
EVG Facebook friend Blazes passes along the news from our favorite corner store on Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place...
There is also a Candy the Gem Spa Kitten Facebook page if you are interested in adorable photos and videos of Candy.
Name: Zachary Mack
Occupation: Co-owner, Alphabet City (ABC) Beer Co.
Location: Avenue C between 6th and 7th.
Time: 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 16
I grew up in Massachusetts, north of Boston in a town called Swampscott. I left Boston for college when I went to McGill in Montreal. I came here when I was still in high school to visit friends and a lot of them would take us here. I had no desire to come to NYC until I came to this neighborhood. It got to the point where I started to spend my summers here instead of going back to Boston. Then when I graduated New York felt like the only logical place to move.
So the first thing I did when I graduated in 2007 was jump on a train from Boston and move here with $150 to my name. It sounds like a cliché but it was true — I had $148.70 in my bank account. My friend let me stay with her until I could find a job and an apartment. I gave myself two weeks and I found both. My first apartment was above In Vino and I’ve living in the neighborhood since then.
My first job here was for a food website called Eats that was trying to compete with Yelp. They let me do food writing for them and some sales. It was a catch-all job. The site eventually ended up becoming Delivery.com, but back then it wasn’t going anywhere. I moved here right before [the recession]. I had to pay my own way, so it was tough. The first few months were tough trying to make it without the pay that I thought I would have after college
My roommate at the time had just started the paperwork to purchase In Vino, an Italian restaurant and wine bar on East Fourth between A and B. I told him that I needed to make some extra money. I began working there right as the [Wall Street] collapse was happening.
Around 2010, when things started to look up a little bit, I ended up taking an internship, which led into a full-time job at Gawker Media. The job was a writing internship for Gawker TV, condensing what had happened on shows the night before and running recaps. That was big at the time — 2010 was the year when they went from being obscure to becoming more mainstream. The friends I made working there are the best friends I have now.
That turned into a job with the Webby Awards, which is kind of the Oscars for the Internet. For a couple of years I was working 70 to 80 hour weeks and still not making any money. Then I realized that I was maybe going down the wrong path. I had moved to New York wanting to work in media but it was killing me.
So the opportunity came. David Hitchner, my close friend who owned In Vino, called me one weekend and he said, ‘Do you want to open up a beer store/bar in the East Village?’ I said absolutely. It took about a year to plan everything and get money together. I was still working the day job while this was going on.
We opened in May 2012. I realized that I had made the right decision the first week that we were open. I like working in this neighborhood so much. I felt like I had been disconnected from the neighborhood when I was working in the office and this brought me back into interacting with people instead of staring at a screen all day.
The first few months were incredible. We were going along great, and then five and a half months later, Sandy happened. We got flooded — so much damage. In a weird way it was the worst thing that could have possibly happened but also one of the best things because we learned a lot from it. This neighborhood just totally stepped up and everybody helped each other so much. There was a lot of camaraderie on the street.
It didn’t seem like we would survive for a time and it was stressful but we got through it. Our basement flooded to the ceiling like a swimming pool, so we had to replace everything down there, from electrical systems to the hot water heater to our walk-in fridge with the draft lines. It took us at least four months to feel any semblance of normalcy.
We open up at noon every day. That’s one of the things that I enjoy most. A lot of the people who come in for daytime hours with laptops to do work, have a coffee or a beer with a sandwich and use the free WiFi. People come in here for all kinds of things. Not even just to have beers, to hang out. Some of our best regulars never come in after 6 p.m. Most people don’t have the luxury of having huge living rooms in the city, so what David and I wanted to go for was something that felt like an extension of your living room. There’s no pretense here. It’s just come and hang out.
I moved for the first time since I came here a couple months ago and I realized that I’m married to the neighborhood. I love the sense of community here and I think that’s why I’ve stuck around the city. I think we’re lucky to live in the middle of a neighborhood like this because we’re supportive of one another. We not only have people who have been here for 30-plus years, but also people who have been here for three who seem invested in the vibe that we create. I feel very lucky to be here.
Mendez: "The Former PS 64 CHARAS/El Bohio was a school building and a cultural community center that cultivated the hopes and dreams of so many people in our community. Community activists laid the seeds and the foundation that created our community gardens and our urban homesteading buildings while sitting in a room at CHARAS. This holiday season my community and I want nothing more than to get our building back."
Manhattan Borough President Gale A. Brewer: "Not too long ago, the CHARAS community center was an anchor that enriched this neighborhood, and with Mayor de Blasio's help it can be again. The Giuliani administration was wrong to shutter this community center and hand this historic space over to developers. The chance Mayor de Blasio has right now is one we rarely get: an opportunity to reclaim a lost jewel and make this neighborhood whole again."
Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez: "CHARAS was a cherished public space and I will continue to support my community in its efforts to reclaim the building for the
community!"
State Senator Brad Hoylman: "We have reached a critical point in the decades-long fight to reclaim the PS 64/CHARAS building for community use. However, we are still at risk of losing this valuable asset to unwanted and unnecessary development. I look forward to working with all stakeholders to help ensure that CHARAS truly benefits the neighborhood, instead of private interests."
"And [the owners] seriously and tenderly move them both as a group effort to accommodate alternate side of the street parking ... all I think about is what a marvelous time they are anticipating on the water once the weather turns. I find it fascinating and adorable."
This apartment has been virtually staged with a 3D animated video to show what this historic quintessential loft gem can be turned into. This the best deal in town! This unique downtown artist loft in an historic East Village building is finally available!
I personally know that this was an agonizing decision for the Streit family, who despite their many challenges, were determined to keep the factory and its workers employed onsite, even as the phone rang daily with offers from developers clamoring to purchase the valuable real estate. I watched as they turned down offer after offer, until the challenges of maintaining a manufacturing business in a drastically changing Lower East Side, as well as the pressures of increased foreign competition, left the company no alternative but to accept.
The matzo business itself is moving, and the 104' x 100' lot is free to be converted or (ack!) torn down by whatever developer is lucky enough to snag it ... from what we hear, conversion will be very difficult due to the state of the 47,500-square-foot building's interior. With a "community facility bonus," a new structure could be built up to 67,600 square feet.
Until 2 weeks ago, Ricky was always accompanied by a cute little wiry-haired terrier chihuahua mix named Pookie who has a very nice disposition.
Turns out his dog was stolen 2 weeks ago when he left it tied up for a minute — yes, I know — outside the Ottendorfer Library on Second Avenue near St. Mark's Place to go inside for a book.
A witness said that it was a "junky-looking blond woman with hair pushed up in the middle of her head" who took it.
She has some sort of arraignment today [Jan. 6] at which time Ricky and a lawyer who has helped him before will be present to see if, at the least, information about the current whereabouts of these stolen dogs can be obtained.
According to Cohen, the failure of his mission was in part due to the U.S. government’s failure to act when his initiative was aborted midstream, just as the talks were showing promise.
"Look at that building going up next door,” he said, shaking a fist at the 11-story high-rise under construction just outside his south-facing window. "Everything’s crowding in. There’s no more light in here!"