Thursday, April 4, 2013
Cat Power's love letter to Manhattan includes stops in Tompkins Square Park and Max Fish
Stereogum has the new video clip from onetime East Village resident Cat Power today... Here's their take: "'Manhattan'" is an absolutely gorgeous wafting cloud of a song from Cat Power’s excellent 2012 album Sun, and its brand-new video effectively works as a love letter to the titular island."
Cat Power, aka Chan Marshall, co-directed the video with Greg Hunt. You'll spot many very familiar locations throughout the song.
Per Stereogum: "This is a wonderful music video, and if you are not currently in New York, it will make you wish you were there."
h/t EVG reader Riad
The Living Room no longer on this month's CB3/SLA agenda
As we've been reporting, The Living Room is hoping to move its live-music venue from Ludlow Street to East Second Street... and the owners were set to go before the CB3/SLA committee on Monday night.
However, a tipster notes that, for whatever reasons, they are no longer on the agenda. (See helpful arrow above.) The Living Room also withdrew before last month's meeting.
During a a recent community meeting, some residents on this block said that they were "vehemently opposed to the possibility of The Living Room" on this block between Avenue A and Avenue B. (Read that post here.)
Perhaps The Living Room wants to do more community outreach ... or look for another location. Many people have said they'd love to see The Living Room stay in the area — and not relocate to Brooklyn, where everyone seems to go to these days. And they have a little more time: The Living Room received another lease extension for their current home on Ludlow Street, as BoweryBoogie reported.
The space currently housing Klean & Kleaner, the laundromat at 173 E. Second St., remains on the market.
Developing: Accident involving NYU bus at Lafayette and East 4th Street
Just after 9 ... on East Fourth Street and Lafayette... details are scarce right at the moment... so we don't know exactly how the NYU bus ended up on the sidewalk next to Astor Wines ... photos via EVG reader Brad212...
More details as they become available...
Updated 10 a.m.:
Via Community Board 3 member Chad Marlow:
"I passed by the NYU bus this morning. Couldn't get too close because my kids were with me and it didn't look good. The bus definitely collided pretty violently with a black car (not certain if private or livery). When I passed by there were two fire trucks and at least one ambulance on the scene. It looked like the firefighters were making an effort to prey open the black car."
Updated 10:05 a.m.:
NYU Local is working on the story. Per their post: According to a user on Facebook, the bus "looks like it was sideswiped by a car on Lafayette. Windows shattered, Toyota bumper was laying on the sidewalk."
More details as they become available...
Updated 10 a.m.:
Via Community Board 3 member Chad Marlow:
"I passed by the NYU bus this morning. Couldn't get too close because my kids were with me and it didn't look good. The bus definitely collided pretty violently with a black car (not certain if private or livery). When I passed by there were two fire trucks and at least one ambulance on the scene. It looked like the firefighters were making an effort to prey open the black car."
Updated 10:05 a.m.:
NYU Local is working on the story. Per their post: According to a user on Facebook, the bus "looks like it was sideswiped by a car on Lafayette. Windows shattered, Toyota bumper was laying on the sidewalk."
UPDATED: Did you hear the rumor about the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office branch closing?
So have you heard the rumors that the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office on East 14th Street near Avenue A will close this fall? We have. Again, it's just a rumor.
After all, in July 2011, when USPS officials released a list of thousands of post offices being studied for possible closure to save money, this one wasn't on the list. Maybe all this is just wishful thinking by the patrons who have expressed their exasperation-disgust, etc. at this branch. (See comments in the links below.)
Or maybe a developer is starting this rumor. Why, what a prime chunk of East Village real estate! Think of the condos we could have instead of some dumb mail!
Or maybe it's just an unhappy postal worker, like the letter carrier who has been telling residents on his or her route that this branch is closing in September, and most likely absorbed into the PO branch on East 23rd Street between Third Avenue and Lexington.
Updated 8:56 a.m.:
OK! Well, apparently this is more than a rumor... more like a done deal.
There's a Town Hall scheduled on the matter between Community Board 3 and Community Board 6 on April 22. Location: — Campos Plaza Community Center (gym) at 611 East 13th Street (btwn Aves B & C)
Updated noon:
And this was in a recent issue of Town & Village (story now online)...
Previously on EV Grieve:
Today in rants: the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office
Meanwhile, at everyone's favorite local post office branch...
Has anyone taken advantage of this 'great news' at the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office?
'No 7-Eleven' comes to Tompkins Square Park on Saturday
From the EV Grieve inbox...
NO 7-ELEVEN COMES TO TOMPKINS SQUARE PARK
Saturday, April 6, 1 pm (7th St. between A&B)
FEATURING
• The NO 7-Eleven Players
• The Community Wheel of Fortune w/prizes!
• The 7-Eleven Dance Competition (for YouTube)
• Reverend Billy and the Church of Life After Shopping
AND
Two new plays especially written for this very special event!
"NO 7-ELEVEN!!"
A tawdry tragedy by Sugar Di Abetes
AND
"NO 7-ELEVEN!!!!"
A dour comedy by Dewey, Cheatem & Howe
*
COME ONE COME ALL!!
-nO tOmAToEs-
Rain date is Sunday.
Rosie Mendez leads call on NYCHA officials to improve infill development process
From the EV Grieve inbox...
Friday at 9 a.m. on the steps of City Hall, City Councilwoman Rosie Mendez, Chair of the Committee on Public Housing, and Council Members Margaret Chin and Melissa Mark-Viverito will be joined by other elected officials, Tenant Association Presidents, community organizations, advocates and concerned residents as they hold a press conference to demand that the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) improve the Infill Development process to empower residents.
The Council Members will then proceed to Council Chambers in City Hall to conduct an oversight hearing of NYCHA’s Infill Development/land lease proposal and to consider a resolution that calls on NYCHA to “engage its residents in planning for and to include certain requirements in any ground leases for NYCHA land.”
In addition to the provisions in the resolution, the Council members will call on NYCHA to hold themselves to a “gold standard” of resident and community engagement, including, without limitation:
• Additional time between Infill meetings at affected developments so that all affected Tenant Associations and residents can secure independent legal and technical assistance to review plans and make meaningful comments
• Additional time between now and the release of the RFP — including a third meeting where residents and their “technical advisory team” can review a draft RFP and comment upon it before it is released
• NYCHA must ensure that all comments on the Infill plans are addressed and responded to; they must also provide a paper based system (to compliment the online portal) that captures the comments of those who do not have internet access. Lastly, suggestions should be centrally posted and logged for all residents to review
• NYCHA should commit to full Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) review for each Infill site, ensuring that the community has an effective voice in the process and that additional considerations and interconnected issues that major development presents are unilaterally addressed
Previously on EV Grieve:
Outrage over proposal to turn the green space at the Meltzer Tower into private development (35 comments)
Here's what's in store for Campos Plaza under the city's land-leasing plan (16 comments)
[Updated] Masak has apparently closed on East 13th Street
Multiple tipsters have told us that Masak, the well-regard Singapore-influenced restaurant on East 13th Street just west of Avenue A, has closed. The gate was down the last two nights during its regular hours. No one answers their phone.
Meanwhile, this appeared on the Masak Twitter feed just after midnight Saturday... #lastsupper
#lastsupper #goteam twitter.com/MasakNYC/statu…
— Masak (@MasakNYC) March 31, 2013
No one responded to our query on the restaurant's status via Facebook.
Meanwhile, in a generally positive review at the Voice last August, Robert Sietsema noted the following:
Masak started out six months ago with a limited menu, and that's how most publications reported on it. Perhaps as a result, the place hasn't gotten much traction and sits half-empty most evenings. But that's not the only problem. The biggest difficulty is the name. When a friend recommended the place, I first thought she said Masa, referring to the wildly expensive sushi parlor at Columbus Circle. Next, I thought she meant Mas, the Greenwich Village wood-oven "farmhouse." Only after she spelled it out, quite literally, did I realize it was a unique place unto itself.
We noticed the work starting in the space back in August 2011.
Updated 10:31 a.m.:
Chef/owner Larry Reutens confirmed the closure via a Facebook message to us.
"We had a blast and love the East Village — most of all we'll miss the faces of our neighbors who've helped to give us all such great memories."
2 new sidewalk bridges arrive as city disapproves latest plan for P.S. 64
[Bobby Williams]
Workers arrived Tuesday to begin erecting new sidewalk sheds on East Ninth Street at the former PS 64 and CHARAS/El Bohio community center.
According to DOB records, the city disapproved developer Gregg Singer's latest round of plans, filed on Feb. 12, for the building on Monday.
Per the all-caps job descrioption:
CONVERSTION OF EXISTING BUILDING TO COLLEGE STUDENT DORMITORY (UG 3). RELOCATION OF FLOOR AREA TO ADD MEZZANINE.
But, as DOB records show, the dorm would be contained within the existing structure... and it would not look like — remember these plans? — this...
[OLD PLANS]
No word on who the dorm would be for... just like the other mysterious dorm project at 35 Cooper Square.
Anyway, given the history here, it should be another 10 years before any construction occurs. Singer bought the formerly city-owned building in 1998 for $3.15 million. Aside from a whole lot of neighborhood drama, not much has been happening with the space since then. (For background: The Villager has extensively covered this story through the years. Check out their archives here.)
As an aside, a reader recently noted that an entryway on East Ninth Street was wide open one recent Sunday... no one in sight... perhaps a good chance for some urban exploration...
Previously on EV Grieve:
Will old PS 64 get a theater for nonprofit groups?
Rebranded P.S. 64 up for grabs: Please welcome University House at Tompkins Square Park to the neighborhood
Deed for 'community facility use only' at the former P.S. 64 now on the market
Something new in the works for PS 64?; plus sidewalk bridge expiration anniversary
The Pudgie's-Nathan's-Arthur Treacher's action-packed combo is officially dead, officially
Back in the dark days of January, signs went up noting that the Pudgie's-Nathan's-Arthur Treacher's action-packed combo was "closed for renovations."
[The darks days of January]
The fryplex of fatty fun opened on First Avenue in June... by the fall, the joint was for sale. The asking price was $189,000.
We held out hope for a return, a renovated restaurant where we could stand proudly under the Pudgie's canopy out front.
[Bobby Williams]
But that was not to be. We spotted this sign last weekend...
Farewell, our feathered Pudgie friend... farewell... until we see you again at the West Islip branch...
Oh, and on a more serious note... the asking rent for this space between Third Street and Fourth Street is $7,500.
[The darks days of January]
The fryplex of fatty fun opened on First Avenue in June... by the fall, the joint was for sale. The asking price was $189,000.
We held out hope for a return, a renovated restaurant where we could stand proudly under the Pudgie's canopy out front.
[Bobby Williams]
But that was not to be. We spotted this sign last weekend...
Farewell, our feathered Pudgie friend... farewell... until we see you again at the West Islip branch...
Oh, and on a more serious note... the asking rent for this space between Third Street and Fourth Street is $7,500.
The Sunburnt Cow looks to be for sale
While looking for rental information on The Pudgie's-Nathan's-Arthur Treacher's space at the Misrahi Realty website... we spotted a listing for the Sunburnt Cow on Avenue C near East Ninth Street...
Listed price: $5,400.
Last month, the DOH temporarily closed the "Endless Brunch" hotspot after finding 56 violation points. Owner Heathe St. Clair "blamed the continuing recovery from Hurricane Sandy for his restaurant's dismal inspection report," according to an article by Serena Solomon in DNAinfo.
"The hurricane and now this — it is a disaster," said St. Clair, whose basement flooded during Sandy like many other businesses along this stretch of Avenue C.
The Moolife Group, owners of the Sunburnt Cow, closed Bondi Road last September after a six-year run on Rivington Street, as BoweryBoogie reported.
Last summer, the Moolife folks announced that the Sunburnt Cow would close to "undergo a physical transformation, but ... also shift focus to more gourmet oriented food and drink." However, that never happened.
The Sunburnt Cow is currently only open on Friday and Saturday nights and weekend brunch, according to their Facebook page.
Listed price: $5,400.
Last month, the DOH temporarily closed the "Endless Brunch" hotspot after finding 56 violation points. Owner Heathe St. Clair "blamed the continuing recovery from Hurricane Sandy for his restaurant's dismal inspection report," according to an article by Serena Solomon in DNAinfo.
"The hurricane and now this — it is a disaster," said St. Clair, whose basement flooded during Sandy like many other businesses along this stretch of Avenue C.
The Moolife Group, owners of the Sunburnt Cow, closed Bondi Road last September after a six-year run on Rivington Street, as BoweryBoogie reported.
Last summer, the Moolife folks announced that the Sunburnt Cow would close to "undergo a physical transformation, but ... also shift focus to more gourmet oriented food and drink." However, that never happened.
The Sunburnt Cow is currently only open on Friday and Saturday nights and weekend brunch, according to their Facebook page.
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Report: Jared Kushner closes on latest batch of East Village walkups
The Kushner Companies have closed on its latest parcel of East Village buildings, Real Estate Weekly reported today. This was the $28.75 million deal for 329-335 E. Ninth Street and 325 E. 10th St., previously owned by Icon Realty.
If our counting is correct, then this makes 28 (29?) East Village buildings that Jared Kushner and his comapny have purchased this year.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: Jared Kushner paid $49 million for 7 more Ben Shaoul-owned properties in the East Village
More about Jared Kushner's East Village buying spree
Hotel Toshi takes over 325 E. 10th St.
Soon, we will all be writing our rent checks to Jared Kushner
If our counting is correct, then this makes 28 (29?) East Village buildings that Jared Kushner and his comapny have purchased this year.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: Jared Kushner paid $49 million for 7 more Ben Shaoul-owned properties in the East Village
More about Jared Kushner's East Village buying spree
Hotel Toshi takes over 325 E. 10th St.
Soon, we will all be writing our rent checks to Jared Kushner
John Penley changes plans for weekend campout at Ben Shaoul's office; gentrification meeting instead
We noted yesterday that longtime East Village activist John Penley was planning a weekend-long campout at the offices of developer Ben Shaoul's Magnum Real Estate on Broadway.
The protest was happening, in part, due to the the recent revelations about actor-poet-writer Taylor Mead's living conditions during a gut renovation of the building he lives in on Ludlow Street. (Mead, a former Andy Warhol star, had lived in the rent-stabilized apartment for 34 years and wasn't leaving.)
However, late last night, word began to spread via Mead's friends and family that a buyout/relocation deal was in the works ... there was also talk that, in light of this, the campout should be cancelled.
So now, per Penley:
The Facebook event has been changed to "Meeting on gentrification at HQ of Magnum Mgt Office of Ben Shaoul — NYC's worst real-estate developer."
[Image part of the Facebook event for the meeting]
The protest was happening, in part, due to the the recent revelations about actor-poet-writer Taylor Mead's living conditions during a gut renovation of the building he lives in on Ludlow Street. (Mead, a former Andy Warhol star, had lived in the rent-stabilized apartment for 34 years and wasn't leaving.)
However, late last night, word began to spread via Mead's friends and family that a buyout/relocation deal was in the works ... there was also talk that, in light of this, the campout should be cancelled.
So now, per Penley:
This is what I am proposing ... that out of respect for Taylor's family and attorney, we will cancel our protest at Magnum Real Estate ... but since this is all over the place and people are gonna show up, we will have a meeting about the situation especially about others affected by Shaoul and his sledgehammer. I will be there at 5 pm and wait for anyone who wants to come and we will have the meeting at a location not in front but down the street ... I have no doubt whatsoever that calling for this protest had an effect on any buyout deal for Taylor Mead, but since others are in the same position he is I think it would be wrong not to do anything at all. I also think ... others have a right to meet about what Shaoul has done to them.
The Facebook event has been changed to "Meeting on gentrification at HQ of Magnum Mgt Office of Ben Shaoul — NYC's worst real-estate developer."
[Image part of the Facebook event for the meeting]
Kinofest NYC kicks off tomorrow; a weekend of films in the East Village
From the EV Grieve inbox...
Kinofest NYC is proud to announce its program for its fourth festival featuring films from Ukraine and other post-Soviet countries. This year's festival will include 10 screenings, presenting more than 25 short and 4 feature films from independent filmmakers from Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Russia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Tajikistan, the UK and the US.
The festival will kick off tomorrow at the Ukrainian Institute of America, 2 E. 79th St, and will end on Sunday. Film screenings will take place at two East Village cultural institutions: The Ukrainian Museum, 222 E. 6th St., and the Anthology Film Archives at 32 Second Ave.
This year's festival will feature seven short films from the Kyiv-based collective called "Goodbye, Ukraine!" In 2012, this group of filmmakers completed an anthology of 34 short films that examine and explore the reasons why hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have left their country since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. According to a recent report by the BBC, 1.5 million Ukrainians have left their homeland in search of greater economic opportunities that are not available in Ukraine.
Go here for schedule and ticket information.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Q-and-A with Andrew Kotliar, festival director for Kinofest NYC
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