A recent DOH shutter on Park Row near CIty Hall.
Guess it's off to the Pizza Hut/Taco Bell/Arthur Treacher's now...
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
"I walked down the Bowery and turned right on Bond Street... and for a minute I thought, 'Oh my God, I don’t know where I am!'"
This week Time Out interviews Lois Weaver (on left in photo) who, with partner Peggy Shaw, opened the now-iconic WOW Café Theater on East Fourth Street and founded the Split Britches performance troupe. They're unveiling their latest piece of edgy queer theater, "The Lost Lounge," at the new Dixon Place this Friday.
Their new work is, in part, about the changes in the neighborhood. "We call it a tribute to the last holdouts, to the people who kind of hold on or resist or fight or just hold on in the face of the kind of real-estate development that’s been going on in the Bowery. It's shocking, what’s been going on there," said Weaver, who still lives in the East Village.
Weaver had more to say on the area in a Q-and-A, including:
Do you feel like strangers in the East Village now?
"I walked down the Bowery and turned right on Bond Street the other day, and for a minute I thought, 'Oh my God, I don’t know where I am!' I just didn’t recognize it. And so one of the themes that we’re working on is how memory is tied up with landscape, and what happens when you lose your landscape — how identity is tied into place and how it feels like we’re losing part of our identity by losing those places."
Image via.
238 E. Fourth St. continues its steady progress
Back in August, I noted the rather impressive progress at 238 E. Fourth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B where the former one-level construction company was razed to become a $4 million penthouse by the world-famous Bob and Cortney Novogratz.
The construction netting is off...and the new tenants will be ready to move in by, say, Dec. 15. Well, maybe not. Anyway, onward and upward and stuff...
As a Curbed commenter said about site:
Previously on EV Grieve:
Former construction company becoming a two-family home with $4 million penthouse
The construction netting is off...and the new tenants will be ready to move in by, say, Dec. 15. Well, maybe not. Anyway, onward and upward and stuff...
As a Curbed commenter said about site:
[A]t least they didn't kill the beautiful old tree that in the back of the property between the yards of 3rd and 4th streets. Our new rich neighbors will get to enjoy the loud bar's garden in the backyard of 3rd St bar, the loud bars on Ave. B between 2 & 4. I hope they enjoy paying millions of dollars for all the "color and charm" of the East Village. Welcome to the fuckin neighborhood.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Former construction company becoming a two-family home with $4 million penthouse
Shake Shack and "Hale and Heardy" among the top-10 2009 Google searches in New York City
Drumroll!
1. cuny portal
2. duane reade locations
3. mta trip planner
4. seamless web
5. conedison.com
6. hopstop
7. hale and heardy
8. shake shack
9. nyu home
10. queens library
Why would anyone have to Google "Duane Reade locations"? Just walk two blocks in any direction and you should find one.
Also!
As EV Grieve reader T.E.V.B, who passed this along, noted, "C'mon people, learn to spell 'hearty!'"
What did other cities look up...?
Ada Louise Huxtable on the new Cooper Union: "It perfectly expresses the creative energy of New York"
Legendary critic Ada Louise Huxtable weighs in on the new Cooper Union building in The Wall Street Journal. And she likes what Thom Mayne has done... Take it away, Ada!
[I]ts futuristic façade is strikingly different in style and unlike anything else around it. The East Village is an area in transition, best known for its disappearing Bowery flophouses and restaurant supply stores. The wave of development moving along the Bowery in the wake of Sanaa's New Museum with its offhand infusion of sophisticated Japanese design already contains the marks of Meatpacking-District gentrification. With its uneven mix of scales and textures and juxtapositions that have more to do with unpredictable change than reliable constants, this is a place that upends any conventional or stable idea of "contextual" harmony.
And!
It is not surprising that the school would commission an equally advanced design for its new construction, not only for the latest in technology and sustainability, but also as an appropriate learning environment for those engaged in creative disciplines. Applying a tough sensibility to a tough assignment revitalized an amorphous status quo. To this native New Yorker who has watched the city evolve over decades and treasures its unrelenting diversity, Mr. Mayne has got it just right.
And she likes the staircase!
The stair is meant to be the interactive heart of the building and it appears to be working, although reality doesn't always follow architects' plans. Students move between classes, sit on the steps with their computers or lunches, and peel off to adjacent study lounges. Daylight pours down from a skylight at the top. This is high architectural drama, a luminous and exhilarating invitation into the structure's life and use. It is not building as bling. It is how architecture turns program and purpose into art. And it perfectly expresses the creative energy of New York.
Some faded ad glory reappears above the Mercury Lounge
Typically, the wall atop the Mercury Lounge building on Houston near Essex features an ad for something like this...
In the last week or so, the building's former occupant was revealed...
The Mercury Lounge opened in 1993. Prior to that, Shastone Monuments -- part of Houston's once-thriving gravestone industry -- called this space home for nearly 60 years. You can read more about Shastone here at Mr. Beller's Neighborhood.
GammaBlog has a great angle on the ad here.
In the last week or so, the building's former occupant was revealed...
The Mercury Lounge opened in 1993. Prior to that, Shastone Monuments -- part of Houston's once-thriving gravestone industry -- called this space home for nearly 60 years. You can read more about Shastone here at Mr. Beller's Neighborhood.
GammaBlog has a great angle on the ad here.
Lil' Monsters opening soon on East 10th Street (cute kitties alert!)
Sounds like a fitting name for a bar around here... But as the sign says here on the storefront at 279 E. 10th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue, Lil' Monsters will specialize in pet care and animal rescue...
And cute kitties alert in the front window...
And please note...
They have a Web site.
And cute kitties alert in the front window...
And please note...
They have a Web site.
It was a balmy 44 last evening
...when we spotted two intrepid diners eating outside at Yuca Bar, Seventh Street and Avenue A...the diner with her back to the camera was wearing a hooded parka thingee.
Reminders tonight: The Lower East Side Remembered and Revisited
The Lower East Side Remembered and Revisited
CUNY-Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Ave., Manhattan, Elebash Recital Hall
Join panelists:
Joyce Mendelsohn, author
Annie Polland, the Tenement Museum
Clayton Patterson, photojournalist and author
Eric Ferrara, the Lower East Side History Project
Joyce Mendelsohn’s "The Lower East Side Remembered and Revisited," first published in 2001 and is being re-released by Columbia University Press in a revised and expanded edition, including a new section on the Bowery. Panelists will discuss the neighborhood's venerable churches, synagogues and settlement houses as well as the breakneck changes that have taken place. Transformed from historic to hip – aged tenements sit next to luxury apartment towers, and boutiques, music clubs, trendy bars and upscale restaurants take over spaces once occupied by bargain shops, bodegas, and ethnic eateries.
*RSVP FOR TICKET AVAILABILITY
Date: December 2, 2009
Time: 6:30 PM-8:30 PM
Phone: 212-817-8471
E-mail: gotham@gc.cuny.edu
Check out the Web site for more details.
CUNY-Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Ave., Manhattan, Elebash Recital Hall
Join panelists:
Joyce Mendelsohn, author
Annie Polland, the Tenement Museum
Clayton Patterson, photojournalist and author
Eric Ferrara, the Lower East Side History Project
Joyce Mendelsohn’s "The Lower East Side Remembered and Revisited," first published in 2001 and is being re-released by Columbia University Press in a revised and expanded edition, including a new section on the Bowery. Panelists will discuss the neighborhood's venerable churches, synagogues and settlement houses as well as the breakneck changes that have taken place. Transformed from historic to hip – aged tenements sit next to luxury apartment towers, and boutiques, music clubs, trendy bars and upscale restaurants take over spaces once occupied by bargain shops, bodegas, and ethnic eateries.
*RSVP FOR TICKET AVAILABILITY
Date: December 2, 2009
Time: 6:30 PM-8:30 PM
Phone: 212-817-8471
E-mail: gotham@gc.cuny.edu
Check out the Web site for more details.
Renovation watch at the former Tribe space
Every time we walk by the former Tribe space on First Avenue and St. Mark's Place, something is just a little bit different...over the course of a few days, we saw...
...and now, EV Grieve reader dmbream noted yesterday:
Here's a shot yesterday via les pensées insouciantes:
Anyway, as far as we know, the Crooked Tree folks are opening a tapas bar in this space.
Previously hereabouts.
...and now, EV Grieve reader dmbream noted yesterday:
Hanging copperplate this morning at Tribe. Plywood taken down. Also jack-hammering out what were covered up window openings on the St. Mark's side of the place.
Here's a shot yesterday via les pensées insouciantes:
Anyway, as far as we know, the Crooked Tree folks are opening a tapas bar in this space.
Previously hereabouts.
Labels:
First Avenue,
new restaurants,
St. Mark's Place,
Tribe
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Fare warning
From the EV Grieve inbox:
Dear God. There are Lady GaGa ads on the screens in the cabs.
[Image via Eric Alba.]
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