Thursday, October 16, 2008
The end is near
On Tuesday, Jeremiah provided a thorough update on the fate of Mondo Kim's on St. Mark's. Yesterday, someone representing Kim's took to the streets to spread the word of the sale. At Seventh Street and Avenue A.
Labels:
Avenue A,
East Village streetscenes,
Kim's,
Seventh Street
Stranded on Fulton
Weird not to have the Strand Annex at 95 Fulton Street in the Financial District around anymore...the store had been in this location for 12 years (in other locations downtown for another eight years)...but the double whammy of a 300 percent rent hike and the ongoing gutting of Fulton Street gave the Strand folks no other choice than to shutter the place, which happened the third week of September after some dandy sales.

And so the 15,000-square-foot space sits empty.


This box was out front the day I walked by...

At least locals can console themselves with another Dunkin' Donuts opening down the street.

[Top Strand photo taken for Downtown Express by by Jefferson Siegel]

And so the 15,000-square-foot space sits empty.
This box was out front the day I walked by...
At least locals can console themselves with another Dunkin' Donuts opening down the street.
[Top Strand photo taken for Downtown Express by by Jefferson Siegel]
Checking in on Hester and the Bowery
Been nearly one year since we first read about the new 61-unit glass box condo high-rise thingee coming to the corner of Hester and the Bowery. And one year later...things still seem to be in the razing stage.


Too late, unfortunately.

Too late, unfortunately.
Four more years?

There's a Wall Street Journal opinion piece today titled:
New York Will Survive Without Bloomberg
The mayor never bothered to prepare the city for any lean years
Something for everyone
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
If you're thinking about moving to Akron, and you want that East Village feeling...

There's a new tool at HomeThinking that compares Manhattan neighborhoods with neighborhoods in dozens of other cities, from Akron (Ohio!) to Woodinville (Washington!). (The tool only provides the names of neighborhoods -- it doesn't offer recommendations on, say, bars, coffee shops, etc.) Oh, and if you really want to have some fun, compare Manhattan neighborhoods with far-flung locales like Brooklyn! (For the record, the East Village, according to HomeThinking, is like Boerum Hill, Park Slope and Fort Greene.) And see the amazing list of Manhattan locales that are a little bit like Brownsville.
A few minutes on the Bowery: Waiting for Lohan ... plus, a few other assorted scenes
From a quick walk: I never actually took the time to stop to admire the ads for Avalon Bowery Place on the side of Avalon Bowery Place. This is exactly the sterile environment in which I want to spend $3K-$4K a month for!

And why do they show Times Square?

Was kind hoping the semi would stop for her.

Fitting. RIP Bowery.

Still life, of sorts.

Lindsay Lohan got away from the paparazzi at the Bowery Hotel. Seriously.

Sad bank balloons. Really makes me want to go open an account.
And why do they show Times Square?
Was kind hoping the semi would stop for her.
Fitting. RIP Bowery.
Still life, of sorts.
Lindsay Lohan got away from the paparazzi at the Bowery Hotel. Seriously.
Sad bank balloons. Really makes me want to go open an account.
Remembering the East Village of the late 1970s
In the Voice today, Lynn Yaeger recalls moving to her first apartment in the East Village on East Ninth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue. (Rent: $135.)
Lots of people think that those days — the late 1970s and early 1980s —were really the best days of New York, and it's true that the city — despite (or maybe because of) the legendary graffiti, the burgeoning art scene, the clattery punk bands, and a general climate, especially in my neighborhood, of weirdness and unease — did have an undeniable louche, gritty glamour.
Hope for the Emerald Inn

Steve Cuozzo had this (third item) in his column yesterday:
All might not be lost for the Emerald Inn, the beloved Irish pub at 205 Columbus Ave. that's losing its lease in May.
As The Post recently reported, the cozy little bar, which has been there for 66 years, can't afford an increase to $350,000 year in rent - more than twice what it currently pays.
Owner Charlie Campbell and legions of regulars were heartbroken.
But Walker & Malloy broker Rafe Evans, who's negotiated scores of Upper West Side retail leases, said he's willing to help Campbell find another location nearby.
"They have expressed interest in keeping the legend alive," Evans said.
But it won't be on Columbus Avenue.
"They can only afford to be on a side street, maybe West 72nd Street," Evans said, where rents are lower.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Farewell to the Emerald Inn
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