Friday, September 18, 2015
All summer long
Seattle surf-noir outfit La Luz played at the Bowery Ballroom a few weeks back... touring in support of the quartet's new record "Weirdo Shrine." Here's "You Disappear" from that release...
The 6th annual NYC Pizza Run is tomorrow in Tompkins Square Park

Well, you're out of luck if you want to participate in the actual run…
We're sold out! If you didn't make the cut, you can still cheer on participants or meet us @DoubleWideNYC for the after party at noon.
— NYC Pizza Run (@nycpizzarun) September 17, 2015Anyway, if you're new to this, then here's an explanation via the Pizza Run website…
Starting at 11AM, participants will run four laps around the park, counterclockwise. The total distance of the race is two miles. After lap 1, lap 2, and lap 3, there will be a “pizza station” set up where participants must stop to eat a slice of pizza before they can continue with the next lap. The first person to complete the run will be crowned the NYC Pizza Run Champion!
Previously
Minus a floor (mostly), BSA to weigh in on Ben Shaoul's zoning variance today for 515 E. 5th St.

[EVG photo from Sept. 5]
Workers packed up their gear and sidewalk bridge a few weeks ago at 515 E. Fifth St., where they had been removing the illegal top-floor addition courtesy of landlord Ben Shaoul.
And the top level here between Avenue A and Avenue B has been hollowed out, with a couple of walls remaining ...

[Photo via an EVG reader]
515 Penthouse Removal Watchers say this configuration is now similar to the Shaoul-owned 514-516 Sixth St., where the formerly illegal space is apparently making for a cool party gazebo for residents.
To quickly recap seven-plus years of illegal addition history: The Board of Standards and Appeals (BSA) ruled in 2008 that Shaoul needed to remove the 6th and 7th floors. However, his attorneys had requested that the city grant a zoning variance to "permit the constructed enlargement, minus the penthouse, to remain" here.
The BSA apparently gave Shaoul until the end of July to provide proof that the top floor had been taken down … then the BSA would reopen hearings on the variances that Shaoul and Co. are requesting.
According to a member of the 515 tenants association, the next hearing is today.
DNAinfo reported on Sept. 4 that four studio apartments on the sixth floor had been listed for rent even though the "floor does not have a certificate of occupancy and the building is technically noncompliant with local zoning regulations."
Shaoul told DNAinfo that he did not know how the listings came to appear on Streeteasy. (They are no longer on the site.)
Per DNAinfo:
“I’m not responsible,” he said before pinning the listings on brokers.
“Brokers are unauthorized. Brokers do that all the time. There’s nothing,” he said. “Brokers do whatever they want to do.”
A building source claims that one of the sixth-floor units has been occupied since late August.
Previously on EV Grieve:
[Updated] 5 years later, another BSA hearing on illegal rooftop addition at 515 E. Fifth St.
Protest at 515 E. Fifth St. this morning, site of Ben Shaoul's illegal addition
The disappearing illegal penthouse of 514-516 E. 6th St.
Never-ending battle wages on over additional floors at 515 E. Fifth St.
Never-ending battle over additional floors at 515 E. Fifth St. promises to keep being never-ending
CB3 not into Ben Shaoul's zoning variance for 515 E. 5th St.
Another BSA hearing on Ben Shaoul's illegal rooftop addition; plus, rent 1 of the contested units!
BSA tells Ben Shaoul to remove the illegal penthouse on East 5th Street within 60 days
Ben Shaoul now has until the end of July to demolish his illegal penthouse on East 5th Street
Sidewalk bridge arrives at 515 E. 5th St., site of Ben Shaoul's illegal penthouse conversion
Actual demolition work happening at Ben Shaoul's illegal East 5th Street penthouse
The annual 9th Street Block Party is tomorrow (aka Saturday)

[Photo via Steven]
Via the EVG inbox...
Annual 9th Street A-1 Block Association Block Party
East 9th Street between 1st Avenue and Avenue A
Saturday, Sept. 19, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. (no rain date)
Live Music (from noon - 4 p.m.)
Resident artists, crafts people, and photographers will be showing and selling their work, and residents will be selling a la stoop sale — antiques, bric-a-brac, clothing, accessories, music, jewelry, etc.
Block businesses include:
• Dorian Grey Gallery, Enchantments, Flower Power (herbs), Mr. Throwback (vintage clothing and accessories), Ollie's Place (cat adoption), Pink Olive (gifts), Polytima (jewelry), Pork Pie Hatterie (hats), Puppy Love Kitty Kat (pet supplies), Reason Outpost (clothing), The Upper Rust (antiques)
• Restaurants/Cafes: Good Beer, Tacos Morales, Cagen, Whitman's, Zucker Bakery, Superiority Burger
• Hair Salons/Barbers: Crops for Girls, Lovemore & Do, Maria Mok Salon, Neighborhood Barber, Tsumiki Salon
Report: Raphael Toledano secures $124 million loan for 16-building East Village portfolio
Raphael Toledano's Brookhill Properties secured a $124 million loan for his purchase of a 16-building East Village portfolio, the Commercial Observer reported yesterday.
New York-based real estate investment firm Madison Realty Capital provided the loan for Brookhill, who closed on the $97 million deal with the Tabak family earlier this month.
These are the 16 properties, as previously reported:
• 27 St. Marks Place – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 66 East 7th Street – 22 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 95 East 7th Street – 20 residential units
• 223 East 5th Street – 18 residential units
• 228 East 6th Street – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 229 East 5th Street – 10 residential units
• 231 East 5th Street – 8 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 233 East 5th Street – 10 residential units
• 235 East 5th Street – 10 residential units
• 253 East 10th Street – 20 residential units; 1 commercial unit
• 323-325 East 12th Street – 37 residential units
• 327 East 12th Street – 22 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 329 East 12th Street – 24 residential units
• 334 East 9th Street – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 510 East 12th Street – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 514 East 12th Street – 20 residential units
Per the Commercial Observer:
Previously on EV Grieve:
Claim: Landlord of 444 E. 13th St. threatened 'to drop dynamite on the building'
Reader report: Large portfolio of East Village buildings ready to change hands
Report: State investigating East Village landlord Raphael Toledano
Report: Uncle suing nephew broker Raphael Toledano over $100 million East Village deal
Report: Raphael Toledano completes purchase of 16-building East Village portfolio
Photo of 253 E. 10th St. and 27 St. Mark’s Place via The Real Deal
New York-based real estate investment firm Madison Realty Capital provided the loan for Brookhill, who closed on the $97 million deal with the Tabak family earlier this month.
These are the 16 properties, as previously reported:
• 27 St. Marks Place – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 66 East 7th Street – 22 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 95 East 7th Street – 20 residential units
• 223 East 5th Street – 18 residential units
• 228 East 6th Street – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 229 East 5th Street – 10 residential units
• 231 East 5th Street – 8 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 233 East 5th Street – 10 residential units
• 235 East 5th Street – 10 residential units
• 253 East 10th Street – 20 residential units; 1 commercial unit
• 323-325 East 12th Street – 37 residential units
• 327 East 12th Street – 22 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 329 East 12th Street – 24 residential units
• 334 East 9th Street – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 510 East 12th Street – 20 residential units; 2 commercial units
• 514 East 12th Street – 20 residential units
Per the Commercial Observer:
Through the repositioning, Brookhill plans to upgrade the common areas in the buildings and renovate the residential units to maximize their square footage.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Claim: Landlord of 444 E. 13th St. threatened 'to drop dynamite on the building'
Reader report: Large portfolio of East Village buildings ready to change hands
Report: State investigating East Village landlord Raphael Toledano
Report: Uncle suing nephew broker Raphael Toledano over $100 million East Village deal
Report: Raphael Toledano completes purchase of 16-building East Village portfolio
Photo of 253 E. 10th St. and 27 St. Mark’s Place via The Real Deal
Black Seed bagels about 2 weeks away from opening

In its Fall Restaurant Preview earlier this month, the Times listed that Black Seed bagels would be opening its new location at 176 First Ave. on Sept. 17.
Based on that info, there were a few people expecting to find bagels being served from the former DeRobertis bakery location yesterday.
That wasn't the case.
Black Seed cleared up any confusion via Twitter…
@NameCantBe @evgrieve @nytimes Two more weeks. Hope to see you soon on 1st Ave!
— Black Seed Bagels (@BlackSeedBagels) September 17, 2015H/T @NameCantBe
Previously
Thursday, September 17, 2015
EVG Etc.: Jesse Malin's new record and bar; Marcia Resnick's NYC 'Punks, Poets and Provocateurs'

[Mocha Lite and Miss Demeanor outside the Phoenix on East 13th Street via Grant Shaffer]
Jesse Malin on his latest record and new bar Berlin under 2A on Avenue A (The Village Voice)
Flowers Cafe closes tomorrow ahead of redevelopment at 355 Grand St. (BoweryBoogie)
Threat of lawsuit over massage parlor installation at Orchard Street gallery (artnet News)
Stats on bullying in East Village/LES schools (DNAinfo)
History of the honorary street names along Second Avenue (Off the Grid)
About Louis Abolafia, the East Village artist who ran for president in 1968 (Ephemeral New York)
More on Avant Garden's opening on East Seventh Street (Zagat)
A look at photographer Marcia Resnick's new book of NYC "Punks, Poets and Provocateurs" (Dangerous Minds)
A visit to Rachael Ray's 6-level East Village home (The Wall Street Journal, subscription required)
Some history of Peridance Capezio Center on East 13th Street (The New York Times)
Another chance to discuss the East River flood protection plan (The Lo-Down)
The original Palm restaurant space for rent (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
Lou Reed cornerspotting (Flaming Pablum)
… and in the spring of 2014, Michael Sean Edwards, who has contributed photos to EVG through the years, released a book of photography titled "Past Future Past: The East Village: 1978-1980."
The softcover edition ($24.95) is now for sale at Alphabets, 64 Avenue A, and St. Mark's Bookshop, 136 E. Third St.

[Photo on St. Mark's Place by Michael Sean Edwards]
Thinking about the future (and past) of 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place
As you probably know, some major change is in the works for the corners of Third Avenue and St. Mark's Place.
To recap:
• Back in June, The Real Deal reported that real-estate investor Arthur Shapolsky is in the process of buying three properties at the northeast corner of Third Avenue and St. Marks Place: 23 Third Ave., 27 Third Ave. and 3 St. Mark's Place. Basically everything from McDonald's to the corner.
According to The Real Deal, the corner could accommodate a 41,500-square-foot commercial building or a residential one of roughly half the size.
To date, nothing about the sale has shown up in public records just yet.
• Last November, the Pappas family, owners of the St. Marks Hotel, filed plans to build a 10-story mixed-use building on the hotel's lot at the southeast corner St. Mark’s Place and Third Avenue. (The hotel would take floors 2-10.)
New York Yimby got a look at a rendering.

This Super St. Marks Hotel structure awaits DOB approval. (The DOB website shows that city last disapproved the plans on March 26.)
Meanwhile, for a little perspective on this corner (at least the northeast side), take a look at this photo that writer Ada Calhoun bought on eBay that dates to 1963...
The coming changes might make for a nice addendum to Calhoun's forthcoming book, "St. Marks Is Dead: The Many Lives of America’s Hippest Street," out Nov. 2 from W.W. Norton & Co.
25 E. 7th St. is for sale
Here are the details from the Cushman & Wakefield listing:
A 26’ wide, five-story, multi-family walk-up building located on the north side of East 7th Street between Cooper Square and 2nd Avenue. The building consists of nine residential units, of which three are rent-stabilized, one is rent-controlled, and five will be delivered vacant.
The average in-place rent of the rent-regulated units is approximately $22 per square foot which is only a fraction of market. A majority of the units are large one-bedrooms that could be converted to two-bedrooms or front-back units.
There is also dramatic upside in renovating the free market units, one of which can be converted into a duplex unit with garden access, to attain market rents. The building is located steps from The Cooper Union’s new building and around the corner from trendy East Village eateries such as The Mermaid Inn and Narcissa.
Asking price: $8.95 million
Image via Cushman & Wakefield
A quick look at Coffee Project New York, opening soon on East 5th Street

The coffee shop at 239 E. Fifth St. between Second Avenue and Cooper Square has been in the works for several months now... yesterday was the first day that we have seen the paper off the front windows... EVG contributor Derek Berg says that the place should be open within a week...

The shop has a website and Facebook page (and Instagram), though there's not much other information for the moment...
Are you psyched about this new business on East 4th Street?

An EVG reader let us know that the new psychic's space opened this week at 193 E. Fourth St. just east of Avenue A.
The location has more to offer than the original "psychic coming soon" signage led us to believe. Aside from spiritual advising, the professionals here are also offering life coaching. (No word at the moment what their lifetime coaching record is.) Also, walk-ins welcome.
The storefront was previously home to Bikes, by George!
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
The Marshal seizes Nevada Smiths on 3rd Avenue

[Image via Facebook]
Several tipsters have told us that the Marshal has taken legal possession of Nevada Smiths at 100 Third Ave.
Here's the official word from Nevada Smiths via Facebook...
Due to Circumstances Beyond our Control Nevada Smiths is temporarily closed. We are working to resolve the Situation and...
Posted by Nevada Smiths on Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Of note: According to DNAinfo back in April, a New Jersey bank filed suit against Nevada Smiths after the bar failed to make the last four payments on a $150,000 loan.
The football/soccer mainstay opened in their new home between East 12th Street and East 13th Street in April 2013.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Nevada Smiths is closed, and here's what's next
Those persistent rumors about 74-76 Third Avenue and the future of Nevada Smiths
The East Village will lose a parking lot and gain an apartment building
Here then, where Nevada Smiths once stood
RIP Adam Purple
[Photo of Adam Purple on 1st Avenue in 2012 by @rahav]
Adam Purple, the activist and environmentalist who was the centerpiece in a city dispute over a blooming oasis on the Lower East Side called the Garden of Eden, died Monday afternoon. He was 84.
According to The Villager, Purple — considered by some to be the godfather of the urban gardening movement — died of an apparent heart attack while cycling over the Williamsburg Bridge to meet a friend in the East Village. (The New York Times has a feature obituary here.)
Purple — born David Wilkie in Independence, Mo. — garnered international attention in the mid-1980s when he battled the city over a five-lot, 15,000-square-foot garden he created amid the ruins of the Lower East Side.
The garden grew from the mid 1970s to the mid 1980s. Purple was known to ride his bike (he had renounced the internal combustion engine, among many other modern conveniences) up to Central Park several times a week and return with mounds of manure from hansom cab horses to fertilize the soil.
The garden, between Forsyth Street and Eldridge Street, just south of Stanton Street, was plowed under by the city in 1986 to make way for low- and moderate-income housing. (Plans to build around the garden never materialized.)

[Photograph©Harvey Wang]
Here's the Times with a feature on Purple from February 1998:
And from the Times in 1999: "He has been called one of New York City's living treasures, an ornery gadfly, a freelance anarchist. He has gone by many names: Hy Patia, Les Ego, John Peter Zenger 2d, P. E. Ricles, General Zen of the Headquarters Intergalactic of Psychic Police Uranus, and even the relatively mundane David Wilkie."
For more background, check out "Adam Purple and The Garden of Eden" by Harvey Wang and Amy Brost from 2011...
In recent years, Purple had been living in Williamsburg, working with Times Up.
As the Times noted in 1998, Purple started wearing little purple — with the exception of a hat.
Adam Purple, the activist and environmentalist who was the centerpiece in a city dispute over a blooming oasis on the Lower East Side called the Garden of Eden, died Monday afternoon. He was 84.
According to The Villager, Purple — considered by some to be the godfather of the urban gardening movement — died of an apparent heart attack while cycling over the Williamsburg Bridge to meet a friend in the East Village. (The New York Times has a feature obituary here.)
Purple — born David Wilkie in Independence, Mo. — garnered international attention in the mid-1980s when he battled the city over a five-lot, 15,000-square-foot garden he created amid the ruins of the Lower East Side.
The garden grew from the mid 1970s to the mid 1980s. Purple was known to ride his bike (he had renounced the internal combustion engine, among many other modern conveniences) up to Central Park several times a week and return with mounds of manure from hansom cab horses to fertilize the soil.
The garden, between Forsyth Street and Eldridge Street, just south of Stanton Street, was plowed under by the city in 1986 to make way for low- and moderate-income housing. (Plans to build around the garden never materialized.)

[Photograph©Harvey Wang]
Here's the Times with a feature on Purple from February 1998:
"He is the purest example of a hippie ever seen in this city," said Mary Cantwell, the author of 'Manhattan, When I Young,' who met Mr. Purple in 1985. "He is an artifact of that era, living in a very unlikely time and place, namely present-day New York City."
Mr. Purple has been something of a fringe fixture ever since he moved to the city 30 years ago. His appearance and his moniker were striking even in a city known for its eclectic characters and wild sartorial tastes. During much of the 70's and early 80's, he dressed almost entirely in the royal hue: purple shirts, purple sweaters, purple pants. With his beard, gray hair, floppy green stocking cap, sunglasses and twinkling blue eyes, he looks like Santa Claus if Santa hit the skids and lost the belly.
And from the Times in 1999: "He has been called one of New York City's living treasures, an ornery gadfly, a freelance anarchist. He has gone by many names: Hy Patia, Les Ego, John Peter Zenger 2d, P. E. Ricles, General Zen of the Headquarters Intergalactic of Psychic Police Uranus, and even the relatively mundane David Wilkie."
For more background, check out "Adam Purple and The Garden of Eden" by Harvey Wang and Amy Brost from 2011...
In recent years, Purple had been living in Williamsburg, working with Times Up.
As the Times noted in 1998, Purple started wearing little purple — with the exception of a hat.
He put the color away, he said, after the garden was destroyed.
"Purple went out with the garden," he said. "Adam Purple doesn't exist."
Condos at Ben Shaoul's 98-100 Avenue A will start at $1.3 million; high-end gym eyed for retail space

[EVG photo of 98-100 Avenue A from yesterday]
Turns out that Ben Shaoul's incoming residential building on Avenue A will house condos and not rentals as previously thought.
According to The Real Deal, one-bedroom units will start at just under $1.3 million while penthouses will go for $2.3 million. Per broker Ryan Serhant, prices will range from the high $1,000s per square foot to north of $2,000 per square foot.
Amenities for the 33-unit (we originally heard 29 units) building will include a — ding! ding! — roof deck as well as some private outdoor spaces for several of the residences here between East Seventh Street and East Sixth Street.
Meanwhile, The Real Deal also hears that the ground-floor retail space will house a high-end gym. Equinox already reportedly inked a deal to lease two floors of Shaoul's incoming development on East Houston and Orchard. So maybe look for a high-end gym other than Equinox for the space that last housed East Village Farms. (And this might just finally dash those hopes for a Trader Joe's.)
The residences here are expected to be ready by the late spring or early summer of
Updated 6:22 p.m.
An EVG reader shared a view from behind the building...

Per the reader: "Here is the backside of the construction. No idea why they left that large area open. Gads."
Previously on EV Grieve:
A little bit of Hollywood on Avenue A
Inside the abandoned theater at East Village Farms on Avenue A
New Facebook group is advocating for a Trader Joe's on Avenue A
Workers back demolishing what's left of 98-100 Avenue A
Rest assured, there isn't a fire in the hole at 98-100 Avenue A
Ben Shaoul's 98-100 Avenue A emerging from the dewatering hole
Life next to 98-100 Avenue A
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