Sunday, September 5, 2021

Tree pit sinkhole on 6th Street

Beware of the tree pit sinkhole on Sixth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue that has caused a partial sidewalk collapse as well...
This is outside 338 E. Sixth St. (Awash Ethiopian Restauranttry the shiro wat! — is the retail tenant) ... Not sure when this happened — during the Ida downpour on Wednesday night?

Sunday's opening shot

Giving it the ol' collage try... a John Belushi-"Animal House" wheatpaste that recently arrived on First Street at Second Avenue... work by @sacsix... 

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Saturday's parting shot

A moment during the "Fuck the Hamptons" event today at KGB on Fourth Street ... photo by Derek Berg

At the Protest: Queer Liberation March installation on 10th Street

10th Street between Avenue C and Avenue D was the site last night for "Protest: Queer Liberation March," a multimedia installation and performance by local artist-activist G-Man...
There were video projections featuring images from the March 2020 Queer Liberation March. Various performers and participants interacted with the images projected along 10th Street. (Passersby were also encouraged to take part.)

EVG contributor Stacie Joy shared these photos ...
The event was in part funded by the New York City Artist Corps.

EVG Etc.: Tracking Ida's damage in NYC; reopening weekend at Economy Candy

Sunset from Avenue A and St. Mark's Place

• Tracking the devastation Ida left behind in the NYC metro area (The City) Why was NYC unprepared? (Gothamist) A list of post-storm resources from the city (NYC.gov

• East Village Loves NYC is planning an emergency cooking session to provide help to those in need after the flooding (Details here and here

• New York extends eviction moratorium until January 2022 (NPR

• BP Brewer: NoHo-NoHo rezoning plan needs work (City Limits

• The East Village is said to be a popular spot for young adults moving to the city after the pandemic exodus (The Post)

• Economy Candy on Rivington Street reopens its doors to customers this weekend (The Lo-Down

• Artist William Wegman's former East Village artist's loft on Sixth Street is for sale (6sqft

• The Hester Street Fair returns this weekend in a new home at the South Street Seaport (TONY)

• Beware the Spotted Lanternfly! (Laura Goggin Photography

• Diversions: A video about NYC city planning from 1969 (Flaming Pablum

Friday, September 3, 2021

Friday's parting shot

The lights of Off Broadway on Fourth Street today... photo by Derek Berg...

'State' of grace

 

East Village-based singer-songwriter (and bar owner!) Jesse Malin releases his next record, Sad and Beautiful World, on Sept. 24. 

The video here is for the single "State of the Art." (Relix has more on the song and video here.)

Take the jitney to 4th Street tomorrow!

Here are details via the EVG inbox about the First Annual Fuck the Hamptons Party... happening tomorrow (Saturday!) at 5 p.m. on the stoop of the KGB Bar

Performances include:
• New Orleans jazz sax by Calvin Johnson 
• Belly Dancing by Amanda 
• Prohibition classics by Heidi and Benno 
• Avant-garde performance by Dodi and Johnny 
• HAIKUS ON DEMAND by LA Markuson and Ars Poetica! 
• And more! 
• Hosted by Tony Perrottet
KGB Bar is at 85 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.

The new location of Cure Thrift Shop opens tomorrow

The new, larger location of Cure Thrift Shop opens tomorrow (Saturday!) at noon on the northeast corner of Third Avenue and 12th Street (officially 91 Third Ave.)
Cure, the eclectic nonprofit that benefits juvenile diabetes research and advocacy, closed its previous location at 111 E. 12th St. between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue in early July.

The shop is open daily from noon to 9 p.m.

Nexus Flea, Labor Day Weekend edition

If you're around this weekend... there's a summer-ending Nexus Flea on First Avenue at First Street tomorrow (Saturday!) ... as always, you can find some art, vintage clothes, jewelry, books and records from local merchants. Noon to 6 p.m.

Summer 2021

Because nothing says summer 2021 like a photo of Key Food! 

 A sampling of the 460 EVG posts from June through August as we head into the Labor Day Weekend... 

• The East Village Neighbors Community Fridge is up and running again after vandal strikes (Aug. 24

• Kestrel maneuvers to rescue this fledging along Avenue B (Aug. 17

• At the LESUPA Reunion 2021 (Aug. 14

• Thanks to Humans of New York, Mary O's will be making scones for the foreseeable future (Aug. 11)

• Former tenants of the fire-destroyed 48 E. 7th St. want to hear from landlord Faith Popcorn (Aug. 9

• About Hi Noona, serving up unique Korean-influenced juices and smoothies on 12th Street (Aug. 4

• Construction hell is consuming the intersection of 1st Avenue at 7th Street (Aug. 3

• First sign of the B Bar & Grill-replacing 21-story office building on the Bowery (Aug. 2)

• Renovation watch: This is what the inside of the former Hells Angels HQ looks like now (July 29

• Author Q&A: About the dystopian East Village future of 'Drained' (July 23

• Local blog contributor tries the Kraft Mac-n-Cheese ice cream at Van Leeuwen (July 15

• PJ O’Rourke regroups with a pop-up space on Broadway (July 14

• Murder investigation on 1st Avenue (July 14

• Attention Kmart shoppers: The Astor Place location is now closed after 25 years in business (July 12

• A conversation with Lilly Dancyger, author of the East Village memoir 'Negative Space' (July 1

•  How you can help The Bowery Mission protect New Yorkers from summer heat (June 28

 • At the 27th annual Drag March (June 27

• Mount Sinai Beth Israel decides against plans to relocate and downsize (June 21)

• At fire-damaged Middle Collegiate Church, it's moving day for the historic New York Liberty Bell (June 17

• RIP Hash Halper, aka New York Romantic (June 15

• Portraits from the Park Prom (June 9)

• RIP Penny Rand (June 2

• Tenants: Pigeons have made empty apartment a health hazard in this Steve Croman-owned building on 7th Street (June 1)

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Gardening in the East Village is 'a great way to meet your neighbors' — and other things

 “Two Gardeners,” a watercolor sketch of El Sol Brillante gardeners Patrick McDonald and Barbara Augsburger courtesy of Kaley Roshitsh

By Kaley Roshitsh

For many, a community garden is a place for healing, a sanctuary amongst concrete — and a lifeline.

This holds true, especially for the gardeners of El Sol Brillante (ESB). Meaning “a brilliant sun,” ESB is a 1,000 square-foot community garden on 12th Street between Avenue A and B. The 29-plot garden is complete with managed plots, common space, compost and worm bins, a tended beehive and ample space for community members to interact.

A once broken lot, the community banded together to raise the garden from ashes in 1977 — and the space couldn’t be more sorely needed in strange times.

“I was here through the blackouts, riots, 9/11, floods, Hurricane Sandy, and as horrific as some of those [events] were, the [COVID-19] pandemic was a new level because the city just seemed so empty — and it was soul-crushing,” said Patrick McDonald, a resident on the block and chef for 35 years, speaking on the impact of the latest event.

Despite the recent pandemic-induced surge in green spaces and outdoor park visits, many long-standing garden members can attribute their joining to a friendly neighbor.

McDonald first joined ESB in 2012 and received his plot the following year. He describes the influence of the late Ken Bond, who counts many friends among the current members, in joining the garden. Bond’s mother Florence, or “Flo,” was referred to as a “block historian” by many on the block and was “instrumental in starting the garden,” according to McDonald. Both Bond and his mother served as president of ESB.

“For me, it’s a little slice of heaven in the middle of the concrete jungle,” said McDonald on the importance of the garden. Describing his front-facing plot, he added: “I like its location. As you come into the garden, it’s one of the first ones you see. I always try to have something fun going on.”

Taking the right pathway tracing the edge of McDonald’s tended plot, on-lookers find pumpkins, peppers, tomatoes and potatoes — the evidence of a chef (and gardener) at work.

A Place for Love, Healing — and Democracy

“It was such a great way to meet your neighbors,” chimed in Barbara Augsburger, a Swiss native who moved to New York in the 1980s (following a then-boyfriend who was a musician). She would join the garden in 1983 and meet her husband only five years later.

Music is a central theme. “There was a guy in the store [on the block] who used to play Latin music and I would be sitting on the stoop [listening],” described Augsburger nodding along, “and that’s how I met my husband.”

Like the roses twisting atop the lover’s arch between her and her husband’s neighboring plot, Augsburger finds unity at ESB. “I learned how to be in fusion with nature,” she shared. “I mean, I knew already because I hiked a lot in the Alps, and I was always in nature, but this made it even in a more intimate way.”

In Augsburger’s plot, there are fresh healing herbs like lavender or lemon verbena, as well as oregano and fragrant rose geraniums.

“I think that every block should have a garden and life would be — for mental health — so much better,” said Augsburger calling the garden her “lifeline” and a space for “healing,” which is fitting given her energy work.

The garden is also rightly “a place of democracy,” in the words of Augsburger, as no communal space can be free of heated discussions where plot politics, fresh harvests and lingering branches are concerned.

A Fresh Take

Austin Frankel joined the garden in winter 2017 to meet new people and soon rose the ranks from friendly neighbor to key holder to plot holder to influential board member.

“In my plot, I’m making a space for myself, and it’s very organic. What I’m developing is coming along from what I’ve set there, and what I’ve inherited, and that’s a very cathartic experience,” described Frankel.

Cucumbers and shishito peppers are the stars of Frankel’s first harvest. But as is true of East Village — one can expect the unexpected to sprout up. When clearing his plot, Frankel discovered of all things a red stiletto boot nestled amid the weeds. (The other shoe to the pair was recovered in the garden common space for those curious. A bent spade atop the garden fence gives reason to suspect midnight stiletto-clad climbers).

His plans are to make a planter from the found shoe and continue providing a fresh take to garden meetings.
The Arts, Alive

Greeting amblers on the block is the 100-foot long fence that was created in 1993 by artist Julie Dermansky using scrap metal and speaks to the artistic presence at ESB that is still kept strong by members like Alejandro “Kuki” Gomez, among others.

“All of a sudden, I decided to start helping and working with the garden and getting dirty. There’s something about touching the dirt, the sticks, the leaves,” said Gomez, drawing the inspiration back to his work as a graphic designer, artist (known by the neighborhood for his tape designs), and now, events director, where an amalgamation of creative talents come together.

He joined over five years ago after first seeking solace in the garden as a guest. Gomez’s mother — an avid gardener — inspired his passion.

On Aug. 25, Gomez helped put on a free jazz event in association with The Jazz Foundation of America and Ariana’s List as part of the City Parks Foundation’s 28th annual Charlie Parker Jazz Festival. A strong turnout despite the heat, “Jazz in the Garden: with Willie Martinez and His Latin Jazz Collective,” drew newcomers and regulars in for a night of swirling sounds.

Along with summer jazz, Gomez organized a watercolor painting night in the garden. Like many in the garden, his tended plot takes on a distinctive flair, with Gomez’s shady corner plot taking on a heart shape among rectangles. Close to heart, “safety” is what ESB provides to Gomez.

Amid what he felt was an abandoned state of the city on the onset of the pandemic, Gomez reiterated that “this was heaven for us.”

-----

Kaley Roshitsh is the first-ever sustainable fashion journalist at WWD. Her work appears on U.N. Women USA NY, Her Campus Media and the independent magazine she founded called ThriftEd Mag. You can find her on Instagram ranting about her latest thrift finds or the importance of knowing your neighbors at @KaleyRoshitsh

50-58 E. Third St. sold again

EVG file photo 

Gaia Real Estate is the new owner of 50-58 E. Third St.,  the 78-unit, three-building parcel between First Avenue and Second Avenue. This marks the third owner for the properties in nine years.

As The Real Deal reported, Gaia picked up the properties for $49.5 million — "14 percent less than when the portfolio last changed hands in 2016 for $58 million."

Per TRD: "The purchase is part of Gaia's three-year strategy to snap up distressed residential buildings in a long-term bet on the city's recovery."

Let's step back several years.

In early 2012, GRJ, a fund co-founded and co-managed by brothers Graham and Gregory Jones, bought the buildings for $23.5 million. 

There was plenty of drama in subsequent months as several longtime tenants lost their leases. The residents formed a tenants group; local politicians offered support during a rally in May 2012. However, as one former resident put it, the Big Real Estate Machine was too great to overcome.

After extensive gut renovations, the buildings were later rebranded the "East Village3" (aka "EV3"), where the newly renovated apartments were fetching from $4,900 to $11,000 per month.

Per Gregory Jones in the news release announcing the sale: "We see a real opportunity to reposition the buildings. We'll invest significant capital and we look forward to creating the most desirable walk-ups in the East Village."

All the capital improvements paid off for GRJ. As The Real Deal reported in the spring of 2016, GRJ sold the buildings to developer Anbau Enterprises for $58 million.

In 2016, a broker on the deal said that about 25 percent of the apartments remain as rent-stabilized units.

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Wednesday's parting shot

Right before the heavy rain moved into the area this evening... all sorts of warnings tonight from the remnants of Ida — a Severe Thunderstorm Warning until 10:30 ... Flash Flood Warning until 11:30. 

And Hitchcocktober returns to 12th Street and Second Avenue!

And updated...