Thursday, August 6, 2009
Dumpster of the day
Labels:
Bounce Deuce,
dumpsters,
East Village,
Sixth Street
92 Seventh Street gets a sidewalk shed
...for the six-story residential building ...getting squeezed in here near First Avenue ... And the new building now sports its first floor.
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition
Looking at the last days of Coney Island? (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
Ken Mac is back, and shooting in the Meatpacking District (Greenwich Village Daily Photo)
Shopping under the Manhattan Bridge (Hunter-Gatherer)
Restaurant supply store actually opening on the Bowery (BoweryBoogie)
Eateries dealing with liquor license delays (The New York Times, via Eater)
"Bollywood Hero" flash mob in Times Square at 2:30 (Esquared)
How's their football team?: Welcome to Stuy Town U (NYPress via StuyTown Lux Living)
Looking at "The Blank Generation" (Stupefaction)
OTB doomed? (The Huffington Post)
Filming "Eat, Pray, Love" in the neighborhood (via)
Aces & Eights GM: "I understand that drunkards make your life miserable"
So, where were we? Tom Michaelsen, the general manager of Aces & Eights on Avenue A, is interested in engaging readers/the neighborhood. As he wrote yesterday:
I'd love to get ideas from the community as to how we could improve your quality of life. If anybody has anything constructive to say, I would love to hear it.
Someone suggested playing NYC classics such as "Dog Day Afternoon" and "Taxi Driver" on a designated movie night. And Marnie, a mother of two, had this to say:
My concerns about Aces & Eights LES are really, to be honest, not something that I think you alone can address. I appreciate your contributions to charities bringing potable water in places like India. I wonder, however, if your charitable contributions might not win you more respect if they were spent here in the neighborhood.
This neighborhood has many public schools which do not receive adequate funding, and therefore rely on the contributions of parents and local businesses.
Another thing we, as parents, need to deal with on a regular basis is not only the noise from local bars (which frankly, my children have learned to sleep through since birth) but the aftermath. The people urinating in doorways, the vomit on sidewalks, the garbage, the stench in the summertime.
I think if you could find a way to direct your efforts towards making real changes to the daily life of local residents we would all be a lot more tolerant of the noise and the general image of the bar itself.
Thank you for listening to those whose lives are impacted by your livelihood.
To which Tom responded,
We have actually already partnered with United Neighborhood House Junior Board, which support local settlement houses like Third Street Music School, University Settlement Society and Henry Street Settlement.
The event was quite a success and I am fully open to working with them or any other charities which benefit the community again.
Community consciousness is something I take very seriously. I understand that drunkards make your life miserable and I will do what I can to stem the tide of urine and vomit from our neighbor's doorsteps.
And another commenter found that A&E has already been a good neighbor:
I live around the corner from Aces & Eights, and when it first opened there was an issue with really loud HVAC equipment up on your roof. One of our residents was brave enough to march right in to your club and tell you about it. And you know what? The issue was taken care of, and the noise issue went away. I give you credit — that's not what we all expected to happen. thanks for being a good neighbor.
Meanwhile, there's another comment thread going here.
So, what else? Here's your chance. (And I think we have the cargo shorts/douche/frathole angle already covered.)
The mystery of 442 E. 13th St.
A reader is looking to solve the mystery of 442 E. 13th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue. This longtime resident lives on 12th Street, and his windows look down on this small, unmarked building. He writes:
It has no signage. Years ago, it had a small sign, Electrical Motor Maintenance.
I'd like to know what goes on in there. The industrial air conditioners are noisy and are on 24/7.
20 years ago, I filed a complaint with the DEP about this building because at the time there was also a noxious smell being emitted from a chimney on the building, but the DEP found nothing.
The building is generally locked up (it's rare to see that entryway door open).
What's the deal?
I walked by and, to some surprise, found the door open...but no one was around -- which only added to the mysteriousness... Not much in the DOB either.
So what's going on here?
And here's an aerial view supplied by the reader:
Labels:
13th Street,
442 E. 13th St.,
East Village,
mysteries
Searchlight Sculptures over Tompkins Square Park
While looking up articles on the late Tony Rosenthal, the sculptor of the revolving black cube on Astor Place, I came across a piece on Frosty Myers. I'm familiar with the work of Myers, particularly The Wall on Houston and Broadway, though I didn't know about the following, via an article from the December 2006 Art in America:
Here's a shot of the "Searchlight Sculpture" in Tompkins Square Park.
Myers is also the author of temporal "Searchlight Sculptures," nighttime installations of carbon-arc searchlights that were sited at the four corners of Tompkins Square Park in the East Village in 1966, in Union Square in 1969, in a park in Fort Worth in 1979, and elsewhere. The beams tent upward to join at an apex in the manner of a vast pyramid. In 1966, using laser equipment made available by a trade sales representative, Myers projected a red laser beam from his studio on Park Avenue South to the outside of Max's Kansas City several blocks away, where a mirror redirected the beam the length of the restaurant so that it completed its trajectory through the smoky din of the art-world watering hole, concluding at the far wall of Max's storied back room.
Here's a shot of the "Searchlight Sculpture" in Tompkins Square Park.
151 Avenue C: "This prime East Village location stands out as a rare opportunity for users, investors and developers"
Back in May, I reported that this two-story building at 151 Ave. C -- between Ninth Street and 10th Street -- is on the market. There wasn't any information about this property listed, though.
However! The property is now on the Massey Knakal site for $2,350,000. According to the description:
However! The property is now on the Massey Knakal site for $2,350,000. According to the description:
A 23' wide, 3,450 square foot, 2 story building located on Avenue C ... R7A zoning provides for approximately 4,186 buildable square feet of additional air rights. The ground floor features extremely high ceilings, exposed brick and will be delivered vacant. The second floor is occupied by a bar paying an under market rent of $500/month that expires in 2015. This prime East Village location stands out as a rare opportunity for users, investors and developers.
Noted
"Kate Hudson devouring tacos with her mother, Goldie Hawn, and Donna Karan at Mercadito on Avenue B." (Page Six sightings)
Heaven and hell (and whatever's in between) at the Mars Bar
Posts that I meant to post Monday but forgot to post: The Bald Man is really gone
Last Wednesday, Max Brenner/Chocolate by the Bald Man closed. On Thursday, Jeremiah noted that the Second Avenue chocolatetorium was dechocolating the place.
While walking by on Saturday, I saw that even the mattresses designed for people to sleep off one too many choctails were discarded...
In case you are looking to "make it"
Hi!
I thought you and your readers at EVGrieve would be interested in the following:
Amidst the busy sidewalks and crowded streets, NYC is flooded with musical talents of all kinds and MTV2 and Time Warner Cable are searching for the next best thing in the NYC music scene! If you or your band are looking to “make it” in the industry, then what better way to be heard by receiving “The Best Breakout NYC Artist Award” at the 2009 VMA’s? On August 14th, MTV will review the top 20 ranked NYC artists and select 3 to battle it out in front of top MTV VMA talent at a Time Warner Cable MTV VMA weekend pre-party! All types of artists are welcome to enter so click here to sign up and showcase your talent OR sign up as a fan to participate in the process and hear what NYC is made of! http://www.ourstage.com/go/mtv2nyc
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
An opportunity to offer Aces & Eights constructive ideas to improve your quality of life in the neighborhood
Tom Michaelsen, the general manager of Aces & Eights on Avenue A, checks in with another comment. Anyone have any constructive comments?
Aces & Eights LES (the LES differentiates us from our other location, FYI) has helped raise enough money to build two wells in the town of Devki, India through an organization called 1Well.
Aces & Eights LES helped raise over $1200 for UNH (United Neighborhood Houses), which is an umbrella organization that presides over the Settlement Houses of New York, a number of which are in the Lower East Side.
Yes, beer pong, that much maligned representation of jockdom and fratholiness you all despise (possibly because you didn’t make the Varsity team in high school? Don't worry, neither did I.) helped make that happen.
Now I know it isn't much. I know we could do more, but I ask, where were you? What were you doing for your community while this "frathole" was giving back?
It is fairly easy to insult me and this establishment. However, I'd prefer to have a conversation. That is why I wrote what I wrote and why I am writing this. I'd love to get ideas from the community as to how we could improve your quality of life. If anybody has anything constructive to say, I would love to hear it. If you just want to insult me and the business keep it to yourself.
I will be at Aces & Eights tonight. It's trivia night. The beer pong tables are converted and people sit and answer questions for prizes. It starts at 9pm. It's good fun. You are all welcome to join. I'll even buy you your first drink if you mention EV Grieve. My name is Tom. I am the one wearing the green t-shirt that says "Douchebag" on it. Seriously.
Noted
"RadioShack is changing its name to 'The Shack,' hoping to present a fresh face to consumers as the electronics retailer directs more of its resources to selling wireless products." (InformationWeek)
Happy New Yorkiversary
"Who cares who you were or what you were doing before you moved here? Your New Yorkiversary is the day you really arrived — figuratively as well as literally." (New York Post)
And in a separate piece, Danica Lo explores the topic some more...:
In this great city we call home, there are two kinds of residents: New Yorkers and people who've just lived here a while.
Sorry, kids.
It doesn't matter how much you feel like a New Yorker, how fast you walk, how many slices of pizza you've gobbled or how much vitriol you seethe at tourists. Forking over income tax to the city doesn't get you a NY-er badge.
Students, your tuition and living costs at NYU and Columbia may be steep, but they don't buy you native status. And if you grew up out of state, moved to the city after college and have worked here for 10 years? Sorry, you're still a transplant.
As a native — I grew up in Queens, went to preschool in Bayside, PS 31, MS 158 and Stuyvesant High School (with all the other Asians) and have worked here all my professional life — my tenuous and negotiable definition is that you're a New Yorker if you completed the majority of your formative years' pre-college education — elementary, middle, junior and high school — somewhere in the five boroughs.
Aces & Eight GM offers some clarification on previous posts, comments
Tom Michaelsen, the general manager of Aces & Eights on Avenue A, responded to our post from yesterday:
I find the entries and comments on this site to be one-sided and offensive. As an Aces & Eights employee I have a few things to clarify:
-Serving food has ALWAYS been a part of our business plan. Due to certain delays we were unable to for quite some time. As the entry above discloses, we are now. The issue should be moot.
-The average age of our clientele is between 25-30 – older than the "frathole" demographic. Also older than the NYU crowd your commentator blames. Frankly, it makes you look prejudiced, judgmental and rude to speak that way about our establishment and our clientele.
- The stipulation in our license regards having no more than two TVs over the bar. The 12 TVs you're referring to are NOT over the bar. There is actually only one TV over the bar. I am not quite sure why televisions offend CB3 so much. According to Nielsen the average American watches 151 hours of television a month. It’s a preposterous figure but I really don’t think watching a baseball game in a bar is that big of a deal.
-Regarding beer pong, it is actually one pitcher (60ounces, three pints) divided into 20 cups played by two teams of two. The average game takes approximately 20 minutes. That means four people split three pints over 20 minutes. In my experience in this industry people drink more, faster when they’re not playing.
-As far as noise is concerned, there is not one subwoofer on the premises and there has never been one. We currently function at a fairly low decibel output. In the East Village street traffic is the nature of the beast. The other evening a man in a spray-painted jalopy drove up and down Avenue A blasting CSNY's "Teach Your Children Well" on a PA system mounted on the roof of his car. I've seen gangs of motorcycles roaring up 1st Avenue. Troops of partygoers and bar patrons have been streaming up and down the streets for years. Our bar is not the predominant noise polluter in the neighborhood nor is it even a significant factor.
I know blogs don't have the same journalistic requirements that standard news media insist upon, but no one has ever come to us to talk or ask questions. No one wants our side of the story. If you'd like to do so now, perhaps to clarify some things, perhaps to see that we run a clean, friendly and accommodating operation. I would be happy to oblige.
Yours Truly,
Tom Michaelsen
General Manager
Aces & Eights LES
Former Citi-Spaces office becoming a restaurant (Update: Plump Dumpling expanding into this space)
The former Citi-Spaces offices on Second Avenue at 11th Street is being converted into a restaurant, per the newly issued work permits.
Update:
Via Eater, we learned that Plump Dumpling next door on 11th Street will expand into this space. (A Passion for Food)
Remember when I suggested that Bounce Deuce wasn't really closed for good, that it would reopen in the fall?
I could be wrong. I caught a glimpse inside. It's a mess. Though the TVs are still in place.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Bounce Deuce to return?
Previously on EV Grieve:
Bounce Deuce to return?
Labels:
Bounce Deuce,
rumormongering,
Second Avenue,
Sixth Street
"Duane Reade has been a sin"
Labels:
Avenue B,
Duane Reade,
East Village,
graffiti,
Second Street,
signs
Stepping Up at the Umbrella House
The local barber shop leasing space from the Umbrella House on Avenue C looks nearly ready to open.
In April:
Previously on EV Grieve:
What's happening at the Umbrella House?
In April:
Previously on EV Grieve:
What's happening at the Umbrella House?
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