Wednesday, October 10, 2018

[Updated] Williamsburg Pizza vying for East Village location on 14th Street



Updated: This item has been withdrawn from this month's agenda.

The owners of the popular Williamsburg Pizza have designs on opening an outpost at 226 E. 14th St. between Second Avenue and Third Avenue.

And they're on this month's CB3-SLA docket for a beer-wine license...



A pizzeria in this spot makes sense, as the most recent tenant was the rather blah Krust, which closed in January after seven years at the address.

I haven't confirmed this yet, but it looks as if the WP team will be taking the small vacant space next door as well. The questionnaire at the CB3 website shows 9 tables here seating 24 people, plus counter space for eight along the east-facing wall. (Krust wasn't all that large.)

The proposed hours are 11:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. during the week, with extended hours Thursday through Saturday night.

If all goes well, then this will make the latest Williamsburg Pizza location... joining the original out on Union Avenue and the one on Broome Street on the LES. (Chef/owner Nino Coniglio also makes pizza at 310 Bowery.)

The pizzeria has plenty of fans (for example). And a few years back New York magazine gave them the Best Slice Joint nod.

Williamsburg Pizza is one of the applicants to appear before CB3's SLA committee this coming Monday. Part two of the October SLA committee meeting takes place at the Public Hotel, 17th Floor, Sophia Room, 215 Chrystie St. between Houston and Stanton. The festivities start at 6:30.

The gutting of 180 2nd Avenue continues



Gut renovations started late last year at 180 Second Ave. between 11th Street and 12th Street, where the existing building is getting a complete condoplexification with the addition of two more floors.



A look inside from the sidewalk reveals the extent of the gut job... and just how much work remains...


[Photo by Steven]

The ongoing work can't be much fun for the restaurants on either side of the property — Cacio e Pepe at No. 182 and Pangea at No. 178. (Go see a show in the backroom at Pangea!)



As a reminder from previous post, here's a rendering of the condoplex in making via Ole Sondresen Architect...



And the description:

This East Village residential building is elegantly comprised of four 2 bedroom units and two 1 bedroom homes. Each unit features its own private terrace with open views down 2nd Avenue. The apartments are composed of two programmatic wooden boxes housing closets, bathrooms, and mechanicals which allows for an open loft-like feeling in the rest of the living space. The building is designed to earn LEED Platinum and Passive House certification, integrating a green roof with solar hot water panels for each residential unit. Reclaimed wood planters are incorporated into each terrace allowing lush plantings to liven the facade.

The Chicago-based Polish National Alliance was the previous owner of No. 180. The building housed the Józef Pilsudski Institute of America, which is the largest Polish-American research institution specializing in the recent history of Poland and Central Eastern Europe. (They found a new home in Greenpoint.) An LLC bought the building for $6.75 million in June 2014, per public records. The owner is listed as Robert Stern.

As for the ground-floor retail space, the Ninth Ward, the previous tenant, is expected to return.

And a p.s. from this construction zone via Vinny & O ... a Bagel Zone sign greets any salmoners...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Residential conversion underway at 180 2nd Ave.; the Ninth Ward expected to return

The renderings for the all-new 180 2nd Ave. include Leonardo DiCaprio on a Citi Bike

Name reveal: Emmy Squared's grilled-pizza sibling will be called Violet on 5th Street

Violet is the name of the grilled pizzeria coming to 511 E. Fifth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B.

Eater had the scoop yesterday on the name for the latest venture from Emmy Squared's husband-wife team of Matt and Emily Hyland. The place is named after the state flower of Rhode Island. Matt was born in Brooklyn, Emily in New Jersey, and they met at Roger Williams University in the Ocean State. (Hey, you learned two factoid about Rhode Island today!)

Aside from grilled pizzas inspired by the Providence-based Al Forno, the menu will feature recipes with Italian and Portuguese influences, per Eater.

Violet is expected to open in early November. And it seems on track given all the work going on in this former home of GG's.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Emmy Squared's owners are bringing grilled pizza to the former GG's space on 5th Street

Getting 511 E. 5th St. ready for new grilled pizza venture from Emmy Squared's owners

Countdown to grilled pizza on 5th Street

That Nutella Cafe is shaping up on University Place



More than a year has passed since news of the first NYC Nutella Cafe came out (via the Commercial Observer).

Anyway, the Nutella signage is now wrapped around the 2,200-square-foot corner space at 116 University Place and 13th Street. (The signage arrived perhaps a month ago.)

Nutella Cafe New York, which is expected to open next month, will feature a (duh) Nutella-inspired menu and specialty espresso beverages.

As previously reported, the Adjmi Architects-designed seven-story condoplex will feature one unit per floor. The starting prices for the homes are $6 million.

The corner previously housed University Place Gourmet as well as several adjacent storefronts, including Bennie Louie Chinese Laundry.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Major changes coming to University Place and East 13th Street

Report: Incoming condos for 13th Street and University Place will start at $6 million


[Photo from June 2015]

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

EVG Etc.: Restitution deadline for Croman tenants; traveler trouble on 2nd Avenue


[At the Taste of the East Village Saturday via Stacie Joy]

Brooklyn man arrested in sexual assault yesterday morning in Stuy Town elevator/stairwell (NBC 4)

Will City Council finally pass the Small Business Jobs Survival Act? (The Indypendent)

AG's office: Steve Croman tenants who are eligible for restitution from civil case have until Nov. 4 to file a claim (Curbed)

Trouble with travelers on Second Avenue (The Villager)

Details on the East Village Community Coalition fundraiser honoring James and Karla Murray (Eventbrite)

Lawsuits: Theodore Stratigos, an investor in the now-shuttered Coup on Cooper Square, sues Ravi DeRossi over charity claims (New York Post)

Police are looking for suspect who stole credit card from a building on 13th Street and First Avenue and then spent $327 at Target (Town & Village)

There is concern about the Washington Square Park red-tailed hawk nest, which is on the under-renovation Bobst Library (Roger_Paw ... with a response from NYU officials here)

More praise for the Hunan Slurp House on First Avenue (The New Yorker)

Inside the East Village apartment of Interpol's Paul Banks (The New York Times)

Highlights from the Kid Lucky fundraiser at MoRUS (Slum Goddess)

A rainy night on the Bowery in 1911 (Ephemeral New York)

The Trader Joe's on the LES opens Oct. 19 (The Lo-Down)

Jeanne Baliba retrospective continues (Film Anthology Archives)

Meanwhile at Doc Holliday's on Avenue A: "Amber Heard slow dances with mystery man after selecting music on a jukebox together" (The Daily Mail)

... and coming up on Thursday evening... The Bowery Alliance of Neighbors is presenting a film and talk — "Hyper-Gentrification in Our Vanishing City," featuring a screening of "The Vanishing City"(2009) followed by a discussion with the filmmakers and Vanishing New York author Jeremiah Moss.



This takes place Thursday evening at 6:30, Grace Church School, 46 Cooper Square (near Astor Place).

RIP Tony



Several EVG readers have shared the news that Tony (aka Abdul), the longtime owner of the deli at 123 Avenue A, has died.

We don't have any details or background information about Tony at the moment. He was originally from Yemen and ran the shop, which operated under various names, for the past 25 years.

On Sunday, an EV resident left flowers and a note on the closed gate here between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place ... "We love you. You will be missed."



Jen Fisher, a sidewalk vendor who sells books nearby, took the two photos here.

"For the last five years he’s looked out for me and was nothing but kind," she said. "It’s so sad to lose him. I'm going to miss him."

Said Marc Kehoe, a longtime neighbor: "Abdul was, I found, gracious, with a sense of humor and always friendly. He always had a kind word, a joke or something nice to say."

Here's a photo from July that Jen took of Tony ...



Will update if we receive more information about Tony's death.

Updated 9 a.m.

This past summer, when there were vigils in Tompkins Square Park to raise awareness of the humanitarian crisis in Yemen, Tony would bring the group members cold drinks...


[Photo via Felton Davis]

The Vitamin Shoppe on 14th Street and 1st Avenue is closing



The closing signage is up on the southwest corner of 14th Street and First Avenue ... where the Vitamin Shoppe outpost will vacate the space on Nov. 17 ...



The listing for the space doesn't include the asking rent.

Nor sure why this location, which arrived in January 2009, is closing. (Leaving ahead of the L Train Apocalypse?)

This past summer, The Motley Fool listed the Vitamin Shoppe as a brand that may not make it through 2018:

Its sales tumbled for six straight quarters, and analysts expect it to post a 5 percent sales decline and a net loss for the full year. Vitamin Shoppe’s stock tumbled more than 80 percent over the past three years.

Its ongoing store closures might soften the impact on its margins, but it also weakens its brand presence against GNC. There are persistent rumors about GNC merging with Vitamin Shoppe, but combining two losers won’t make a winner ...

The Vitamin Shoppes on Broadway at Astor Place and Union Square East will remain in business.

Report: Arrest made in armed robbery of Mona's on Avenue B

The NYPD arrested a 29-year-old Brooklyn man wanted in connection with four armed robberies in Brooklyn and Manhattan, including Mona's on Avenue B between 13th Street and 14th Street.

Police took Sanjay McBayne into custody on Saturday following a tip through the Crime Stoppers hotline.

Early last Thursday morning, McBayne allegedly walked into Mona’s "and turned a gun on an employee, demanding cash," as Town & Village reported. He fled the bar with $700.

Lumos Kitchen remains closed



Lumos Kitchen, a high-profile restaurant that opened in the spring at 188 Second Ave. at 12th Street, remains dark.

A sign on the front door, which one neighbor estimates has been here since early August, notes a temporary closure and the words "gas meter."



According to the Department of Buildings, there is a Stop Work Order on the restaurant dated July 25. Per the DOB: "GAS WORK DONE WITHOUT A PERMIT IN KITCHEN OF THE RESTAURANT FOR KITCHEN EQUIPMENT. WORK CURRENTLY IN PROGRESS. NO PERMITS POSTED."

The complaint also notes: "ACCESS TO PREMISES TO INSPECT APPROVED WORK ACTIVE JOB #123258063 HAS BEEN DENIED BY MALE OCCUPANT AT APPROXIMATELY 10:50 AM. STOP ALL UNDER ABOVE CITED APPLICATION... MAKE SITE SAFE ONLY."

There doesn't appear to be much activity inside the dining room...





... and there is mail on the floor....



The phone to the restaurant is not in service. (Ditto for the the Lumos West outpost on Carmine Street.) No one from Lumos responded to an email or Facebook message about the closure. There isn't any mention of any closure on the Lumos website or social media properties. (Their Instagram account has been quiet since July 11.)

As we've seen in the past, these gas-related issues can be a lengthy process with the various parties involved — the DOB, Con Ed and the landlord.

Upon opening in April, The New York Times was generous with its praise in a preview of Lumos Kitchen, noting that the chef "fuses French and Chinese cuisine, in dishes like pan-seared quail with foie gras in a Chinese wine sauce, black bass glazed with baijiu-miso sauce, wok-fried tiger prawns, and foie gras fried rice."

This corner space has been a challenge for restaurants in recent years — Hot Pot Central, DumplingGuo and Dumpling Go — all came and went since March 2015. Before this, Shima had a lengthy stay here until January 2014.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Lumos Kitchen bringing the baijiu to 2nd Avenue

New cafe alert: JQK Floral Tea slated for 11th Street



An EVG reader shares this photo, showing storefront renovations at 330 E. 11th St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

A small sign on the front lists the name as JQK Tea. The cafe's placeholder website lists the business name as JQK Floral Tea.

This space was previously home to Fair Folks & a Goat, the coffee shop and boutique, which left in August 2017.

The arrival of a cafe is good news for the block, which has seen mounting losses starting in 2017 with Honeyhaus, Anna, Odin, Pas de Deux and Fair Folks & a Goat. (It's still a good block, though, with Russo's, Veniero's, Tokyo Joe, Buffalo Exchange, Casey Rubber Stamps and Lori McLean Fine Jewelry, among the shops.)

Monday, October 8, 2018

Monday's parting shot



Photo on Second Avenue today via Derek Berg...

StuyFitness debuts on 14th Street



StuyFitness, the new gym on 14th Street between Avenue B and Avenue C for residents of Stuy Town and Peter Cooper Village, opened today. (Thanks EVG reader Brian!)

As previously noted, the gym — "7,500 Square Feet of Awesome" — features four Peloton spin bikes and a GYM RAX Storage and Suspension system, among other things.

This site has membership info for residents of Stuy Town and Peter Cooper Village.

Previously on EV Grieve:
A gym for Stuy Town on 14th Street — aka '7,500 Square Feet of Awesome'