Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Something sweet from Something Sweet for free today



EV Grieve First Avenue correspondent Blue Glass notes that Something Sweet at 11th Street will be giving out a free small dessert today between 1 and 3... good chance to sample a neighborhood staple...

UPDATE: Oh, per the comments, I didn't know this was so widespread, this dessert giveaway. Here are more details.

Spreading the fear of bed bugs to the F train




Thanks to our friend AWKWORDrap for these shots....

Hurry! Listing for the last of the Allen Ginsberg apartments goes live this morning



Given how much interest there was the last time around... Dmitry Daniel Kramp at City Connections Realty tells me that the listing will be live this morning. It will appear at Streeteasy later. $1,875 for a renovated one bedroom.... More info here on the history.


Previously on EV Grieve:
Allen Ginsberg's former 12th Street apartment now on the market

Allen Ginsberg's former apartment quickly rented

Facing mounting criticism from neighbors, Sin Sin puts up a new neon sign




Late yesterday afternoon. That should sooth over all the tensions....



Previously on EV Grieve:
'The neighborhood will not rest until you are gone and Sin Sin’s license is revoked'

NYPD hosting meeting between Sin Sin and neighbors tonight

East Village noise wars new battlefront: Sin Sin/Leopard Lounge

Why the president of the East Fifth Street Block Association carries a baseball bat

Did Mayor Bloomberg kill Moroccan restaurant's business?

Sintir on East Ninth Street between Avenue A and First Avenue is now officially gutted...



After some neighborhood opposition, the Moroccan eatery/lounge opened in May 2009... it was run by the Marrakech-born Hassan Hakmoun, considered the Jerry Garcia of the sintir in his native country....

Anyway, the place looked cute enough....Despite some so-so early reviews, I wanted to give it a try...



...and every time I walked by, I saw the photos of Hakmoun prominently displayed on the restaurant's front window...posed next to Mayor Bloomberg....



These were the only two photos up... no Katz's-like Wall of Fame or anything...

"Maybe he doesn't realize that having a photo of Mayor Bloomberg in the front window in this neighborhood isn't really a selling point," Mrs. Grieve helpfully said after I decided that I really didn't want to try it. Always wondered if anyone else felt the same...

World's long private party almost over: Rhong Tiam is returning!

The space formerly known as Rhong Tiam on Fifth Street and Second Avenue was all lit up last night... as if it was — open!



The space is being cleaned up.... and some of the garish fixtures have been moved around...





I asked a worker if they were reopening. He said no. Then he said a new place would be open next month.

As Grub Street reported last month:

"Andy Yang tells us he has closed the East Village outpost of Rhong Tiam. “It was a miscalculation,” he says of its predecessor Kurve, with its infamous Karim Rashid design." He's also considering whether to remodel it (bringing the kitchen upstairs) and reopen it with a less off-putting décor, or to simply let go of the space.


Looks as if he is going the remodeling route.

In: The dungeon look

We previously noted the new Korzo Haus's decor on Seventh Street near Avenue B....



And now, the Chico plywood outside the coming-soon Korean fried chicken/jazz club has come down on Fourth Street near First Avenue.... at least in the dark, it looked a little dungeony....

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

New community garden rules lack preservation, permanence



Above, Esperanza Community Garden bulldozed in February 2000 on Seventh Street near Avenue C to make way for the East Village Gardens condo.



Time's Up! has released a statement on the city's new garden rules:

The same week the Parks Department cut down 56 trees to make way for Fashion Week, the City released new garden regulations with almost no notice, no community support, and no commitment to permanently preserve the community gardens. Despite overwhelming community support to preserve our parks and community gardens, the City's new rules fail to protect them, and in fact expose each and every one to transfer and development. New Yorkers love their parks and community gardens and for years have fought to protect them, preserve them and keep them open to the public. These green spaces play a vital role in the mental, physical and emotional health of our City's residents and play an ever increasingly important role in our City's environmentally sustainable future.

Importantly, the new rules violate the City’s 2002 agreement with the Attorney General. The City has ignored the permanent status of 198 gardens and has not done a State Environmental Quality Review of the gardens, both required under the 2002 Settlement Agreement

Under the new rules, you can lose your garden for a myriad of reasons — noise complaints, incidents that occur adjacent to gardens, and or failure to maintain "good standing". Gardens can now go into accelerated default for breaking any city, state or federal rules, or failing to renew their license, or registration.

These new rules police the gardens and chill the community’s ability to hold events. Already, gardens are reluctant to hold events for fear of noise complaints. Under the new rules, you can go into accelerated default for playing guitar and having a beer, yet you can enjoy a glass of wine on the great lawn in Central Park while listening to an orchestra.

The new rules establish a division between gardens in good and bad standing, establishing a mechanism for the hyper-regulation and control of public space. Before these new rules, you just needed a license, now if you do not have one, your garden can be bulldozed.


Read the rest here.

Meanwhile, enjoy the city demolishing various community gardens...

Landmarks Preservation Commission saves Jesus Saves church on 11th Street



Tonight, the Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) gave three nearby structures landmark status, amNY reports.

As the paper reported, LPC Chairman Robert Tierney said the buildings tell stories of the immigrant life in New York’s past. “These buildings collectively speak to many aspects of the immigrant experience in the East Village and on the Lower East Side in the 19th and early 20th centuries,” he said.

The three new landmarked buildings:

• 97 Bowery

• Loew’s Canal Street Theatre at 31 Canal St. (The Lo-Down has more on this.)

• The Eleventh Street Methodist Episcopal Chapel (above) on 11th Street between Avenues A and B that now houses the Father’s Heart Ministry Center. (Read about the church's history here.)

A good day for...

...some time in the Liz Christy Garden Community Garden off Houston and the Bowery, where EV Grieve contributor Blue Glass was earlier....





Last one of Allen Ginsberg's former apartments ready to hit the market



Another one of Allen Ginsberg's former apartments at 437 E. 12th St. (he had three units there) is ready to hit the market, The Real Deal reports. This one will be going for $1,875 per month. The unit will be ready Oct. 1. Here are the details.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Allen Ginsberg's former 12th Street apartment now on the market

Allen Ginsberg's former apartment quickly rented

[Photo via The Real Deal]

The East Village starts at the filth



EV Grieve reader Joe notes that crews just painted the bike lanes on Second Avenue north of 14th Street... and the new green paint inexplicably stops 10 feet south of 14th.