Wednesday, November 1, 2023

East Village cultural landmark Nuyorican Poets Café now closed for a 3-year renovation

Photos by Stacie Joy

After celebrating its 50th anniversary this past month, the Nuyorican Poets Café has closed for a long-awaited $24 million, three-year renovation project. 

This so-called "Nuyoricanstruction" phase will usher the organization into into the next 50 years, leadership says.

Here's more about the extensive renovation at the iconic space on Third Street between Avenue B and Avenue C, as reported by The City:
There will be new elevators, a new first-floor performance space, a green room and changing area in the basement, and more offices and performance spaces on the second, third, and fourth floors, according to a spokesperson for the city's Department of Cultural Affairs, which is partially funding the renovation along with the City Council and borough president's office. The electrical and mechanical systems will also be completely overhauled. 
And...
The space at 236 East 3rd Street was an abandoned tenement building, built more than 100 years ago, when it was purchased in 1971 by the La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club. The Poets Café founders bought it in 1981 after starting off in an East Village living room eight years earlier. 

The Café owns the building, but has had a restrictive covenant on its deed since 2013, which is a requirement for all city-funded capital projects on private property.
Through the years, the Café has been a venue for for underrepresented artists through weekly Latin jazz, slam poetry, theatrical performances and open mic events.

The staff is planning on staging pop-ups and collaborating with other New York institutions during the three-year renovation. You can check Instagram or the Café website for updates.
Puerto Rican writer and poet Miguel Algarín founded Nuyorican in 1973 as a living room salon on Sixth Street along with Lucky CienFuegos, Bimbo Rivas, Pedro Pietri and Miguel PiñeroAlgarín died in December 2020 at age 79.

East Village photographer's fascination with empty bars at dawn is the subject of a new book

Photo at McSorley's by Daniel Root 

An East Village photographer's "bars at dawn" series has seen the light of day! 

While out on early morning walks in recent years (dating to 2016), Daniel Root began taking pictures through the windows or doors of empty neighborhood bars at daybreak. The shots became part of an ongoing #nybarsatdawn project on Instagram. In the end, he shot 974 bars and walked some 1,500 miles. 

Now that project in the subject of a new book, "New York Bars at Dawn," which debuted yesterday via Abbeville Press. The book includes 200 of his most compelling bar portraits, many of them in the East Village. 

A description: 
Nearly every day, Daniel Root sets out before sunrise to wander the streets of Manhattan with his camera. In those comparatively quiet hours, the entire city wears a different face, but Root is particularly fascinated by the scenes to be glimpsed through the windows of its bars. Empty of patrons and illuminated by an odd mix of artificial lights — neon beer ads, red EXIT signs, a single bulb above the cash register — they present a more hushed and mysterious aspect than in the busy evening hours. Nonetheless, each one — whether a dive bar, a sports bar, or a restaurant bar — still conveys an individual character, a distinct personality. 
We interviewed Root about the project in 2019. Revisit that Q&A here.
There is a book signing at 7B/Horseshoe Bar/Vazac's — which graces the book cover — on Seventh Street and Avenue B Friday evening from 6-8.

Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Tuesday's parting shot

Halloween night at Village East by Angelika, 12th Street and Second Avenue.

6 posts from October

A mini month in review (with a photo in Tompkins Square Park by Derek Berg)... 

• A round-up of the old-school Chinese restaurants in the East Village (Oct. 25

• The milling of the multipurpose courts in Tompkins Square Park is underway (Oct. 17

• A last look inside Wegmans before its grand opening on Astor Place (Oct. 16

• This nearly block-long parcel on 2nd Avenue is now for sale (Oct. 16

• Posse officially in Effect now with the Beastie Boys on 14th Street and Avenue A (Oct. 5)

• Why the benches were removed from across the street from the 9th Precinct (Oct. 2)

Downtown Burritos Cocina Mexicana — the former Downtown Bakery — returns to service this Friday

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

After being closed for nearly eight months, Downtown Burritos Cocina Mexicana (FKA Downtown Bakery) will open this Friday morning at 69 First Ave. between Fourth Street and Fifth Street. 

Co-owners and brothers Ivan (left) and Mario Marín passed the Health Department inspection yesterday... and they previously got the OK from Con Ed for the gas service ...
As we first reported, Ivan and Mario, the longtime managers (20 years) of Downtown Bakery, bought the longtime business (established 1990) earlier this spring when the owner retired. 

This came on the heels of a DOH-mandated closure in February for Downtown Bakery operating with an expired health permit. The new owners then decided to take the opportunity to update the interior.

In renaming the business, the brothers mentioned the confusion regarding the inclusion of "Bakery" — people would call and ask about baked goods.
Daily hours moving forward: 7 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.

Signage alert: Instant Noodle Factory on 7th Street

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Signage is up now for Instant Noodle Factory, opening next month at 130 E. Seventh St. just west of Avenue A...
This fast-casual DIY concept offers up instant noodles — more than 150 types. 

The first outpost opened this past summer in Long Island City... Eater's Robert Sietsema gave it a whirl (and liked it!): 
When you enter, you are advised to study the ramen matrix ... mainly from Japan, China, and Korea, though a few originate in Thailand, Singapore, and other locations. 

Yet, this is a factory and you are the worker responsible for preparing your own meal. I was entirely bewildered when I first walked in, wondering how to approach the place. But this bewilderment was delightful — because perplexed is not a bad way to feel at the start of a meal. My advice is to select one of the preset noodle combinations, eight in number, which include type of ramen; added objects like sausages, herbs, fish balls, and boiled eggs; and condiments. If you don't pick a preset combo, you could spend hours considering your million or so options.
No. 130's former tenant, Avant Garden, moved around the corner to Avenue A and Sixth Street in July.

Openings: The Avenue Cafe on St. Mark's Place

The Avenue Cafe debuted last week at 102 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue.

The independent/minority-owned shop offers a variety of coffee drinks and housemade pastries. (There's an avocado croissant waffle available only on Saturdays and Sundays.) The shop is open daily from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

This marks the first storefront for the owners after two-plus years inside the Jamaica Market food hall in Queens.

If you're on Instagram, you can follow The Avenue Cafe here

All the Kings Horses Café announces year-end closing date

After three years in service at 521 E. 12th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B, All the Kings Horses will shut down at the end of the year. 

Owner Robbie Lecchino made the announcement about his Australian café in an Instagram post on Sunday: 
We will be closing our doors December 31st this year. We have spent 3 of the best years nestled here in the East Village and have made so many friends and relationships continue building each day that we will cherish for many years to come. 

Thank you for the continued support during one of the toughest times in our lives during and beyond Covid-19. 

Please continue to support us as we will be operating right through until December 31st. Thank you welcoming us with open arms we will miss y'all... 
Hours: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Saturday, with an 8 a.m. open on Sundays. 

ATKH opened in October 2020.

Image via Instagram