Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Ham radio operator irking neighbors with 30-foot antenna on East 11th Street

We've heard people complain about everything from bar noise to messy willow trees... so here's a first: Some neighbors on East 11th Street are upset over a resident's giant rooftop antenna. As Patrick Hedlund reports at DNAinfo, a group of residents are hoping the city will force the ham radio operator to have the antenna removed.

To an upset neighbor!

"Whenever we have guests over, they take one look at it and say, 'Oh my God, what is that?'" said Greg Ramsey, who's lived at 235 East 11th St. since 1988 and whose outdoor terraces sits about 12 feet away from the antenna. "It's like a military installation or something. It just seems extremely selfish to have this huge tower for one man to be running his ham radio from. It's obtrusive and inappropriate."

The tenant, who grew up in the building between Second Avenue and Third Avenue, told Hedlund that the antenna allows him to communicate with radio operators worldwide. "It was put up professionally and it's been approved," he said. "I didn't do anything in a precarious manner."

Read the whole article here.

[Photo by Patrick Hedlund/DNAinfo]

EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition


Former staffers at a Mars Bar farewell party Monday night (Nadie Se Conoce ... See also: Vivienne Gucwa's MB photo essay)

Case sheds light into Bloomy's last re-election campaign. Which doesn't make the Mayor too happy (City Room)

How the city makes money off your frozen cars (Runnin' Scared)

From Tribeca to the East Village in 2:11 minutes (NYC Taxi Photo — now with video!)

More on the LCD Soundsystem line — with video! (BoweryBoogie)

More on Friday Night Throwdown in the LES (The Lo-Down)

Looking at 'The Penguin Pool Murder' (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)

CB2 weighs in on some bars sort of near you (Eater)

Doughnut Plant opening in the Chelsea Hotel (Diner's Journal)

The return of East River Pipe (Village Voice)

About all those people bundled up in line now on Houston and Ludlow

The phone lines are going batty with calls about that long line stretching from in front of the Mercury Lounge around the corner and down Ludlow.

Well!

These folks are waiting in line for the last LCD Soundsystem show ever ... on April 2 at Madison Square Garden. The Mercury Lounge box office opens at 10 for general admission tickets.

And The Village Voice's @VoiceStreet is among those brave, yet frozen souls in line. Despite numb, frozen fingers, they are doing their best at live tweeting. And they sent these photos...



And EV Grieve reader Michael sent along this photo..


Reminds me of the time I waited in line to see Frampton at the Garden in '79.

Well, not really...

Anyway, it's getting ugly...

About the hole in ground at the Marble Cemetery

Here we are at the Marble Cemetery on East Second Street...EV Grieve contributor Bobby Williams took these shots yesterday ... he noted the activity, though no one was around to ask things like What in God's name is going on here!



Regardless, please don't let your overactive, sensationalist minds think this is something about, say, grave robbing or zombies or explosives ... We're certain there's a logical explanation for this... Like!

a) Routine cemetery maintenance
b) A new theme bar called Lucky Stiffs
c) Hyperlocal blogger misunderstands the expression "digging for a story"
d) Death + Company is moving
e) Longtime tenants forced out by rent hike
f) Shake Shack

Or maybe you have a better idea...

[Updated: Thanks to Gothamist for the link... and some answers!]

East Fourth Street's new luxury row

We've been focusing our attention of late on the preservation efforts at 35 Cooper Square... Meanwhile, we haven't checked in at the scene of another battle — 326-328 E. Fourth St. — in several weeks.

Despite a lot of outreach and awareness by a variety of local politicians and preservations groups, the historic townhouses here between Avenue C and Avenue D continue their journey toward the luxury condo apartment afterlife with the addition of two new floors.

Since we last looked, workers erected the sidewalk sheds...




And you can see right through now... not much is left inside. Workers have removed the guts.


However, the work on this block isn't limited to 326-328. There's also a sidewalk shed in front of 322.



According to a newly renewed work permit:

Interior renovation of existing apartments, including addition of one floor and penthouse; including structural, plumbing and mechanical work.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Historic East Fourth Street artists' collective soon to be condos

Two side-by-side townhouses on East Fourth Street await your renovation

City doesn't give a shit about these historic East Village townhouses

Looking at the sidewalk shed and dumpster at 35 Cooper Square

Speaking of sidewalk sheds... Jeremiah first reported last Friday that work was starting at 35 Cooper Square...

So I took a few photos for my files...



Roland Li at Real Estate Weekly got a quote from a spokesperson for the building's developer: "They are removing asbestos in the roof...and they took down the awning."

The DOB permits point to "minor facade work."

Which may or may not explain the presence of an empty dumpster sitting in the sinkhole adjacent to 35 Cooper Square last evening ...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Something 28,998 square feet or so coming to Cooper Square (and goodbye Cooper 35 Asian Pub?)

Doom and doomer: More of Cooper Square primed for development

Cooper 35 Asian Pub part of development deal on Cooper Square

Going southbound

Looking south on Second Avenue toward Seventh Street... with the Fillmore East in the background. April 1972.


[Sal Traina/Corbis]

A record-setting sale at 221 First Avenue


Massey Knakal sent out a news release yesterday about the sale of 221 First Avenue between 13th Street and 14th Street for $4.4 million. The buyer and seller weren't named.

According to the release:

The four-story property is approximately 3,954 square feet and sits on a 22’ x 56’ lot. There are three fully renovated three-bedroom apartments that are free market. The 1,050 square foot retail unit on the ground floor is currently leased to Señor Pollo, a Latin American chicken and sandwich bistro. The 3 floor-through apartments which rent on average for $4,900 per month benefit from fireplaces, exposed brick, and either a private roof deck or large terrace. The property also benefits from its close proximity to transportation, shopping, dinning and parks. The sale price equates to $1,112.80 per square foot.

This sale represents the highest price per square foot ever paid for a mixed-use investment property in the East Village,” said Massey Knakal Vice Chairman John F. Ciraulo ...

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

[Updated] NYPD assists abandoned dog in Tompkins Square Park

Earlier this evening, police were in Tompkins Square Park to attend to a dog that had apparently been abandoned on Crusty Row.


One witness said the dog's owner tied up the pooch and never returned... another witness said the dog was tied up for two hours before someone called the police.


No word on the owner... and, unfortunately, I didn't hear what kind of dog this is...

[Updated: Ah, Bob Arihood has a photo of the dog right here.]

Today in Hells Angels bench coverage

The Post has a follow-up on our Hells Angels bench story from yesterday (and they did credit EV Grieve in the story — thank you!).


Here's the article, in part:

Not even tourists are intimidated by the Hells Angels anymore.
The once-menacing motorcycle club has been unable to keep people from sitting on its beloved bench outside its East Village headquarters.
A sign stating "Private Property" failed to keep guests at neighboring hotels from taking a seat, so a few weeks ago, the club finally installed a yellow metal bar and lock across the bench that only members can open with a key, noted the Web blog EV Grieve.
The only hogs the club cares about more than their Harleys are the folks who lounge on their bench, said Mario Cornejo, manager of Sanctuary Guest Suites, one of two hotels neighboring the Angels' East Third Street den.
"They really care about their bench," he said.
The hotel urges guests not to use it, even posting its own signs in the lobby, he said.
Members of the club — apparently now as gentrified as the rest of the East Village — declined to comment.

No word yet if the Angels are planning their next rally at 1211 Avenue of the Americas.

Report: Gunman robs the Blarney Cove

From today's NYPD Daily Blotter in the Post (not yet online): A "gun-toting bandit" made off with about $1,000 after robbing the Blarney Cove on East 14th Street. The report doesn't say what day this happened, only that it was at 4:30 a.m. "He ordered the bartender to the back, stole cash from a register and fled," according to the report.

East Fifth bliss? Looking at the new apartments at 343 E. Fifth St.


Last March, I wrote about 343 E. Fifth St., the apartment building between First Avenue and Second Avenue that inspired the novel "East Fifth Bliss" (and coming soon to a theater near you...).

The gut renovations of the former railcar apartments are apparently done, and some of the dorm rooms units are on the market from our good friends at 9300 Realty/Croman Real Estate Inc. Let's take a look at what's available starting March 1.


To help attract the usual high-paying, quick-turnover renters in the market for three- and four-bedroom apartments, they'll even toss in a free month's rent.


There are all sorts of stories about the tenants — many of whom lived here for decades — being forced out here. A lot of it was hearsay, of course.

Last March, "East Fifth Bliss" author Douglas Light, who lived at 343 E. Fifth St. for several years, told me in an e-mail:

"My wife actually ran into an old tenant from there ... and he was telling her some wild stories about $250k buy-out offers (which he turned down, of course), arson by the building owner (to flush-out the remaining hold-outs), and the police cuffing and perp-walking the owner out of the building. As for the validity of the stories I can't say. This is the same guy who believed my wife was a spy that the owner planted in the building to keep tabs on everyone."

Anyway, speaking of the movie — starring Michael C. Hall, Lucy Liu, Peter Fonda and Slum Goddess — it's done. You can watch a trailer for it on Facebook. The dramatic comedy was filmed around the neighborhood, so there's plenty of locations to recognize...

Previously on EV Grieve:
About the building that inspired the novel "East Fifth Bliss"

Q-and-A with 'East Fifth Bliss' author Douglas Light