Do you have any idea why there is a giant square block of concrete sitting at Ave A and 2nd Street?
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Any word on what happened on Houston between A and 1st this morning around 830? I was walking to Essex st station and as I crossed Houston there were six cop cars on either side of the median. There was a woman who appeared to be handcuffed in a bathrobe, a loose dog, and dozens of onlookers. I figured it must be a big deal as cops were driving west on the east-bound side of Houston, which I rarely see.
Anyone?
And, as always, thank you for the tips, questions, etc.!
Friday, May 21, 2010
That "Lewd Loud Sound" for the Cooper Square Hotel

With the nice weather last night, apparently some Cooper Square Hotel guests got a little raucous.
Which, perhaps, inspired one of the greatest e-mails ever:
Lewd Loud Sound From [XXX] E 5th Street for balcony users at Cooper Square Hotel. Thought you'd be interested.
Yes I am!
For more reading:
Back to the Backside (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
The last days of Superdive?
A reader passed by Superdive last night... and it was open. Unusual, seeing as the signs out front say the bar is only open Friday and Saturday nights. Per the reader: "They had kind of a raucous crowd in there. Reminded me of a frat house enjoying its last days before shutdown."
And the best part? There was an ambulance out front. The reader said it had nothing to do with Superdive. But! "It made for a funny shot."

Hmm... Or maybe Superdive management hired the ambulance to park out front... to make it look extra chaotic! Kind of like the Chiefs did in "Slap Shot."
And the best part? There was an ambulance out front. The reader said it had nothing to do with Superdive. But! "It made for a funny shot."

Hmm... Or maybe Superdive management hired the ambulance to park out front... to make it look extra chaotic! Kind of like the Chiefs did in "Slap Shot."
But there is a 25-cent cover charge
A woman walks into Sophie's early one recent evening. She sits down and orders a drink. She pulls out her phone and calls a friend. "Do you want to come meet me? I'm in your neighborhood." But she doesn't know where she is exactly. She goes outside to find the name of the bar. "Sophie's" doesn't appear anywhere out front. The women studies all the signs in the window for a moment and comes back in.

She continues the conversation with her friend. "I'm at a place called Public Telephone."
She continues the conversation with her friend. "I'm at a place called Public Telephone."
Fifth Street and Avenue D for $918 a square foot
The other day we featured a countryish home on East Fifth Street... if that was a little too "Green Acres" for you, then consider this new listing on the market further to the east... all the way to Avenue D....
According to Corcoran:
(Um, that listing came written this way.)
So! Let's see what they mean by all that...
And it's $725,000 for 790 square feet ... for those of you into this kind of thing, that's $918 per square foot... which seems like a lot for a space adjacent to a 3.84 acre city housing project.
According to Corcoran:
The East Village with soaring 18 foot ceilings and monthly carrying cost below $600 (including real estate taxes). This two bedroom features four oversized southern facing windows with unobstructed open views to allow maximum sunlight all day long. The apartment features stainless steel appliances, including a Viking range there is also a dishwasher and washer dryer.
There are hardwood floors throughout the loft that compliment the marble counter tops and marble baths. The traditional stairs, including cast iron railings help to add unique features to this open layout. The addition of plenty of closest means storage is not a problem. All of these wonderful details are just three short flights up.
The building features a 421-a tax abatement. In addition to the tax abatement, there is a common roof deck only one flight up from this apartment. The building also features bike storage and close proximity to transportation. Get all the pluses of new construction without the additional closing costs.
(Um, that listing came written this way.)
So! Let's see what they mean by all that...
And it's $725,000 for 790 square feet ... for those of you into this kind of thing, that's $918 per square foot... which seems like a lot for a space adjacent to a 3.84 acre city housing project.
Icy, Icy Baby
As The Feed noted the other day, NYC Icy is making a return to the East Village ... after Avenue B between Second and Third Streets a few years back.... team Icy is opening up a temp space on Avenue A next to Black Market.... and, as this photo by EV Grieve reader Steven Matthews shows... NYC Icy opened yesterday...

And they have a chocolate-bacon flavor. Urp.

And they have a chocolate-bacon flavor. Urp.
"Sex and the City 2" ads make empty building look better empty
Noted

An EV Grieve reader shared this with me the other day... it's a writeup on Avenue A's newest full liquor license...:
Take a date for upscale Mexican at Avenue A's dark and sultry Diablo Royale Este.
You'll feel like you've entered a Robert Rodriguez flick stocked with skinny girls in skinnier heels instead of vampires.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Blue vs. White on Avenue A
EV Grieve reader Shawn Chittle passed along this link earlier today... he has a good vantage point to see the dueling productions of "The Smurfs Movie" and "White Collar" ....
Smurfs, White Collar filming on Avenue A Alphabet City Lower East Side Manhattan from Shawn Chittle on Vimeo.
Avenue A by the numbers
While walking north on Avenue A starting at Houston, I counted the number of storefronts. I decided to break the storefronts down into five categories:
1) Restaurants/pizza places/coffee shops (including places that serve alcohol, but where food is usually thought of first)
2) Bars
3) Mom-and-pop shops (questionable usage of that term, for sure, but I'm couting these as dry cleaners, bodegas, liquor stores, tattoo shops, laundromats, psychic readers, etc.)
4) Empty storefronts
5) Regular old businesses (Key Food, Citibank, the more higher-end speciality shops)
And here's what I counted (numbers could be off by one or two...I got distracted a few times...but they're pretty accurate):
Mom-and-pop shops: 39
Bars: 31
Restaurants/pizza shops/coffee shops: 28
Empty storefronts: 18
Businesses: 16
Now, you can quibble with these categories and numbers. For instance, would you consider Sidewalk a bar or restaurant? Or both? I put it in the restaurant category. Ditto for Yerba Buena on Seventh and A. And many of the restaurants also serve at least beer or wine. I'm not sure about a few places, like Ost Cafe on 12th and A.
So, there are plenty of places to get a drink on Avenue A... and there would have at least been one more addition if El Camion had been approved Monday at the CB3/LA meeting.
And for some reason I took photos of 16 places that serve beer or wine above 10th Street on Avenue A ... several of which I like. (I wanted to be clear that this wasn't some sort of condemnation of bars.)
I included the empty space that El Camion wanted at 12th and A... plus the fish market/restaurant that will be opening some time next to Hi-Fi.












Anyway, if my shoddy math skills are working... Of the 132 storefronts on Avenue A:
30% are mom-and-pop shops
23% are bars
21% are restaurants/cafes/pizza shops
14% are empty
12% are businesses
Previously on EV Grieve:
There are 21 empty storefronts along Avenue A
1) Restaurants/pizza places/coffee shops (including places that serve alcohol, but where food is usually thought of first)
2) Bars
3) Mom-and-pop shops (questionable usage of that term, for sure, but I'm couting these as dry cleaners, bodegas, liquor stores, tattoo shops, laundromats, psychic readers, etc.)
4) Empty storefronts
5) Regular old businesses (Key Food, Citibank, the more higher-end speciality shops)
And here's what I counted (numbers could be off by one or two...I got distracted a few times...but they're pretty accurate):
Mom-and-pop shops: 39
Bars: 31
Restaurants/pizza shops/coffee shops: 28
Empty storefronts: 18
Businesses: 16
Now, you can quibble with these categories and numbers. For instance, would you consider Sidewalk a bar or restaurant? Or both? I put it in the restaurant category. Ditto for Yerba Buena on Seventh and A. And many of the restaurants also serve at least beer or wine. I'm not sure about a few places, like Ost Cafe on 12th and A.
So, there are plenty of places to get a drink on Avenue A... and there would have at least been one more addition if El Camion had been approved Monday at the CB3/LA meeting.
And for some reason I took photos of 16 places that serve beer or wine above 10th Street on Avenue A ... several of which I like. (I wanted to be clear that this wasn't some sort of condemnation of bars.)
I included the empty space that El Camion wanted at 12th and A... plus the fish market/restaurant that will be opening some time next to Hi-Fi.
Anyway, if my shoddy math skills are working... Of the 132 storefronts on Avenue A:
30% are mom-and-pop shops
23% are bars
21% are restaurants/cafes/pizza shops
14% are empty
12% are businesses
Previously on EV Grieve:
There are 21 empty storefronts along Avenue A
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