Friday, February 11, 2011

Outside Lil' Frankie's, carrot toppled



On First Avenue near First Street last night. Photos courtesy of EV Grieve reader Anna. And we have no idea what was going on here... which makes it all the more entertaining...

[Publisher's note: We are limiting commenter Marty Wombacher to five bad carrot puns.]

Neon still burns brightly at the Blarney Stone

The Blarney Stone, an EV Grieve favorite down on Fulton Street, closed nearly one year ago... And the neon still has it going back on the former bar's Ann Street entrance...


"For lease" signs still adorn the front gate.

Previously on EV Grieve:
A fond farewell to the Blarney Stone

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Guiding light


A little bit ago ... Courtesy of EV Grieve Contributor Bobby Williams

Noted


Second Avenue and Fourth Street.

Union Market makes their East Village move official with an Official News Release!

Thanks to a blogging friend for the following release...


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Union Market to Open First Manhattan Location at 240 East Houston Street

BROOKLYN, Feb 10th, 2011 –-Brooklyn’s Union Market is set to open a new store location at 240 East Houston Street at Avenue A, bringing their experience-centered brand of grocery stores to it’s new Manhattan customers. The location is at the intersection of the East Village, and the Lower East Side.

Opening next fall, the store will bring Union Market’s unique approach and first-rate selection of goods to the borough of Manhattan for the first time since the store was founded in 2004. With its personal, convenient, and locally focused shopping experience, Union Market at Houston Street will offer all the high quality service and products that Manhattanites expect, with the personal touch of a neighborhood grocery store.

The new store at Houston Street will build upon sustainable business practices established at the LEED registered Court Street store. Union Market stocks organic, local and all-natural products, and will continue the stores’ established reputation as a customer first grocery store that offers superior goods at competitive prices.

Previously on EV Grieve:
About Union Market coming to Avenue A and Houston

EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition


Is the Bowery Ballroom getting an Irish bar next door? (The Lo-Down)

Some people in NYC have leprosy (Runnin' Scared)

LG Optimus Black receives Keith Haring graffiti makeover (Shiny Shiny)

Comparing and contrasting "Mean Streets" and the Feast battle today (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)

Sunday evening at the Mars Bar (The Gog Log)

Ugly new Delancey building getting a — faint! — kitchen supply store on the ground level (BoweryBoogie)

Remembering the Cedar Tavern on such a winter's day (Flaming Pablum)

Why some Stuy Town residents may smell, be constipated (Lux Living)

More on annoying foodie types (Grub Street)

A link between diet soda consumption and an increased risk of strokes and heart attacks (Gothamist)

More news from the latest CB2/SLA meeting (Eater)

And we have another exclusive new track from the forthcoming Strokes record:

229 E. Second St. is sold out, and look at the roof deck!

Lordy it has been 13 months since we last looked at 229 E. Second St. between Avenue B and Avenue C...

You remember that it went from this...



to this...



At last look, the building's prices had been reduced anywhere from 10 to 20 percent. Well, that worked. According to Streeteasy, all the units have been sold. But! Don't despair... there is one unit available as a rental: A two-bedroom, floor-through loft with a soaking tub and "and floor-to-ceiling closets that will hold the largest of wardrobes!" Priced to rent at $6,800.

Meanwhile, the roof deck was one of the things about 229 that intrigued us. We just saw glimpses of it from the street.



But we found a few photos at various sites...



Complete with priceless renderings...



Hot tubbing!


Finally, according to the DOB, the ground floor will be used for a community facility. Will they have hot tub access?

Previously on EV Grieve:
Million dollar condos hit the market on East Second Street

229 E. Second St. sprouts a roof deck

Cutting condo prices by 20 percent on East Second Street

Back at the Marble Cemetery

Our Bobby Williams happened by the New York City Marble Cemetery again yesterday on East Second Street ... This time, a lone worker was shoveling the lawn... Bobby says he yelled twice to the worker, but the man did not look up... We're just a little curious to learn more what was happening here.



Gothamist got the scoop yesterday. (By calling? Who knew they had a phone at the cemetery...) Cemetery officials say there will soon be a burial there, and crews are preparing the lawn for the ceremony.

I'm fascinated by the history here at this rather crumbling green oasis. (Read more about it here.) You may also search interments listed by vault here.

The future and past of 264 Bowery

Back in July, I sat through a CB2 meeting ... where 264 Bowery was on the agenda that night... a group of slicksters were hoping to turn the vacant space into a club tapas bar that would serve food until 3:30 a.m. The working name: Bowery Row.

The committee rejected that one. (Read more on it here.)

I was reminded of this yesterday while reading Eater's coverage of Tuesday's CB2 meeting. Another proposal was on the docket for 264 Bowery: Two fellows hoping to open English Road, a bourbon bar with southern food. They stated upfront that "we are not a club, just a bar" without any TVs. They'd be open until 4 a.m., have DJs ... and the lawyer mentioned how good the soundproofing was. As Eater noted, the info packet for English Road mentioned their security plan was "Chuck Norris approved."

The neighbors loved this! And CB2 denied the English Road request.

(BoweryBoogie has more on the history of 264 Bowery.)

Now I drift off again into lala land ... I wonder if 264 Bowery would/could ever be turned back into what it was in the 1930s.... a barber shop that didn't serve drinks or double as a clothing store...


Tri-boro Barber School photographed on Oct. 24, 1935. [Via the NYPL]

The Bowery is the fourth most dangerous street in Manhattan

The Tri-State Transportation Campaign released a report on "the most dangerous roads for pedestrians" in the area yesterday. According to the report (via the Times), 109 pedestrians were killed on Manhattan streets from 2007-2009. In total, there were seven fatalities on the Bowery — putting it at fourth place in the city...


The report includes a map showing each roadway death... here's a shot of the LES...


You can find the whole report here.

Haters call Shep Fairey a 'buttmunch' on the Bowery


Make that a "commie buttmunch." The worst kind of buttmunch?

At Fourth Street.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

At the star-studded secret Strokes show?

Twitter is alive with reports of the new Strokes single. This isn't it. Something about the clothes and hair though... I think the Strokes owe it all to Leif Garrett.