Gabrielle Hamilton's popular destination says to please check back for updates about a reopening.

Prune fans remain hopeful that the restaurant, which opened in 1999, will return one of these days. Hamilton's compelling essay — "My Restaurant Was My Life for 20 Years. Does the World Need It Anymore?" — in the New York Times Magazine during the worst days of the pandemic in April 2020 raised doubts.

The site of the lit-up space was a good sign for the reader, who noted: "Hopefully, it means it is reopening soon!"