Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Let's talk about rats


The 6th Street A - B Block Association is co-hosting a talk on rat prevention with the NYC Department of Health tomorrow night at 7 at the 6th & B Community Garden. Details are on the flyer below…



An organizer says that the area has been inundated with rats of late … in part because of the demolition of 98-100 Avenue A between East Sixth Street and East Seventh Street.

Meanwhile, in Tompkins Square Park, some people think the rat population is near the levels of the TSP Ratstravaganza during the summer of 2011.

And, despite the signs, people never stop feeding the birds and squirrels ... ultimately helping supply the rat colonies ...





Bottom photos this week via Scuba Diva

... and this morning in the Park...

Gut renovations enter 16th month at 338 E. Sixth St., where 1 tenant remains


[Photo from yesterday via EVG reader Michael Hirsch]

Three flatbed trucks with sheetrock arrived here yesterday on East Sixth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue ... where Rory Denis remains the only tenant in the building at 338 E. Sixth St.

He has lived in a rent-stabilized apartment here since 1979.

As DNAinfo reported last October, Denis stayed in his apartment despite the best efforts of landlord Nurjahan Ahmed.

Denis reportedly took Ahmed to housing court last year after she switched off the electricity and water. Denis won the case in June 2013, which forced Ahmed to restore the services.

Word here now is that workers have installed the new electrical wiring and plumbing. (DNAinfo reported that the gut renovations began in May 2013.)

Meanwhile, according to city records, a Stop Work Order exists on the address. Per the DOB's ALL-CAP STYLE: "CONSTRUCTION SITE UNSAFE - WORKER CONDITIONS UNSAFE."

The city issued the Stop Work Order last Thursday. Despite this, construction work continues.


[Early last evening]

Previously.

Former St. Mark's Bookshop for lease



Signs went up yesterday at 31 Third Ave. We didn't spot the listing online just yet.

Before moving this past summer to a new storefront on East Third Street, St. Mark's Bookshop had been paying $23,500 a month, according to the Times. (The store's new rent is $6,000.)

Anyway, took a little longer for the "for lease" signs to arrive here. Workers gutted the space back in early July.

The lack of rent signage made it seem as if a new bank branch tenant was already in place for the space.

New laundromat now open at site of former laundromat



Capital Laundry & Dry Cleaners opened this week at 44 Avenue B between East Third Street and East Fourth Street. (Thirty percent off on drop-off and pick-up service!)

Back in January, the previous laundromat here relocated to Clinton Street.

As we've noted, this is the third time in recent memory where a laundromat closed … only to be replaced by another laundromat. (Here and here.)

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Sammy’s Roumanian Steakhouse: Still got it?


[Via Trip Advisor]

At the Times, Pete Wells files a review on Sammy's Roumanian Steakhouse 157 Chrystie St. near Delancey.

All is well!

He calls Sammy's "the most wonderful terrible restaurant in New York."

Woot.

And!

The rest of the Lower East Side can obsess over filament light bulbs and salvaged barn beams; Sammy’s, virtually unchanged since opening in 1975, will be ready when fluorescents and drop ceilings make their triumphant return to fashion. Inside the dining room, lighted like a bail bondsman’s office in Detroit, are hundreds of faded business cards, yellowed newspaper clippings and curled snapshots taped and tacked to every surface. Outside on Chrystie Street, scaffolding obscures the faded red and yellow painted signs in front of the building, which looks as if it has been marked for demolition. Like a Mississippi juke joint, Sammy’s seems to have been put together under the theory that nobody is likely to stay sober long enough to inspect the décor. (Known for selling vodka bottles encased in ice, Sammy’s is New York’s original bottle-service restaurant, and still the only tolerable one.)

Read the whole review here.

Noted



Outside the McDonald's on Third Avenue at St. Mark's Place this afternoon. Eat a Big Mac. Do some planks.

Jimmy McMillan wants to wear his karate uniform for an upcoming gubernatorial debate


[Photo from February 2013 by James Maher]

Catching up to this piece in The Wall Street Journal Saturday on St. Mark's Place resident Jimmy McMillan of the Rent is 2 Damn High Party.

He plans on running for governor again, though it hasn't been easy.

It's not clear whether Mr. McMillan will be on the ballot come November. His petitions have been challenged by Mike Welch, a Schenectady science teacher who alleges Mr. McMillan photocopied signatures to meet the 15,000 required for a spot on the ballot. Mr. McMillan says Mr. Welch didn't follow proper procedures filing his objection. The Board of Elections is expected to rule [this] week.

And!

He's already selected an outfit if he is included in a coming debate — his karate uniform. And he sees no need to go out campaigning.

His most convincing campaign literature, he tells people, is their rent receipt: "If you can't see that your rent is too damn high, don't pay me no mind."

You can read the Journal article here. (Subscription may be necessary.)

Going Mobil



The former Mobil station is now all snug behind plywood on Avenue C and East Houston (luckily, workers left blogger portals in the plywood!).

Meanwhile, Mobil management put up a sign showing the nearest convenient locations for another Mobil station…



The station, the last one left in the East Village, abruptly closed on Sept. 2.

Back in March, Hakimian Property filed plans (still waiting for approval) to erect a 9-story mixed-use building on the site. Plans call for 45 residential units and 4,550 square feet of commercial space.

This aerial shot, via www.anitam.com, gives you a good idea of the shape of the lot and what the developers have to work with…



Previously on EV Grieve:
You have a little longer to get gas on Avenue C

Plans filed for new 9-story building at site of Mobil station on East Houston and Avenue C

RUMOR: Gas station going, boutique hotel coming on Second Avenue? (31 comments)

BP station on 2nd Avenue closes this month

State seizes Mobil station on Avenue C and Houston for nonpayment of taxes


[Photo by Michael Sean Edwards from last fall. Click to enlarge.]

Headline H/T

Full reveal at 154 Second Ave.



Workers yesterday removed the plywood from the ground-floor space at 154 Second Ave. … now finally providing a full view of the former Sigmund Schwartz Gramercy Park Chapel.

Icon Realty and architect Ramy Isaac added three extra floors here for luxury rentals… with ground-floor retail that's still on the market (the rate is negotiable, according to the Icon website)…



The demolition work here started back in April 2012.

As we've posted before, here's how the building looked in the summer of 2011…

[Via Off the Grid]

Here's what the address looked like in the 1940s, via Vanishing New York...


And here is the rendering …


Sill no word yet on pricing for the units.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Former funeral home looks to double in size with help from 'the controversial penthouse king of the East Village'

Redeveloped funeral home looking for a few live retail tenants

The walls come tumbling down at 154 Second Avenue

'Go Lightly' with Ellen Turrietta


[Photo from August by James Maher]

Back on Aug. 27, we featured Ellen Turrietta in our weekly Out and About in the East Village feature.

At that time, she had been camped outside a building on East Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue for several weeks. She had set up a fake barber shop. And a leather shop, among other things. There was a surprisingly intense debate among readers about all this. Was it some kind of performance art? Or was she out there where the trains don't run?

Since then several readers told us about the existence of "Go Lightly," described on YouTube (and uploaded in June) as a "psychologically intense portrait of a former fashion model living in New York. This film explores themes of masochism and exploitation."

We asked Brooklyn-based writer-filmmaker Forrest McCuller a few questions about his "Go Lightly."

How did you meet Ellen?

I met Ellen while I was working at a coffee shop. I think it was in May.

I am usually guarded when I am working in food service. I am a writer. I do not have any small talk.

But Ellen is good at engaging people. She can slice through introversion. I found her to be an interesting and challenging person. She can express her inner world and make it vivid. She has a lot of insight.

That is a good word for it: insight. She looks inward to understand the outside world. It is a strategy with a limited applicability contingent on the breadth of the mind in question. Ellen has come a long way on her wits. It is egotism, but if you think that it is not practical I'd challenge you to go stand outside in the street for a month and see how you fare.

I am not saying that she is self-made. Few people pass that test. But the opportunities that she gets, at least as long as I've known her — and I think since she left home in her teens — she has gotten because she impresses people. She is sharp and straightforward. One thing I've learned watching her: you get a lot more out of people if you tell them what you want right away than by any underhanded plot. She lives off of that idea.

At what point did you know that you wanted to film her?

The first time I hung around with Ellen outside my job she told me about her life, and I told her about my filmmaking. I like to make documentaries with characters who seem unreliable. That way you get a notion of the person without the false sense of certainty that a lot of documentaries sell.

I described "The Fortune Tellers," a music documentary I made that does not attempt to sell music. Instead, it is a dark comedy. She liked the sound of what I was doing, and she mentioned wanting a film about her own life. Knowing what I knew about her life then, it seemed to me like any biographical portrait would be an exploitation film. I decided to make an anti-exploitation film.

I wanted to demonstrate Ellen rather than packaging her personality and selling it. The film is neither for or against her.

Did you give her any guidelines, or did she just start going?

I didn't give Ellen much direction while we were filming. I just talked to her. I wanted it to be as much like our previous conversations as possible.

It would not have been appropriate for me to give her too much direction. I would have been like a photographer demanding a model to strike postures. My intention was the opposite. I didn't want a model. I wanted to show Ellen.

Our feature on her generated 80 comments. What is your assessment of her?

She seems much healthier today than she was when I met her. She found a way to build a community around herself. I think that is helping her.

I understand people calling Ellen an anachronism in the East Village. Her performances aren't made to sell, and I suppose everyone is supposed to be scrambling for money right now (I won't speculate about her financial situation.)

But the problem with calling her behavior old-fashioned is that I don't know of any time when withdrawal from social etiquette has been broadly well-received. Ellen's ideals line up with her practices, and that happens to be a recipe for ostracism.

What are your plans for the film?

My plan for the film is to put it in front of a lot of eyes.

It's not an informational doc. It relates a tacit experience. For people to understand it at all they have to watch it.

Here's a preview.



You can find the 30-minute film here. (It's $5.)

Noted



As the flyer on Third Avenue and East 10th Street says, Hey ladies!

Didn't know there was a market for unwanted new and pre-owned Lululemon apparel and accessories. Will have to go through my closet!

Exciting new business opens on University Place



At East 11th Street … formerly home to Jack Bistro, which closed last fall.

Now neighbors to the European Wax Center, which opened in the space last held by the Cedar Tavern.

Photo by @Zipperfilm

Monday, September 22, 2014

After flooding Wall Street



Second Avenue this afternoon.

Read more about Flood Wall Street today here.

Photo by Derek Berg.

Avenue A and East Houston intersection shaping up, pretty much


[Photo of Houston and A from July by Maggie Wrigley]

After nearly four decades years of construction and confusion and chaos (and what not), you could actually say that there's progress to note at Avenue A with the East Houston Reconstruction Project.

See — less confusion and chaos. You can see the streets! And new curbs!





An aside, does anyone know how to get to the hospital… oh, forget it!



Anyway …





And via Twitter, EVG reader Mike Brown reminded us of the new Greenstreets and street configurations on these corners…




[Click on images to enlarge]

No sign of a cab stand in these designs.

The East Houston Reconstruction Project is now scheduled (PDF!) to be completed by mid-2016, according to the latest city estimates.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Coming soon to East Houston: Construction, hell, rodent control stations

Long-threatened East Houston reconstruction starting this month

How you can help Punjabi Grocery & Deli stay in business