Friday, April 8, 2011
Flowers for Cornell
Cornell Edwards, who opened The Flower Stall at 143 E. 13th St. in 1967, recently passed away... and people have been coming by and leaving flowers and drawings in his honor...
Monkey business
EV Grieve reader Deb K. passed along this piece of art by UK underground graffiti artist Bortusk Leer ... spotted somewhere on East Ninth Street...
251 E. 13th St. getting Milk Barred?
As Eater has reported, Momofuku Milk Bar applied for a liquor license at 251 E. 13th St. across the street from the current Milk Bar location. Per Eater: "The folks at Momo Milk are considering taking up the space, for an expansion or to move the operation."
The CB3/SLA committed approved an MBII license in February. "When the committee questioned the need for a bakery to have a full liquor license, representatives eloquently spoke out about their need being mainly for baking purposes, and for a boozy milkshake. They would simply serve two types of beer for patrons who did not wish to have dessert," Eater reported.
So apparently the MB11 team is moving forward with plans to expand. On Wednesday, workers arrived and removed the old hair-salon canopy from the 251 storefront.
The DOB issued work permits for "replacement of storefront" last week.
The CB3/SLA committed approved an MBII license in February. "When the committee questioned the need for a bakery to have a full liquor license, representatives eloquently spoke out about their need being mainly for baking purposes, and for a boozy milkshake. They would simply serve two types of beer for patrons who did not wish to have dessert," Eater reported.
So apparently the MB11 team is moving forward with plans to expand. On Wednesday, workers arrived and removed the old hair-salon canopy from the 251 storefront.
The DOB issued work permits for "replacement of storefront" last week.
Iconic blizzard bike gone missing
This iconic photo became one of the iconic shots of the iconic Blizzard of Dec. 26, 2010....


A little later ...

And now! EV Grieve reader AC notes that the bike has gone missing...
Perhaps just taking out to get a seat....?
Previously on EV Grieve:
Exclusive: Q-and-A with the bike that became an iconic symbol of the 2010 Holiday Blizzard

A little later ...
And now! EV Grieve reader AC notes that the bike has gone missing...
Perhaps just taking out to get a seat....?
Previously on EV Grieve:
Exclusive: Q-and-A with the bike that became an iconic symbol of the 2010 Holiday Blizzard
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Under St. Marks featured on NY1 today
Find the story here.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Horse Trade Theater Group launches campaign to buy 94 St. Mark's Place
[H/T to @mbrosen]
[Updated] April 7
Rob D. spotted this on Houston today between Avenue A and Avenue B. And how about that newspaper for verification? "Didn't have a paper handy so I used my Petopia receipt. Hope it suffices in the eyes of the coalition."
Hmmm...
Via Skype, I spoke with an International Coalition of Tree Tossing in the Spring (ICTTS) official who is currently investigating the authenticity of a 300-year-old tree found in Frankfurt (Germany). After hearing the explanation, the official said, "The Coalition respects and appreciates Rob's resourcefulness. There is something rather MacGyver-like about this. Of course we are also big Richard Dean Anderson fans."
Meanwhile, one reader thought that using a newspaper for verification purposes was a little "old fashioned" given that no one reads newspapers anymore. The reader asked if someone could use the front page of The Daily on an iPad instead.
The short answer, via the ICTTS: No.
Updated: Interesting development... EV Grieve reader Josh has now come forward with a similar sighting ...
But.
"Took a picture, but like Rob, no newspaper proof that it was today. If you look at the file name, which is generated by date and time, you get some solid proof! I don't care about this to the extent I would go changing file names... or do I?"
We're now sending this via a Coalition-immunity pouch to the ICTTS lab at or around Langley.
Hmmm...
Via Skype, I spoke with an International Coalition of Tree Tossing in the Spring (ICTTS) official who is currently investigating the authenticity of a 300-year-old tree found in Frankfurt (Germany). After hearing the explanation, the official said, "The Coalition respects and appreciates Rob's resourcefulness. There is something rather MacGyver-like about this. Of course we are also big Richard Dean Anderson fans."
Meanwhile, one reader thought that using a newspaper for verification purposes was a little "old fashioned" given that no one reads newspapers anymore. The reader asked if someone could use the front page of The Daily on an iPad instead.
The short answer, via the ICTTS: No.
Updated: Interesting development... EV Grieve reader Josh has now come forward with a similar sighting ...
But.
"Took a picture, but like Rob, no newspaper proof that it was today. If you look at the file name, which is generated by date and time, you get some solid proof! I don't care about this to the extent I would go changing file names... or do I?"
We're now sending this via a Coalition-immunity pouch to the ICTTS lab at or around Langley.
EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition
[Photo by Bobby Williams]
There are a lot of rats on the Lower East Side (Daily News)
And what happens in 20 years, after ‘N.Y.U. 2031’? (The Villager)
St. Mark's Place streetscenes (Nadie Se Conoce)
About NYC's lack of growth (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
Who isn't a sucker for really big dogs? (BoweryBoogie)
Buy Tatum O'Neal's LES condo (Curbed)
Reading Allen Ginsberg’s Moloch (Patell and Waterman’s History of New York)
Not guilty plea in 14th Street parking assault case (The Local East Village)
New tenant for for former Cinema Nolita space on Mulberry? (NYC the Blog)
Edgar Allan Poe’s Upper West Side farmhouse (Ephemeral New York)
Macaulay Culkin stars in a bizarre new Adam Green film (NME)
Reminder: A Rally for Information Freedom this afternoon at City Hall. (More info here)
And Blue Glass noted that workers dismantled the exterior of Cafe Centosette on Second Avenue and 10th Street yesterday...
There are a lot of rats on the Lower East Side (Daily News)
And what happens in 20 years, after ‘N.Y.U. 2031’? (The Villager)
St. Mark's Place streetscenes (Nadie Se Conoce)
About NYC's lack of growth (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
Who isn't a sucker for really big dogs? (BoweryBoogie)
Buy Tatum O'Neal's LES condo (Curbed)
Reading Allen Ginsberg’s Moloch (Patell and Waterman’s History of New York)
Not guilty plea in 14th Street parking assault case (The Local East Village)
New tenant for for former Cinema Nolita space on Mulberry? (NYC the Blog)
Edgar Allan Poe’s Upper West Side farmhouse (Ephemeral New York)
Macaulay Culkin stars in a bizarre new Adam Green film (NME)
Reminder: A Rally for Information Freedom this afternoon at City Hall. (More info here)
And Blue Glass noted that workers dismantled the exterior of Cafe Centosette on Second Avenue and 10th Street yesterday...
Live like a model, for the most part, on Avenue B
In other really important news today.... Jennifer Gould Keil has this item in the Post real-estate section today:
Anyway, check out the listing.
The kitchen hardly looks used!
[Lily photo via]
You might not be equipped to become a supermodel, but you can live like one for $7,995 a month. Lily Donaldson, the striking face of Burberry, wants to rent out her uber-cool East Village two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment on Avenue B, directly overlooking Tompkins Square Park. And she seems motivated to make a deal — the price has just been reduced from $8,500. Donaldson, who has also worked for Dior, bought the 1,700-square-foot apartment for $2.2 million in 2008 — a hefty $1,294 per square foot in Alphabet City. Fit for a model, the master bedroom offers lots of closet space and a separate dressing area.
Anyway, check out the listing.
The kitchen hardly looks used!
[Lily photo via]
Discovery Wines moving to Avenue B
Discovery Wines is one of the businesses that will be displaced with the arrival of Union Market this fall on Houston and Avenue A. Discovery's lease is up on May 31.
However, we've learned that the store won't be going too far. Tim at Discovery Wines confirmed that they signed a lease for 16 Avenue B at the corner of Second Street.

"We're leaving 10 Avenue A at the end of May and, if all goes as planned, then we'll hit the ground running in June at the 16 Avenue B space," Tim said via email.
And perhaps some neighbors will be relieved to hear this news. Previously, two different restaurant-club hybrids had tried to open another bar at 14-16 Avenue B. (As you may recall, one venture called for a 3,000 square foot Italian restaurant, catering company and lounge "with an occasional D.J.")
The space at 14 Avenue B apparently remains on the market. Nail salon perhaps?
More on 14-16 Avenue B here.
More on Union Market here.
However, we've learned that the store won't be going too far. Tim at Discovery Wines confirmed that they signed a lease for 16 Avenue B at the corner of Second Street.
"We're leaving 10 Avenue A at the end of May and, if all goes as planned, then we'll hit the ground running in June at the 16 Avenue B space," Tim said via email.
And perhaps some neighbors will be relieved to hear this news. Previously, two different restaurant-club hybrids had tried to open another bar at 14-16 Avenue B. (As you may recall, one venture called for a 3,000 square foot Italian restaurant, catering company and lounge "with an occasional D.J.")
The space at 14 Avenue B apparently remains on the market. Nail salon perhaps?
More on 14-16 Avenue B here.
More on Union Market here.
More on the former Tonda space: breakfast and a celebrity pedigree
We've been curious about what's coming to the former Tonda space on East Fourth Street. Our previous queries were met with a "we're still in development ... no comment" from one of the principals.
The entity, currently known as 4AB, goes before the CB3/SLA committee on Monday. Turns out CB3 posted the questionnaire from the 4AB folks on the CB3 website.
Not a whole lot more details... However! Some interesting nuggets of info... Like, the plans call for one bar with 12 seats... And the hours of operation:
Monday-Thursday, Sunday: 7 a.m. — 2 a.m.
Friday and Saturday: 7 a.m. – 3 a.m.
What else... No TVs (or hookah pipes!) ... No DJ or bands... just "small, background speakers."
And at least one of the names of the applicants seems familiar...
Perhaps this is the same Byron Bates who worked as the GM of the one-time Chelsea hotspot Bette, the place owned by Amy Sacco that brought out the bold-faced names (Scarlett Johansson! George Clooney! Uma!). The place closed in June 2008.
Here's a piece on Bette from Diner's Journal.
And if this isn't the same Mr. Bates... well, see you Monday!
The entity, currently known as 4AB, goes before the CB3/SLA committee on Monday. Turns out CB3 posted the questionnaire from the 4AB folks on the CB3 website.
Not a whole lot more details... However! Some interesting nuggets of info... Like, the plans call for one bar with 12 seats... And the hours of operation:
Monday-Thursday, Sunday: 7 a.m. — 2 a.m.
Friday and Saturday: 7 a.m. – 3 a.m.
What else... No TVs (or hookah pipes!) ... No DJ or bands... just "small, background speakers."
And at least one of the names of the applicants seems familiar...
Perhaps this is the same Byron Bates who worked as the GM of the one-time Chelsea hotspot Bette, the place owned by Amy Sacco that brought out the bold-faced names (Scarlett Johansson! George Clooney! Uma!). The place closed in June 2008.
Here's a piece on Bette from Diner's Journal.
And if this isn't the same Mr. Bates... well, see you Monday!
[Updated] City makes McSorley's wipe away 100 years of history, remove Minnie McSorley
The dust busters at the DOH told McSorley's that management had to clean up the bar's famous wishbones, placed there by doughboys headed off to war...
Per Dan Barry's article at the Times:
So, with heavy heart, the proprietor, Matthew Maher, 70, climbed up a small ladder. With curatorial care, he took down the two-dozen dust-cocooned wishbones dangling on an old gas lamp above the storied bar counter. He removed the clouds of gray from each bone. Then he placed every one of the bones, save for those that crumbled at his touch, back onto the gas lamp — where, in the context of this dark and wonderful establishment, they are not merely the scrap remains of poultry, but holy relics.
And!
[T]imes have changed: old New York and new New York remain in conflict, and old New York is losing. For example, lounging cats had been a furry part of the McSorley fabric since Lincoln. But word recently came down from City Hall: no cats. A longtime regular, Minnie, has been barred as a result.
Save Minnie!

We reached out to Minnie via Facebook. She told us the following.
"I actually contacted Mr. Barry hoping he'd do a follow-up to his previous column on the wishbones. He asked about my current status, and I explained that Mr. Maher has said I'm not allowed into the bar during drinking hours...officially. Since the only heat I want coming down is from the stove, that's the fact as it must be reported and as we must maintain.
It's a sad turn of events about the bones."
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