Thursday, March 3, 2016

City changes way it will treat people drinking or urinating (or both) in public


[Pee Phone™ photo from 2014]

Well, we somehow missed this announcement on Tuesday... via the DA's office...

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., New York City Police Department Commissioner William J. Bratton, and Mayor Bill de Blasio today announced a new initiative to change how individuals who commit low-level offenses are processed in Manhattan.

Beginning on Monday, March 7, 2016, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office will no longer prosecute most violations or infractions, and the NYPD will no longer arrest individuals who commit these offenses – such as littering, public consumption of alcohol, or taking up two seats on the subway – unless there is a demonstrated public safety reason to do so.

This initiative will enable the NYPD to devote its resources to investigating serious crimes, while further reducing the backlog of cases in Criminal Court. The issuance of summonses instead of arrests is expected to result in the diversion of approximately 10,000 arrests that would be prosecuted in Manhattan Criminal Court.

Public urination is also on the list of low-level offenses, per published reports.

Will the city's new policy make you more likely to urinate in public?
Yes
Yes, and when is SantaCon?
No
If you don't like urinating in public, then move to _____
Beer store!
personality test

Krystal's Cafe 81 has closed for good on East 7th Street

[EVG file photo]

Krystal's Cafe 81 on East Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue has closed for good. Sunday was its last day in business, according to this website for "New York Ethnic Food Lovers."

There isn't any mention of a closure on the Cafe 81 Facebook page. The Cafe 81 phone rings once before the line goes dead.

Most recently Cafe 81 had been a Filipino restaurant and bar... Until Jan. 1, 2005, the address was home to Verchovyna Tavern aka George's Bar aka Bar 81.

H/T EVG reader Charlie Chen

Previously on EV Grieve:
At Cafe 81, you'd better be quiet or someone will throw a shamwow at you

Hakata Hot Pot (RIP Sushi Lounge) has moved on St. Mark's Place



Hakata Hot Pot and Sushi Lounge, housed in the retail spaces at 58 St. Mark's Place between First Avenue and Second Avenue, are no more.

The restaurants shut down at the end of February. According to the owner, they lost their lease. (The building's new landlord is Raphael Toledano.)

However, Hakata Hot Pot will live on. Here's the message via Facebook:

Attention all of our guests!

Hakata Hot Pot and Sushi Lounge will move from 58 Saint Marks Place to 31 Saint Marks Place from March 1st.

Hakata Hot Pot had started 1983 as NATORI Restaurant.

Unfortunately we lost our lease in this place, and now we are going to join our sister restaurant Zen 6 since 1985 on the heart of Saint Marks Place between 2nd and 3rd avenue.

Zen 6 is Ramen restaurant, and we will add new Japanese Hot Pot on the menu.

Our new restaurant name is Hakata Hot Pot & Zen 6.

Please visit feel free to our new location and enjoy our authentic Hakata style izakaya food.

Thank you for your patronage.
owner
Hideyuki Okayama

Let's see if we have this straight. Higher rents chased Sushi Lounge from St. Mark's Place and Avenue A at the end of October 2013. (The corner space is now home to Empellón al Pastor, a bar with tacos.)

The owners of Sushi Lounge were also the new proprietors of Natori at 58 St. Mark's Place. (The original Natori, a longtime favorite, closed in November 2012.)

Then what was operating as the second Natori became Sushi Lounge in January 2014. Then they added the Hot Pot component.

Anyway, what we do know is that Hakata Hot Pot and Zen 6 will be under one roof at 31 St. Mark's Place...



H/T EVG reader Morgan!

Previously on EV Grieve:
As the sushi turns: Sushi Lounge now operating out of the former Natori space on St. Mark's

100 Avenue A reps say that 100 Avenue A is already 50% sold



As previously noted, developer Ben Shaoul's residences at 100 Avenue A between East Sixth Street and East Seventh Street at the new 6-story 8-story building will start at $1.28 million.

Apparently people want to live here, according to the people who are selling the units.

Per a news release on the opening of the sales office at 115 Avenue A yesterday:

Prior to opening the sales office, the rare luxury 32 unit condo property is already 50% sold to date as a result of early buzz generated by a daring marketing campaign featuring nearly nude models painted to blend into their surroundings. 100 Avenue A is set to break countless records, including the highest residential price per square foot achieved in the East Village for a non-penthouse unit, with residence 7C already going into contract for $2,685 per foot.

Previously on EV Grieve:
The retail space at Ben Shaoul's 100 Avenue A is available for $24.5 million; plus, naked model marketing clarification!

Trying to figure out what is going on at 98-100 Avenue A

Part of the former Alphabets storefront will serve as sales office for Ben Shaoul's 100 Avenue A

Someone threw black paint bombs at the naked women condo ad along 100 Avenue A

Take a look at the inside of Ben Shaoul's condos at 100 Avenue A

100 Avenue A announces its incoming sales office with familiar naked, graffitied person motif

'Gentrification in Progress' tape arrives at former Trash & Vaudeville and Stage Restaurant spaces

The tape arrived late Wednesday night outside the former Trash and Vaudeville storefront on St. Mark's Place ...



... and the Stage Restaurant on Second Avenue...



Thanks to EVG correspondent Steven for the photos (and H/T Ed B.)

Trash and Vaudeville closed after business on Sunday ahead of a move to 96 E. Seventh St. Rising rents and a change in the business environment on this block of St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue were among the reasons for the move. The Stage announced its permanent closure earlier on Wednesday.

The tape is the work of the artist GILF, who previously has cordoned off the Germania Bank Building at 190 Bowery with her creation.

Goodbye red lights #gentrificationinprogress

A photo posted by gilf! (@gilfnyc) on



Updated 6:30 a.m.

BoweryBoogie notes that GILF also placed the tape at the former St. Mark's Bookshop.

Updated 8 a.m.

Morning views...




[Photo by Lola Sāenz]

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

East 7th Street maintaining rep for stunt parking

Previously! Between the dumpsters on East Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue...



EVG Tight Parking Spot correspondent Derek Berg also shared this photo on East Seventh Street ... this time between Avenue A and First Avenue...

Noted at the former Stage Restaurant



Someone has quickly expressed his or her displeasure to the news today that the Stage Restaurant at 128 Second Ave. will not be reopening... the fake NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene sign takes aim at landlord Icon Realty...



H/T Steven

The Stage Restaurant will not be reopening


[Photo Monday by Steven]

On Monday, the gates at the Stage Restaurant at 128 Second Ave. between East Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place were up... offering a glimmer of hope that the 35-year-old diner might be reopening.

That's not the case. The Stage said goodbye today on Facebook...

Today we officially close our doors....As overwhelmingly unfortunate as it is, it's always important to look on the...

Posted by Stage Restaurant on Wednesday, March 2, 2016


The 35-year-old diner has been closed since last March 30. Stage owner Roman Diakun was involved in an ongoing legal/eviction battle here with landlord Icon Realty.

Icon, who bought the building in the fall of 2013, had accused the Stage of gas-tampering charges, which Diakun strongly denied.

Here's a second Facebook message from Diakun:

Dear wonderful and loyal customers, fans, friends, and neighbors,
It is with bittersweet emotions that we at Stage Restaurant are announcing that we are closing our doors permanently after 35 amazing years. The events of the year have been overwhelmingly devastating on us and we have decided to close the Stage’s door. Over the past year, we have resolved our dispute with the landlord and Icon Realty Management. Stage Restaurant never engaged in any wrongdoing; however, after our prolonged closure and because of the cost to make the repairs and expenses of reopening, we are sad to say that the Stage cannot reopen.

It has been our great honor and pleasure to serve and truly be a part of the community over the past 35 years. We are so grateful to all who have made the experience of running this restaurant in such a vibrant, and supportive area of this great city a remarkable and unforgettable journey for us. We will greatly miss our staff, many of which have put as much care and effort into the business as our family has. We would like to thank all of the customers we have had the pleasure of meeting for your business and friendships. Thank you all for your support, your signatures, your donations, and especially your kind words. We could not have realized our passion and love for nourishing and providing a place of comfort and gathering to the community without you all. Your loyalty, support, kindness and love have been a true blessing, and something we will never forget. Thank you all from the bottom of our hearts.
Roman Diakun

So good night...


[Photo by Michael Seto]

Previously on EV Grieve:
[Updated] Report: Icon Realty serves the Stage an eviction notice

Stage owner Roman Diakun responds to allegations of illegally siphoning gas

Petition to help reopen the Stage

[Updated] The Stage is giving away its bulk food and supplies to charity

Report: The Stage is suing landlord Icon Realty to halt eviction process

The Stage is now crowdfunding to help in its legal fight with Icon Realty

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: Annie Ju (left) and Melissa Scott
Occupation: Owners, an.mé /ahn-may/, Boutique for Kids and Families.
Location: 9th Street between 1st and 2nd Ave
Time: 11 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 26

Melissa: I was born in Flushing, Queens. I’ve been down here in the East Village since 2004, with my husband. I now live two blocks over. When we first moved into Manhattan, we moved to the Upper East Side because of my job, but both my husband and I hung out down here prior to that, and so we said, ‘Hey, let’s try it,’ and now we’re raising our child here.

Annie: I’m from Taiwan and I live in Queens. I came here in August 1995, right to high school. I came here for English and for design school. I have always been in retail. I have always been working in boutiques. That’s what I’m most comfortable in — nothing corporate, always small business. I did this, but I did it for other people. This is our first venture together.

M: We worked together prior to this, over 10 years ago. We worked together for six years.

A: We wanted to have the shop here. Melissa lives here and we always loved this area. We were looking and then this space became available, because the previous owner had to cut his lease short, and we jumped on it over a year ago. We were like, now or never.

We both like the physical store, because we had a vision for how we wanted it to look. A lot of people said, ‘You should do it online. That’s what it’s all about right now,’ But we like the interaction with people. We like to create a place where people can come in comfortably with their kids and pets and they can touch things and feel things before they make a purchase. That was the whole idea behind it. We want the toys to bring people in and to come to the neighborhood. Then chances are they’re going to shop with us and then go next door. We feel like it’s a group effort.

M: This block is great, and we hope there will be more stores opening up that will be mom and pop. We’re for the young and for the young at heart. Most of the clothing is all new and we source globally. Then the toys, some are vintage throwback toys, and some are new.

A: People can come in at all ages and relate to a certain part of the store. We have a lot of big people coming to buy our toys.

M: You mean adults.

A: Big people!

M: We have a whole bucket of 1980s GI Joes. It’s always funny, the mom will drag the family in, the dad will sigh, ‘another shop,’ and then he’ll see it and be like, ‘Yo, I had those!’

A: I’m a collector, so I collect a lot of stuff along the way. I have a little bit of a problem. It’s a good problem to have… I’ve been told.

Aside from going to trade shows and finding new brands, we also support a lot of local artists, and mostly East Village-based artists. They’ll come, ‘I design cards, would you be interested,’ or bibs, dolls. We are always open to look to purchase from local designers. We work with quite a few.

M: It has been a lot of work, but it’s been a slow and steady progression, and we’ve had a lot of return customers, which is great. I think that’s what sets us maybe apart from others, is that we’re both shoppers. We like to go out and see what’s happening. We like to visit other stores. We see other kids.

We try to find what people want, and be unique in a sense, because we don’t need to compete with Amazon. We also pride ourselves on if you come in with your child, the next time we’ll remember you, and we’ll remember their size. Even from when we started, people who came in with their newborns who are now walking, it’s a progression and we hope to stay with them.

A: That’s also the biggest reason why we wanted a physical store. That relationship with people. [Compared to] big box stores, that’s why I feel like it’s so much harder to have a brick-and-mortar shop, because you need to work so much harder just to find a special something, because that’s what people want.

We also create events for parents. Halloween is going to become a tradition because that was around the time that we opened the store. Last Halloween was awesome. We had gift bags for the kids and wine for the adults, so everyone was happy. And once in awhile we hold events in the store to promote local artists and designers.

M: We just had a book signing with a local mom, a friend of mine who just illustrated her first children’s book. We had the signing here and all the kids came and were running around. We also try and we reach out to all the local schools, or as many as we can. They come in and they ask for donations for their school auctions. We try to donate and give back as much as we can. We also work with NYC Mama’s Give Back.

A: They usually have events at the Henry Street Settlement, where they distribute goods to the moms in need.

M: In this neighborhood, it’s phenomenal raising a kid, because there’s such a sense of community here. My son went to EV Tots and we met a great group of people. Now he goes to Children’s Workshop School, and we’ve continued on with that great group of people. We rely on each other almost like a family. ‘Can you pick up this person,’ you know. It’s nice to be able to. Sometimes we have other parents who come like, ‘I just need to rush to the butcher can you just watch my kid for two minutes?’ We always joke that we’re a boutique slash daycare. We like having the kids in here.

We also always joke that my son is a good salesman, because he’ll come in and start showing people products. I actually had a woman leave after having a 10-minute conversation with my son, and I was like ‘oh man,’ and she came back and was like, ‘He sold me. I’m going to get this.’

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

After 54 years, Barbara Shaum Leather has closed


[Image via GVSHP]

Barbara Shaum, the legendary local shop owner who also happened to be the first woman officially admitted into McSorley's in 1970, died last Sept. 17. She was 86.

In 1962, she opened her first handmade sandal and leather goods shop on East Seventh Street two doors down from McSorley's. She lived in an apartment behind the shop. In 1985, the landlord sold her building, and she eventually found a new workshop-storefront at 60 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery, where she worked until shortly before her death.

The shop had remained open off and on until Monday, when it was cleaned out...


[Photo by Derek Berg]

We're told that while she had various apprentices through the years, she didn't leave any instructions about a business-continuity plan upon her death.

As for her well-documented entry into McSorley's, here's a feature on Shaum from The New York Times in January 2015:

At the time, Daniel O’Connell-Kirwan, the manager of McSorley’s, invited Ms. Shaum to be the first woman through its doors.

“Danny called me and said, ‘Barbara, would you come over and be the first one in?’ ” she recalled. “I said, ‘Well you got Sara on the other side,’ ” referring to another local shopkeeper, Sara Penn.

And so it was that she, and then Ms. Penn, became the first women let into McSorley’s. “I put on a big straw hat, and I walked in on Danny’s arm,” she said. “It was a big milestone.”

According to her obituary, the press attention about McSorley's troubled her. (Never mind that she said she’d been going there after hours for years.)

She wanted to be known for her own principles, for her impassioned stands on equal pay for women, on affordable rents for small businesses. She was an activist. Encouraged by Councilwoman Miriam Friedlander, she and other Lower East Side small business people of that era struggled hard against rising rents, nevertheless losing ground year by year.

Upon naming her a Village Award recipient last year, the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation wrote:

Barbara Shaum has contributed to the quality of life in the East Village through her creativity and her determination to keep her small business alive and thriving for more than half a century...

Here is a short film from 2005 about Shaum and her shop...

East Village now minus 2 beverage distributors



The beverage distributor housed inside 188 E. Second St. between Avenue A and Avenue B is gone... and now the single-level, 2,600-square-foot space is available to a retail-commercial tenant...


[Image via Leslie J. Garfield]

Per the listing at Leslie J. Garfield, the monthly asking rent for the raw space is $13,000. For now, the property isn't being offered as any kind of development site.

Back in 2013, the address was home to an Urban Etiquette Signage Campaign between neighbors and the beverage company. Residents said that the building housed rats. Not so, said the beverage people, who noted they frequently had the property exterminated. Per the sign left for neighbors: "If you see rats going in or out it means they're just passing to or from other places."

Meanwhile, further east on Second Street... the Houston Street Beer Distributors between Avenue C and Avenue D has left the building, as BoweryBoogie noted yesterday.



We first reported back in September 2014 that the one-story warehouse was for sale. Per the listing:

It is located in an R8A zoning district with an FAR of 6.02 (approx. 15,941 SF) or up to 7.2 FAR with Inclusionary Housing designated area bonus (approx. 19,066 sq. ft.) This prime development site is across the street from Hamilton Fish Park and a branch of the New York City public library, offering unobstructed southern exposures.

A new development would enjoy sweeping views of downtown and midtown Manhattan, Williamsburg, LIC and more.

The asking price was $8.9 million. According to public records, it sold for a little more than $7 million last fall to 298 East Village Owner LLC with an East Ninth Street address.

To date, there haven't been any any work permits filed for this property, which sits adjacent to two other new developments — The Adele on East Houston and Avenue D and The Robyn on East Third Street near Avenue D.

Previously on EV Grieve:
298 E. 2nd St. latest development site up for grabs

Banana Leaf slips away on East 6th Street


[EVG photo from Jan. 29]

The Sri Lankan restaurant Banana Leaf moved from its Chelsea location to 328 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue ... opening in the former Spice Cove space (same owners) in December.

We noticed that they were closed on a recent weekend night.

And now after just a few months on the block, they are apparently closed for good.

Vinny & O sent along these photos from last night... showing that the place is now called Tonkatsuya...



... and they are hiring waitstaff and delivery people, per the sign on the door...



We called Banana Leaf's number... only to hear an outgoing message for Spice Cove.

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Tonight in fairly incredible parking jobs



Between the dumpsters on East Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue... photo via Derek Berg

Evening shade



Earlier this evening via Bobby Williams....