Thursday, April 14, 2011

Bowery beef

A few minutes apart this evening ...

...outside DBGB...


...and Billy's...

$2,500 reward for Harry, who needs his meds


Melanie took this shot and posted at East Village Corner...

And here's another view of a Harry flyer via Bobby Williams...

What the hole in the ground at 250 Bowery will look like


The Post has the story today. The address, south of Houston, will be "a residential building with roughly 84 feet of store frontage. The 24 condo units, a mix of one- and two-bedrooms, will be on floors three through eight, and there will also be a penthouse level. The one-bedrooms will run around 850 to 900 square feet, the two-bedrooms around 1,100 to 1,200 square feet."

BoweryBoogie has been following the story all along. Catch some of his earlier posts on the project.

[H/T Curbed]

You chance to discuss bike lanes tonight


At St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery ... I hope the Post wasn't invited to cover this!

Will 35 Cooper Square get the St. Ann's treatment?


What if developer Arun Bhatia decides to placate members of the community by keeping part of the structure intact? Much like NYU did by incorporating the façade of St. Ann's into the entrance of the 12th Street dorm.

Goggla mentioned this yesterday in the comments about 35 Cooper Square: "I wonder if something similar could happen here where the façade (or some replica of it) gets 'preserved' purely for decoration."

Would this be a victory? Or is it worse to see the daily reminder of what was entombed around a soulless, glassy tower?

Or, better, 35 Cooper Square could remain, and the mystery project is built around the historic structure... similar to how the Cooper Square Hotel went up next door to the home of Hettie Jones...

[Image via Jeremiah's Vanishing NY]

[Top image via]

Also at 35 Cooper Square: A 'failure to comply' notice

We spotted this new "notice of violation and hearing" taped up to the plywood...


Per the notice:



So from this document, it appears that people can still access the building at "lower roof of property" (That's YOU, Cooper Square Hotel!), just like Runnin' Scared noted two months ago.

Plus! That ongoing issue: the roof is exposed to the elements. A hearing on the matter is set for June 1, according to the document. Just six more weeks of spring rain.

Extra Place fit for Wonder Woman

Yesterday, EV Grieve Superheroine Correspondent Bobby Williams caught part of a photo shoot in Extra Place off the Bowery for what a crew member said was a promo for "the new Wonder Woman movie."

Hmm, well, NBC has a pilot in production for the fall... Anyway, who cares! Look, tiny shorts like Lynda Carter wore!



MTA makes nice

Last Friday, we discussed the story of East Village artist (and EV Grieve commenter) VH McKenzie, who received a letter from an unpaid MTA intern asking her to stop selling her oil paintings on discarded MetroCards subway cards. (She has for sale in her Etsy shop.)

The story made the rounds, from WPIX to The Wall Street Journal.

So all this has ended well. First, as she wrote, her 18 paintings sat "barely noticed and certainly unsold for three months. Until the MTA ordered me to stop 'selling them.'"

She sold them all in less than 24 hours after the attention from the intern's letter.

As she writes on her blog ... VH received a nice email from Mark Heavey, Chief of Marketing and Advertising for the MTA, asking that she: 

...simply change the listing on Etsy to read something like “Original hand-painted art on a NY transit fare card,” and refrain from using an image of an original, unpainted MetroCard in the listing, you may continue to do what you are doing.”

Her response?

Done, Mark. Actually, I did that last week and the Intern still indicated that I should make arrangements for a licensing agreement. ... I pointed out to Mr. Heavey that I had turned the somewhat sour lemon of his unpaid intern’s  “cease and desist” letter into a rather sweet, refreshing citrus beverage.

He wrote:

I wish you continued success with your “fare card art” project… the media does love a good David vs. Goliath story ... Continue to make lemonade.

Meanwhile, she is now working on more MetroCard used subway card paintings to fulfill her requests. 

P.S.
Props to Esquared who helped get the story rolling at Nonetheless.

P.S.S.
Our friend Jen Doll also has an update on this at Runnin' Scared...

Changes in store for Casimir on Avenue B?


Casimir, the French bistro on Avenue B near Seventh Street, was on Monday's CB3/SLA agenda for a transfer. Our friends at East Village Eats have learned that owner Guillaume Blestel has sold the restaurant. EV Eats talked with some of the employees this past weekend "and not much is known about the new owner." One piece of info: Turns out that the new owner is also behind Midtown East-based restaurant/lounge comboLéa.

Never heard of it. Per New York magazine:

Small tables house an after-work crowd early in the evening, enjoying better-than-average bar fare from the kitchen, including sushi, bruschetta, and crab cakes. As the night wears on, the darkness deepens and the music—contemporary hip-hop and house beats that don't quite fit the lounge-y décor gets louder.

Anyway, no word yet if the new owner plans to keep things the same or turn the place into another Midtown East outpost... like too many other places already around here.

Personal Affairs closing on Seventh Street


Personal Affairs, the German-based boutique on Seventh Street between Avenue A and First Avenue, is closing after 11 years. Paper & String reports that the closing could come as early as Sunday.

And the tough times continue for vintage clothing stores and boutiques...

Previously on EV Grieve:
East Village vintage stores doomed?

More vintage doom: Beauty Crisis is closing

Other closings:

The song remains the same: Physical Graffiti latest thrift store to shutter

Atomic Passion has closed

Monk Thrift Shop on Avenue B

Atomic Passion on Ninth Street

O Mistress Mine on 11th Street

Andy's Chee-Pees on St. Mark's Place

Fab 208 is moving into a smaller space on Seventh Street


[Image via]

The Bowery Wars take to the streets!

From the EV Grieve inbox...

Downtown Art presents The Bowery Wars, Part 1, original music theater of NYC's turbulent past, performed in the streets, April 30-May 22.

In 1903, Tammany Hall burns to retake city hall, while on the streets of the Lower East Side the battle for control of the Bowery between the Five Pointers and the Eastmans explodes in the worst gunfight New York had ever seen. The Bowery Wars, an epic told in two parts, weaves into these historical events the story of two immigrant teens, Romeo and Juliet.

New York City's history is our shared inheritance. The Bowery Wars looks at our city a hundred years ago, when the Lower East Side was the densest place on earth, and poses questions about the will to survive in the face of hardship and violence.

Hope to see you there!!

Actors: Lily Abedin, Michael Andrew, Zen Anton, Alyssa Burgos, Lauren Burgos, Oscar Hallas, Robby Jenkins, Tatiana Jorio, Jarrett Jung, Jeanne Kessira, Geri Kirilova, India Kotis, Alma Moos Nunez, Alice Quinn Makwaia, Max Molishever, Jasai Chase Owens, Jake Paganakis, Shawn Suggs, and Erin Wells

Musicians: Matthew Burgos, Mike Emmerich, Michael Hickey, Zachary Lewellyn, Eugene Rivera

Go here for tix and location.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011