Tuesday, November 28, 2023

A public meeting (tonight) about the pending closure of Mount Sinai Beth Israel on 1st Avenue

EVG file photo by Stacie Joy 

Mount Sinai officials are hosting a public forum tonight on the proposed closure of the Mount Sinai Beth Israel 16th Street campus on First Avenue. 

As previously reported, there's a pending July 12, 2024, closing date on the books. Last month, officials reportedly notified state regulators — who must sign off on their plans — of their request to shutter the 799-bed teaching hospital. 

Per the meeting flyer (which we only just received): 
Mount Sinai Beth Israel executives will discuss the plans for Downtown, the timeline on closure, and how Mount Sinai will continue to address the needs of the community now and in the future. After the presentation, there will be a Q&A open to the public.
Tonight's meeting (6-8) is inside Baruch College's Engleman Hall, at 55 Lexington Ave. at 25th Street. 

The news of the closure here drew immediate criticism from health advocates and elected officials, who say downtown Manhattan is underserved and emergency response times are already high. 

Per the Times from Nov. 3: 
The closure would mean longer ambulance rides and wait times for some downtown residents having strokes and heart attacks, nurses who work at the hospital said. And it will most likely lead to overcrowding and longer wait times in emergency rooms at hospitals farther uptown.

Openings: Rakka on 1st Avenue

Photo by Steven 

Rakka debuted last week before the holiday at 156 First Ave. between Ninth Street and 10th Street. 

As we mentioned earlier in the month, this is a return for the quick-serve Middle-Eastern restaurant that had outposts on St. Mark's Place and Avenue B

Rakka continues to serve some staples, including falafel ($6.50) and chicken shawarma ($8.75) sandwiches. 

There are two tables here... otherwise, it's a primarily to-go operation. 

Daily hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Blank Street is down to 1 East Village location

Photo by Steven

The Blank Street outpost on Third Avenue between Ninth Street and 10th Street closed earlier this month.

After an expansion tear, the V.C.-funded coffee chain launched in 2020 has closed two of three East Village locations (not including the kiosk in the Bowery Market). The space on First Avenue at 13th Street closed to the public in May and is now a "training + innovation lab."

The Blank Coffee on Avenue A between Ninth Street and 10th Street remains in service.

As previously noted, not everyone is a fan of the company. Per the Times last year: "When word got out that Blank Street is not an independent chain like Variety or Bean & Bean, but an enterprise with global ambitions backed by private equity financing, many became curious — and sometimes suspicious."

Across the Atlantic, Blank Street opened in London last year and is debuting its first shop in Manchester next month.

Monday, November 27, 2023

Don Ceviche debuts today on 1st Avenue

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

After some friends-and-family meals, Don Ceviche debuts today at 57 First Ave. between Third Street and Fourth Street. 
Owner Lenin Costas said that the Peruvian restaurant will be open daily for lunch (with lunch specials, see below) and dinner...
You can find the website and menu here

Hours: Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., with an 11 p.m. close Friday and Saturday.
Don Ceviche also has an outpost at the Essex Market. 

Previously on EV Grieve:

Liftonic bringing group weight training classes to this 2nd Avenue condoplex space

Liftonic is opening a studio at 24 Second Ave., the newish condoplex on the NE corner of First Street.

Window signage is on display for the gym that offers group weight training classes starting here in January...
The retail space has seen a variety of pop-up concepts in the past few years.

This corner parcel was previously a BP station, closing in 2014.

Sunday, November 26, 2023

Updated: Tako is safe!

Updated! 

Tako was found safe, if not a little shaken, early Sunday evening in Seward Park. Some kind-hearted community members there took her in... and helped reunite Tako and family.

Takoyaki, a 50-pound pitbull mix with large spots on a white body, went missing this afternoon in Tompkins Square Park. 

Her owners say that she is easily frightened... 

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a pic of St. Mark's Church-in-the-Bowery from Thursday)...

• Help for the family of Ommatt Cruz, who died Nov. 17 in a construction accident in the East Village (Monday

• At the grand opening of El Rinconcito on Avenue C (Monday

• RIP Bob Contant (Saturday

• Rockwood Music Hall 'getting back to basics,' closing its Stage 2 space (Friday

• Watch the video presentation for the 'City of Yes for Economic Opportunity' text amendment (Sunday

• Apartment fire temporarily shutters Scarr's Pizza on the Lower East Side (Monday)

• In 2024, Bank of America will be moving on up on 2nd Avenue (Monday

• The 'Snappy' new show at O'Flaherty's (Friday

• Openings: Potenza Centrale on Avenue B (Tuesday

• Demolition underway on the fire-damaged Middle Church façade (Monday) ... Steeple watch (Tuesday) ... Brick by brick: Historic steeple removed from the fire-damaged Middle Collegiate Church (Friday

• A Thanksgiving Day message to stop throwing eggs on 9th Street (Thursday

• Sharaku Japanese Restaurant emerges from plywood frozen in 2020 time (Tuesday

• EV trees in the fall (Thursday

• Scaffolding and sidewalk bridges coming and going along Avenue A (Friday

• Incoming bagel shoppe on a roll with renovations (Monday

• Signage alert: Hen House on 1st Avenue (Friday)

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A conversation on the history of drag in NYC

Here's information about an event of potential interest this Wednesday evening (Nov. 29) at 7 p.m.

Via the EVG inbox:
Village Preservation will be joined by journalist, historian, and photographer Elyssa Maxx Goodman to discuss her newly published book, "Glitter and Concrete: A Cultural History of Drag in New York City." Goodman will delve into the meanings of drag, both then and now, its history in the city, its role in the development of the East and West Villages, its sociocultural impact, its future, and more. 

The reading takes place at the Church of the Village, 201 W. 13th St. near Seventh Avenue. RSVP for free here. 

Saturday, November 25, 2023

RIP Bob Contant

Bob Contant, co-founder and co-owner of St. Mark's Bookshop, died at his Manhattan home on Nov. 6. Per published reports, he died of cardiac arrest. He was 80. 

According to Shelf Awareness, Contant was born in Rochester, N.Y., and grew up in suburban Washington, D.C. After college, he worked at the Washington Public Library and, after a move to Cambridge, Mass., at two of Harvard's libraries and then at several Harvard Square bookstores.
He came to New York in 1972 and was manager of the old 8th Street Bookshop in Greenwich Village. In 1977, Contant, along with others working at East Side Books — Terry McCoy, Peter Dargis, and Tom Evans — decided to open their own store at 13 St. Mark's Place. St. Mark's Bookshop moved to a larger location, at 12 St. Mark's Place, in 1987 and then in 1993 to a new development by Cooper Union at 31 Third Avenue. 

The store built on its strength in poetry, critical studies, small press literature, and art. But after many years, with a change of board, the school shifted its approach to the bookstore and offered no help when, in the wake of the financial crisis, St. Mark's had trouble paying its $20,000-a-month rent. 
After 38 years at four locations, St. Mark's Bookshop eventually closed for good on Feb. 28, 2016, at a smaller space on 136 E. Third St. between Avenue A and First Avenue.

Adena Siegel, a retired sales representative at Yale University Press, Harvard U Press and MIT Press,  remembered Contant as "a passionate bookseller, principled, enthusiastic, so knowledgeable," per Shelf Awareness.