Thanks to Anna for her patience and creativity in continuing to tend to this mobile plot!
Monday, September 6, 2021
Another end-of-summer appreciation: The grocery cart garden
Wrapping up summer number 2 with the grocery cart garden on Fourth Street near the Bowery...
This opuntia is the latest addition...
The prickly pear was adopted from Stuyvesant Cove Park, which is getting ready for flood-wall construction over the next few years.
The mystery puddle in the middle of Avenue A
Sooo a few EVG readers have been asking about the mysterious puddle in a groove of the southbound lane of Avenue A at Sixth Street...
The water level never seems to lower... and there isn't any sign of a leak. A thorough investigation of this body of water reveals that it is generally shallow enough to walk through and too small to traverse with a boat or raft.
Oh, and the puddle pre-dates the heavy rains that the remnants of Henri and Ida dumped on the area.
Mystery aside, this puddle needs a name (Instagram and OnlyFans accounts can follow).
Sunday, September 5, 2021
Week in Grieview
Posts from this past week included...
• Gardening in the East Village is 'a great way to meet your neighbors' — and other things (Thursday)
• City clears and closes the area around the chess tables in Tompkins Square Park (Wednesday)
• Bon voyage to The Baroness (Tuesday)
• In a New York Groove (Wednesday)
• 6 Avenue B doesn't appear to be part of a new (and rumored) Houston Street development (Tuesday) ... This East Village business strip has been cleared out ahead of rumored new development (Monday)
• It takes a court order to clean out the long-empty 89 1st Ave. (Wednesday)
• The Sullivan St. Bakery pop-up on 9th Street has closed (Monday)
• At the Protest: Queer Liberation March installation on 10th Street (Saturday)
• 50-58 E. Third St. sold again (Thursday)
• Here is the trailer for the Velvet Underground documentary (Monday)
• Openings: Mochinut on 2nd Avenue, Little Rebel on 2nd Avenue (Tuesday)
• Astor Place Wegmans watch, work-permit edition (Monday)
• The new location of Cure Thrift Shop opens (Friday)
• FULL glass reveal at this incoming Lower East Side boutique office building (Monday)
• So long to the Clover Deli's iconic neon signage (Monday)
... and new awning-signage alert at 328 E. Ninth St. ... where Pillow-Cat Books, specializing in books for animal lovers, is opening soon... (thanks to Steven for the photo...)
About the Mermaid and Mai Tai Market at Otto's Shrunken Head
Otto's Shrunken Head is hosting a Mermaid and Mai Tai Market today from 5-10 p.m. featuring a variety of vendors selling vintage clothes, art, records, etc.
The rock-n-roll tiki joint is at 538 E. 14th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B...
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 Restaurant — try 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
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.)
Labels:
every Friday at 5,
Fridays at 5,
Jesse Malin,
music videos
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 PerrottetKGB 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.
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