Monday, December 14, 2020

Steel structure for new Houston Street office building continues ascent

Since our last look on Nov. 2, there's noticeable progress on the 9-story office building rising at 141 E. Houston St. between Eldridge and Forsyth... the steel structure is up to what appears to be the fourth and fifth floors...
 

Some day it will be like this:
From acclaimed architect Roger Ferris, the only new development of its type on the Lower East Side, 141 East Houston is a new frame for viewing the neighborhood. Column-free and unbounded by walls, it reinterprets the area through a bold geometric perimeter of cladding and glass. State-of- the-art workspaces and private terraces reframe expectations, while a well-connected location recasts perspectives. 
With its glass frame and dynamic courtyard running the length of its eastern side, doubling as a second facade, 141 East Houston challenges the distinction between indoors and out.

East End Capital and K Property Group bought the property for $31.5 million in the spring of 2017. The links below provide more background on what has transpired on the site of the former Sunshine Cinema (RIP January 2018).

Sunday, December 13, 2020

Sunday's parting shot

A new tribute to Gem Spa (closed for good in May) on this freshly repaired sidewalk on Ninth Street ... photo by Steven...

Week in Grieview

Posts from this past week include... (and thanks to Derek Berg for the photo of @krypfixed in Tompkins Square Park) 

• Report: Faulty wiring caused fire that destroyed SE corner of 2nd Avenue and 7th Street (Saturday

• Permits filed to demolish the former B Bar & Grill on the Bowery (Tuesday

• Indoor dining at 25% comes to an end after this weekend (Friday

• Bike lane detour confusion as construction starts along the East River Greenway (Friday

• Straight shooters: Marvel Studios brings 'Hawkeye' to 4th Street for Disney+ series (Tuesday

• Nón Lá debuts on 4th Street (Thursday

• Headless Santa now free to terrorize Rite-Aid shoppers on 1st Avenue (Tuesday

 • On 1st Street, Con Ed work shutters Cafe Himalaya and Prim Thai once again (Tuesday

 • The Tompkins Square Park Holiday tree is now lit (Wednesday

• Thai Direct reopens on Avenue A (Wednesday

 • This week's NY See panel (Thursday

• This week's Gallery Watch: Nosegay Tornado by Ambera Wellmann at Company (Wednesday

• A partial reveal shows off the now-taller 94-96 Avenue A (Thursday

• As Westville Bakery exits, Superiority Burger set to expand on 9th Street (Tuesday

• The Checkers on 1st Avenue closes (Tuesday)

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Spray on: A new tribute to Basquiat on Great Jones

There's new art adorning the second floor of 57 Great Jones St. between the Bowery and Lafayette... artist-photographer Adrian Wilson (under his @plannedalism moniker) painted "Let Us Spray" here where Jean-Michel Basquiat lived and worked at the time of his death in 1988.

The building, once owned by Andy Warhol, now houses Bohemian, an upscale Japanese restaurant ... their curbside dining space includes a message by Al Diaz,  who, as a teen in the late 1970s, collaborated with Basquiat on a series of cryptic messages seen around the city signed from SAMO©
This isn't Wilson's first dalliance with the space. In the fall of 2018, he helped curate the Same Old Galleryan exhibit that featured Diaz's workThe two also collaborated on a mural here to mark the 30th anniversary of Basquiat's death in August 2018.

In July 2016, the Greenwich Village Society of Historical Preservation (now Village Preservation) unveiled a commemorative plaque outside the building ...

We don't need another hero

A discarded Batman cape as seen on Eighth Street at Avenue C this morning by William Klayer... and not far away from where Marvel's "Hawkeye" was filming on Friday...

It's Day 2 of the holiday market and flea on 1st Avenue and 1st Street

Today marks Day 2 of the holiday market and flea on First Avenue and First Street at Peretz Square from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.  ... and it looks like a good day for it with temps expected in the high 50s. You can find a list of participants at the Facebook Events page here.

EVG contributor Stacie Joy stopped by yesterday and shared these photos... 

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Saturday's parting shot

A few of the vendors this evening outside the 3rd & B’Zaar Holiday Market at 191 E. Third St. between Avenue A and Avenue B...  a group of local merchants, artists and designers are behind the venture, which is open through Dec. 24. 

Look for "unique gifts at affordable prices" Wednsdays through Sundays from 1-6 p.m.

Photo by Stacie Joy

The Grinch at the 2nd Avenue F stop

Among the details: Cindy-Lou Who as a three-eyed cat-raccoon. 

Oh Santa

1) On 14th Street at First Avenue. The inflatable Santa made a return to the Christmas tree stand. In previous years, the Santa had been on top of a Cousin Eddie-worthy RV

2) Today would have been SantaCon.

Report: Faulty wiring caused fire that destroyed SE corner of 2nd Avenue and 7th Street

Faulty wiring at 48 E. Seventh St. was to blame for the six-alarm fire last Saturday morning that destroyed the Middle Collegiate Church, FDNY officials said yesterday. 

An FDNY spokesperson told 1010 WINS that the fire has been deemed "non-suspicious." 

The five-story building, which has been demolished, had been vacant since another fire this past Feb. 10. Faulty electrical wiring was also the blame for that three-alarm fire, FDNY officials said. 

No. 48, which included retail tenants Via Della Pace and Cafe Mocha, was under renovation this fall. 

There were approved work permits dated from Oct. 29 on file with the DOB. According to the permits: "Repairs due to fire; interior non-structural demolition, removal of damaged floor and roof framing, replace damaged floor and wall joists, reconstruct floor and roof joists, reconstruct roof joists, reconstruct roof bulkhead, repair interior stairs ... install new windows, installation of new roof." 

The estimated cost of repairs, per the permit: $1.2 million. It was unclear how far along workers were with renovations. In a Facebook post this week, a longtime tenant from one of the building's four rent-controlled units said they were planning on moving back in next summer. 

Meanwhile, workers have mostly cleared away the remains of No. 48.
And here's a quick video clip showing the work yesterday...

Updated 12:30 p.m.
 

A detail from Myles N. Miller at NBC 4...

One last flea market for 2020 at 1st and 1st

There's one more flea market this weekend on First Avenue and First Street at Peretz Square ... this will be a two-day grand finale for the vendors, many of them from the Avenue B Flea

Some East Village-based musicians will be providing the soundtrack from 1-3:30... find a list of participants at the Facebook Events page here.

Organizer Lisa Marie promises to be back with more flea markets in the spring.

Friday, December 11, 2020

Friday's parting shot

Here are the resident red-tailed hawks of Tompkins Square Park, Amelia (top) and Christo, enjoying the pleasant weather today atop St. Nicholas of Myra Orthodox Church on 10th Street and Avenue A... thanks to Steven for the photo...

Gleaming the 'Cube'

 
The prolific John Dwyer and his merry band of Osees are releasing an epic live set titled Live at the Henry Miller Library Big Sur... which you can stream next Saturday, Dec. 19. (Details here.) 

Ahead of that they've released a view tracks from the show, including "Gelatinous Cube."

P.S.

Indoor dining at 25% comes to an end after this weekend

As expected, Gov. Cuomo announced today that NYC restaurants must end indoor dining after this weekend following an ongoing increase in the number of COVID-19 cases.

Restaurants will still be able to continue outdoor dining, takeout and delivery. "You're going to see a bad December, a bad January. How bad is the question," Cuomo said at today's press briefing. You can read more about the new shutdown and its impact on the local restaurant industry at Eater

Some local restaurants preemptively closed for the time being ... while others today announced they are shutting down after this weekend until the spring, including Van Da on Fourth Street, whose last day in business for now is tomorrow. 

A new survey that the New York State Restaurant Association conducted revealed that 54 percent of NYC restauranteurs say it is likely that they will close in the next six months if another federal relief package does not come through.

Meanwhile, gyms and salons will be allowed to continue operating in orange zones with lowered capacity from 33 percent to 25 percent. Find more details at Gothamist

Cuomo said officials are especially concerned about "living room spread." The state's contact tracing data shows nearly 74 percent of new COVID-19 cases are coming from households and social gatherings, Cuomo said. Restaurants and bars accounted for 1.43 percent of new cases while gyms caused less than 1 percent, he said.

See more on this chart via the state...