Thursday, December 10, 2015

[Updated] EVG on EVR

I'm going to be doing a few shows here and there on East Village Radio.

Tomorrow morning (Dec. 11!) from 10-noon, I'll be talking with Robert Shapiro, founder of Social Tees Animal Rescue, and East Village-based illustrator Peter Arkle and writer-editor Amy Goldwasser, creators of the book "All Black Cats Are Not Alike."
And there will be some music too. And a couple bad jokes and awkward pauses. Fun!

Listen in via dashradio.com/EVR or the Dash Radio app.

The show will be rebroadcast at some point during the weekend. And I'll try to get a copy of the program to post here later.

Updated 12/11

You can tune in to the rebroadcast on Saturday (tomorrow!) from 10 a.m. to noon at dashradio.com/EVR or the Dash Radio app.

Report: Manhattan’s vacancy rates are highest in the East Village (but rent is still going up)

Let's get to some takeaways from the most recent rental outlook via the Elliman Report.

From Curbed:

While median rental prices climbed for the 21st consecutive month, the vacancy rate is the highest it's been in nine years, which means landlords are being forced to offer tenants more concessions on rentals, explains data whiz Jonathan Miller, the author of the Elliman Report.

From DNAinfo:

Miller doesn’t expect to see big rent drops anytime soon since there is still a lot of “pressure” on the rental market — there’s a “robust” economy as well as tight credit and the potential of rising mortgage rates, which prevent some renters from becoming buyers.

But affordability continues to be a big issue, Miller said.

According to Gary Malin, president of Citi Habitats, Manhattan’s vacancy rates were highest in the East Village (3.2 percent), followed by the West Village (2.6 percent).

“The fact that vacancy rates are the highest in the East and West Villages is strong evidence that for apartment seekers, paying high prices for small spaces no longer adds up,” Malin said.

Malin said the “party’s over” for landlords, as inventory has been “trending upward for the past six months,” giving renters more options.

Citing lack of support, Jimmy McMillan retires from the Rent Is Too Damn High Party


Speaking of high rents... East Village resident Jimmy McMillan has announced his retirement from politics, specifically the Rent Is Too Damn High Party, under which he ran for mayor, governor and, for a moment, president.

According to The New York Times:

In a news release infused with misspellings and other errors that was dated Tuesday, Mr. McMillan said voters had been “totally brainwashed” and criticized Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio, both Democrats, for not securing “a rent reduction for the people in the cities of Brooklyn, Bronx, Staten Island, Manhattan and Queens.”

“Rent is too damn high is an international crisis,” he wrote. “There are many questions the people should ask themselves. I which them the best — I’m out.”

And we're not sure about what came of the eviction battle over his rent-stabilized apartment of 38 years on St. Mark's Place. We saw him get in his car on the block earlier this week.

Meanwhile, on Nov. 29, McMillan published this Merry Christmas message/song on YouTube...

As the Hotel Indigo and Mr. Purple continue efforts to be part of the LES neighborhood



The recently opened Hotel Indigo on Orchard Street continues to try to make inroads with the local community. The latest effort: a nighttime light show titled The Color of Discovery.

From the press invite:

With the launch of The Color of Discovery, the Hotel Indigo brand is set to expose consumers to a one-of-a-kind, community experience like never before. The Color of Discovery leads travelers to explore and discover the local neighborhoods of each Hotel Indigo property through a series of mnemonic reveals. The brand’s message is to deliver a unique boutique experience at each location and the color Indigo is the emblematic of each unfolding adventure.

To launch this campaign, Hotel Indigo Lower East Side New York is hosting an event exposing the culture of the Lower East Side (complete with graffiti art, performances and neighborhood elements) while partnering with Dawn of Man and Lee Quiñones to bring the new campaign to life in a truly imaginative display of 3D projection art that incorporates the signature Indigo mnemonic, thus revealing each aspect of the local scene.


[Photo by James and Karla Murray]

At one point, it looked like the projection of an old tenement projected on the new building that the Hotel Indigo replaced. BoweryBoogie noted this morning that this Color of Discovery is helping the hotel further solidify "its sense of self, you know, just in case you didn’t realize the towering 23-story building was there."

Then there is the hotel's 15th-floor bar called Mr. Purple.

According to initial reports, the bar, featuring an outdoor pool, was named after Adam Purple, the well-known Lower East Side environmentalist and activist, who died on Sept. 14 at age 84. (The Gerber Group, who operates the bar space, later seemed to backtrack on this.)

On Nov. 24, a rep for the Gerber Group sent us the following statement in regard to Mr. Purple to show that they are committed to supporting the local community:

The name of the bar and restaurant was established when the project was first conceptualized in 2014. It was indeed inspired by Lower East Side resident David Wilkie, who became known as "Mr. Purple." A gardener and activist, he was an iconic figure who dedicated his life to beautifying and improving the neighborhood. A mural was painted in his honor and can be seen on display in the lobby area of the hotel.

Also, in honoring Wilkie's dedication to the neighborhood, the restaurant is committed to supporting the Lower East Side community through several initiatives including partnerships with the Bowery Mission and local businesses such as Russ & Daughters, il laboratorio del gelato and Yonah Schimmel Knish Bakery who are all featured on the restaurant's menu. Additionally, through the Lower East Side Employment Network (LESEN), 30 percent of jobs at the hotel have been allocated to local residents.

After posting this statement, we heard from Russ & Daughters, who wanted to set the record straight:

Russ & Daughters doesn’t have a partnership with Mr. Purple or Hotel Indigo. That restaurant simply purchased smoked salmon at our shop one time. We never authorized them to use our name on their menus or in their promotional materials.

We then contacted the Bowery Mission to see if they do have a relationship with the hotel. In an email, James Winans, chief development officer for the Bowery Mission, told us the following:

The Gerber Group reached out to The Bowery Mission a number of weeks ago. They seem genuinely interested in getting to know The Bowery Mission and learning how they can help us serve our homeless and poor neighbors. The Gerber Group has made an initial financial contribution and spent a morning volunteering at the Mission.

Part of this relationship also included Mr. Purple donating a $1 to the Mission from every drink sold on Thanksgiving eve and Thanksgiving.

Meanwhile, in a report yesterday, BoweryBoogie noted further tension between the bar and some local community members, particularly those who were friends with Adam Purple.

Multiple sources tell us that there was actually a meeting earlier in the year between Adam Purple and the Gerber Group. While the hotel was still under wraps. Purple apparently never gave them permission to use his name or his likeness and did not sign any documents to that effect.

And!

We hear whispers that a large contingent wants to approach the hotel with positive solutions ... If the hotel is open to hearing these ideas and willing to speak with a representative from the community, they are saying, then there might be a way to honor Purple’s legacy, and at least might make a clueless concept a bit less offensive.

The short list of ideas includes asking the hotel to create a proper memorial in the bar with a display of photos and info about Adam, taking the “Mr. Purple Burger” off of the menu [Purple was a devout vegetarian] or replacing it with a garden burger, and educating the staff on the real story of Adam Purple.

For the time being, New Year's Eve reservations are now being accepted at Mr. Purple...


If you're interested, the VIP Table Package No. 3 is $3,000 ...



Previously on EV Grieve:
[Updated] The upscale hotel bar with a pool named for the late environmentalist Adam Purple

[Updated] The Gerber Group responds to criticism over Mr. Purple

Construction watch: 22 Bond St./25 Great Jones



Construction continues at a glacial pace at 22 Bond St./25 Great Jones.

From Lafayette, you can see that workers are adding on to the Great Jones-facing exterior of the building ...



Right here.



As previously noted, the building will now house a 6-unit condo. (The building is officially 22 Bond Street, though it's also known as 25 Great Jones since the property extends through the block.)


[The view from Bond Street]

BKSK Architects designed the exterior.



Here's what they have to say about it at the BKSK website:

What was a long-dormant 14-story superstructure originally intended to be a hotel is being remade into a more contextually sensitive and art-inspired residential loft building.

Plans for the through-block site include reducing the height of the existing tower, which faces Great Jones Street, by two floors and re-establishing the building’s street presence with new façades positioned on either lot line. Taking advantage of the site’s expansive exposure on Lafayette Street, the building will become a literal canvas for art with a giant, site-specific mural. Additionally, the deep site is bracketed by two facades of weathered steel on the north and south ends, framing an “art garden” within, visible to passersby through a large vitrine near the entrance on Bond Street.

Within the garden, landscape, an expansive mural, sculpture, and elevated trees are framed by architecture, transforming the building into a vessel for art. This building-as-art concept continues the neighborhood’s legacy as an incubator for art, where beginning in the 1970s, some the city’s most prominent contemporary artists emerged. This tradition has inspired a new generation of art installations – along Bond Street in particular – that work in concert with the architecture.

According to The Real Deal, the units range in price from $9.26 million to $19.88 million. Pricing starts at $3,200 — a foot.

At one point with different developers and architects involved, the property was going to be a hotel several years back.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Your chance to buy a boutique hotel on Great Jones

25 Great Jones St. returns to the land of undead developments

Ruffian Wine Bar signage arrives on East 7th Street


[Photo by Steven]

The Ruffian Wine Bar sign is up now in the window at 125 E. Seventh St., in the storefronts between Butter Lane and Big Gay Ice Cream.

As the name implies, a wine bar/cafe is in the works for the small space that previously housed Oaxaca Taqueria here between Avenue A and First Avenue.

Ruffian has an active Instagram account showing renovation progress ... (the website is still partially under construction).

Owner and sommelier Patrick Cornet has worked as GM and beverage director at Lelabar on Hudson Street ... as well as wine director at Resto on East 29th Street.

This will be the second new wine bar right along this stretch of East Seventh Street... Virgola, the Greenwich Village-based oyster-and-wine cafe, is due soon at No. 111.

Activity to note at interesting new business coming to East 14th Street

Well, we haven't seen much activity of late at the incoming Domino's Pizza® location at 440 E. 14th St. just west of Avenue A. The sign arrived back in July.

And that has been about it for the Domino's Pizza® Watching.

However! The gate was open yesterday...



... offering a look at the work in progress...



Perhaps the crew here was waiting for the adjacent buildings to be demolished for a new residential building with 114 units.

In any event, this location hasn't shown up just yet at the Domino's Pizza® website. Big D fans will still need to order from STORE #3694 on Allen Street or STORE #3616 on West 8th Street.

Thanks Edmund John Dunn!

Previously on EV Grieve:
Interesting new business opening on East 14th Street

Work continues at interesting new business coming to East 14th Street

Signage arrives for interesting new business on East 14th Street

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Stand out at SantaCon this Saturday by dressing in a polar bear suit



Per a seller on the Lower East Side via Craigslist:

Get the hottest costume for Santacon - a polar bear. Unleash the beast within. This costume is well constructed, warm, and stylish. Wearing this costume, you are guaranteed to grab the attention of the opposite sex. In fact, it's very likely they'll help you take it off. Buy it now!

The costume is clean and was worn once for a holiday event. I paid a lot more than I should have for it, but I couldn't resist. Now it's yours for half the price ($100) and twice the self-control.

The costume is four pieces: The head, the body (with attached gloves), and two feet (the feet have never been worn). It also comes with a convenient carrying bag. Buy it and make this the best Santacon of your goddamn life.

Might be fun to wear to the MulchFest 2016 as well!

Look for the gory details tomorrow on the SantaCon 2015 not-a-pubcrawl route.

NYPD looking for suspects in apparent random East 9th Street stabbing



According to NBC New York, the NYPD is searching for two men who allegedly approached a man standing on East Ninth Street and stabbed him several times in the back.

Surveillance video picked up the two suspects approaching the 49-year-old victim on the 300 block of East Ninth Street near Second Avenue just after 4:30 a.m. last Saturday, Dec. 5. The two men reportedly fled after the attack. The victim was treated and released for his injuries. It was unclear if the man knew his assailants.

The NBC report did not include a description of the suspects.

Anyone with information that could help in the investigation is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477). You may also submit tips online.

Out and About in the East Village

In this weekly feature, East Village-based photographer James Maher provides us with a quick snapshot of someone who lives and/or works in the East Village.



By James Maher
Name: Tony Feher
Occupation: Artist
Location: Avenue A between East 3rd and East 4th
Time: 4:30 pm on Friday, Dec. 4

I moved here from Corpus Christi, Texas, in 1981 because I wanted to have a life, which I was not going to have in Corpus Christi. I moved into my apartment on East 2nd Street in 1984. I worked in SoHo. The art galleries were there and I was kind of between places and somebody let me sleep in their basement on some crates full of art. Then I moved over here because it was cheap. I’ve lived here for 31 years.

I’m an artist. When I first came here I was working in galleries or for another artist in the contemporary art world. I now support myself with my own work. I do sculpture for a lack of a better word, but really the breakthrough for me came when [started using] found objects and common ordinary things that we just overlook but I found interest in them and kind of created a unique genre of the moment.

It was a good neighborhood for found objects because there was so much debris and so much stuff everywhere. Like milk crates — nobody ever paid attention to them, but when you see them scattered around the neighborhood in green and red and blue and pink… I thought, ‘Wow these are like shells on the beach.’ It’s landscape, but it’s an urban landscape and they used to just be dotted around. Now you can’t find anything.

It was vibrant. It was tough, but [I was] young and looking for adventure and so that was cool. But I had to walk five blocks to the laundry, and if you turned your back, somebody would steal your clothes. There weren’t any markets around. The Koreans showed up after awhile and they changed the neighborhood completely because they had fresh food. Now they’ve all been kicked out. There’s not a single Korean market left. Grace from Gracefully had three or four places in the neighborhood and they’re all gone. And she, to her credit, when the deli workers, green market workers went on strike, she was the first one to settle with them, pay them more money, and get back to work. So I give Grace a lot of credit.

Two-thirds of the buildings on my street were abandoned and burned out. There was like a Kmart for heroin across the street in this vacant lot. For an artist it was great but I think it’s difficult to romanticize the ghetto, especially if you’re not from the ghetto. And that was not my background. A city can’t survive with huge sections burned out. It’s just the greed of real-estate development that destroys the integrity of a neighborhood and forces people out. I was too poor to move to Brooklyn when all my friends moved to Brooklyn and they’ve all now moved like five times. They keep getting pushed out. I worked in my apartment as my studio for 20 years and kind of woke up one day and all my friends were gone.

Westminster apparently bought [nearly 30] buildings in the neighborhood in the last year or two. The building was built in, say 1890, or something like that and had marble wainscoting four feet high up the stairway and all the way up. It’s a beautiful building. The first thing that they did with my building, which was really sad since it was the only building on the block that survived intact through the dark ages, was smash out the interior and turn it into a ruin for the look of the exposed brick interior. They made it look like it had been a burned-out hole, which they think appeals to the young suburban NYU kids. But it could have been a landmark interior. It was spectacularly beautiful. It needed to be cleaned; it didn’t need to be smashed. And the dust it created… people got sick. It’s just so vulgar, the way that they approach the whole thing.

I have a curator friend who has lived on Clinton Street for longer than I’ve been here and he predicted that the galleries would move to the Lower East Side, and I was like, ‘are you nuts?’ It’s interesting that the artists have been replaced with the galleries. The artists can’t afford to live there and the galleries are paying these big rents. That’s the thing in the city — there’s no place else to go.

When everybody moved to Chelsea, that was still an open territory for galleries. That’s full now and the High Line has turned that into a luxury neighborhood. There are a lot of substantial galleries that are having trouble, because the art market has changed so dramatically with the art fairs. It’s insane with the billionaires who come in and the speculation. I’m going to be left on the street but there’s going to be five or six mega-galleries and if you’re not involved with them, then you’re not involved.

Where is the art world going to go? I don’t know. It proved that Brooklyn doesn’t hold up because the people with money don’t want to go over there. For a little while Williamsburg was okay, but they ain’t taking the L Train and traffic is traffic. That’s when the Lower East Side bloomed. I mean, there’s stuff going on over in Brooklyn of course, and a lot of young artists are there. But it’s the same story — if a gallery over there gets successful, they move over here as quick as they can.

James Maher is a fine art and studio photographer based in the East Village. Find his website here.

The East Village Holiday Shopping Night — is tonight (and today)


[Photo last month on East 9th Street via Steven]

The East Village Independent Merchants Association (EVIMA) is hosting its second annual Holiday Shopping Night tonight.

Nearly 20 shops are taking part in the event ... and with some discounts for shoppers. Here's the list via the EVIMA website... (and these deals are good all day, not just this evening...)






There's also a free holiday party at Ballaro (no Taylor Swift xmas song requests please), 77 Second Ave. between East Fifth Street and East Sixth Street, from 6 to 9 p.m. (You can RSVP here.)

EVIMA is an offshoot of the East Village Community Coalition.

[Updated] Caffe Bene opens today on St. Mark's Place



The (soft) opening sign has been up inside here at 24 St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue...



The storefront previously housed a Pinkberry, which closed at the beginning of the year.

This will make the second Caffe Benne to open in the East Village in recent weeks. The outpost on Avenue A at East 13th Street, which serves beer and wine, is up and running too...

Has anyone been to the Avenue A location? Several readers have noted that the proprietor of this franchise (the company is based in Seoul, South Korea) lives in the neighborhood, where he grew up in a family of deli/market owners.

The one comment I heard from several people about the Avenue A location — it's a little bright...



... at least compared with Ost Cafe a block away on A at East 12th Street...



Updated 9:04 a.m.

Several neighbors have now noted that the Avenue A Caffe Bene is opting for the bar vibe, promoting football and a buy-one-get-one-free special on weekend nights ... instead of say, coffee ...



CB3 signed off on the beer-wine license back in September, though with some hesitation ...

From the minutes (PDF) of that meeting:

Community Board 3 was concerned about granting a wine beer license to this applicant given that 1) this application for an international coffee house chain store is in a location which has previously been unlicensed and was last operated as a laundromat, 2) this location is in close proximity to numerous businesses with liquor licenses, as well as numerous independently operated small coffee shops, 3) that this applicant has no experience operating an eating and drinking establishment or having a wine beer license, 4) while there are seven (7) coffee houses in New York City from this international chain, this is the only operator seeking to obtain a wine beer license, and 5) opposition from area residents, the 182-184 Avenue A Tenants Association and the North Avenue A Neighborhood Association to the granting of an additional liquor license for this location because of its hours of operation, the number of other licensed businesses in the area and the garbage, drunkenness and noise which now pervades this corner..

According to the stipulations, this Caffe Benne may have a happy hour to 8 p.m. each night. The above photo is from 10:47 p.m., according to the neighbor who took it (and the time stamp on the photo)...

H/T Steven

Previously on EV Grieve:
2 Caffe Bene locations coming to the East Village (45 comments)

Reader report: Rent hike washes away longtime Avenue A laundromat (11 comments)

Work starts on the 2 Caffe Bene spaces in the East Village (26 comments)

Brewing Soon signage arrives for Caffe Bene on Avenue A (25 comments)

The Caffe Bene on Avenue A looks very close to opening (24 comments)

Makki Deli & Grocery has closed



The small deli serving Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Indian food to go at 440 E. Ninth St. has closed. EVG correspondent Steven spotted workers hanging for rent signs on the space just west of Avenue A last evening.



Makki opened back in April, and people seemed to like the food (and the portions and prices). However, the place never seemed to attract many customers, at least based on the times that I looked in while walking by... The food was good, though it was tough passing up Punjabi Grocery & Deli on East First Street for this.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Have you tried Makki Deli & Grocery?

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Report: SantaCon starts in McCarran Park before heading to the East Village; plus, organizers respond to elected officials

[Photo from 2012 by A. Sasaki]

Busy day on the SantaCon 2015 front.

First! According to DNAinfo, the Santas will first assemble at McCarran Park in Williamsburg Saturday morning at 10. DNAinfo previously quoted a police source saying that the assembled will eventually arrive in the East Village to continue the festivities.

And where exactly here? You'll have a little longer to wait.

Per DNAInfo:

A major portion of this year's SantaCon route will be publicly released Wednesday evening and Thursday morning, said civil rights attorney Norman Siegel, hired last year as the event's liaison with government agencies and the press.

Meanwhile! SantaCon organizers and Siegel responded to the letter made public yesterday by 12 local elected officials.

You may read their response right here...

Santa Con Response to State Senator 120715