Monday, November 2, 2009
Butcher Bay deep-sixed?
Yet another strange chapter in the short history of fish-shack eatery Butcher Bay, which opened back in February on Fifth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B... after the owners gutted the space from the short-lived Seymour Burton... there have been menu changes, new chefs and CB3 lawsuits...and now, the restaurant is closed...the windows are papered over...with the following note:
"...closed temporarily to write our memoirs..."
Village Green sheds the sidewalk shed
Some day soon, Village Green, the "eco-indulgent" new condo on 11th Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue, will look like this...
...where residents enjoy "serenity in the city" while cars roar up the street at 100 mph...
...and we've been eagerly awaiting what this will really look like...
And now, the sidewalk sheds have been removed...
Previously on EV Grieve:
Village Green opening its houses this weekend
...where residents enjoy "serenity in the city" while cars roar up the street at 100 mph...
...and we've been eagerly awaiting what this will really look like...
And now, the sidewalk sheds have been removed...
Previously on EV Grieve:
Village Green opening its houses this weekend
Le Souk has really closed
On Friday, we heard that troubled hookah hotspot Le Souk had, indeed, closed after losing its liquor license.
I was curious if that was permanent. This sign now greets potential Le Soukers.
I asked Stacie, a resident who has lived nearby for a lot longer than the eight years that Le Souk has been around, for her take:
With Le Souk's departure and the closure of Layaly, only one Hookah bar, the Horus Cafe, remains along the Avenue B corridor...
I was curious if that was permanent. This sign now greets potential Le Soukers.
I asked Stacie, a resident who has lived nearby for a lot longer than the eight years that Le Souk has been around, for her take:
Yep -- it's closed. No dining, no drinking, no dancing, no parties. No bouncers, no crowds, no fights. No honking, no puking, no throbbing (music), no nothing.
With Le Souk's departure and the closure of Layaly, only one Hookah bar, the Horus Cafe, remains along the Avenue B corridor...
Labels:
175 Avenue B,
Le Souk,
LeSouk,
noise,
State Liquor Authority
Habib's Place abruptly closes
Habib's Place on Avenue A near Sixth Street has abruptly closed. Really closed. (And you can now see the name of one of the former occupants...)
Thanks to EV Grieve reader Creature for the tip and photo. According to Creature: "I swear this was a fully functioning restaurant [Saturday]. I caught a look inside, before the gate was closed, and the place was gutted. Including the name blacked out."
This was Habib's third location in the East Village since 1992.
New Cooper Union building gets its first (temporary) storefront tenant
That retail space for rent in the new Cooper Union building is now occupied...
It's serving as the information center for Performa 09, which runs through Nov. 22
It's serving as the information center for Performa 09, which runs through Nov. 22
Absinthe absent on First Avenue (and Elvie's now for lease)
Jeremiah has written about the ongoing noise problems at Absinthe wine bar at 111 First Ave. near Seventh Street. It opened last December.
Anyway, I'm not certain when the place closed or changed concepts or names or whatever, but a new canopy is up at the address...
Meanwhile, up First Avenue near 12th Street...We noted a few weeks ago that Elvie's Turo-Turo, the Philippine eatery, was seized by the marshals...the "for lease" signs went up last week.
Anyway, I'm not certain when the place closed or changed concepts or names or whatever, but a new canopy is up at the address...
Meanwhile, up First Avenue near 12th Street...We noted a few weeks ago that Elvie's Turo-Turo, the Philippine eatery, was seized by the marshals...the "for lease" signs went up last week.
Squat the condos
Labels:
Avalon Bowery Place,
expensive condos,
street art,
the Bowery
Looking for delivery bikes outside the Moonstruck Diner
On Friday, some fliers appeared calling for a boycott of the Moonstruck Diner on Second Avenue and Fifth Street...
According to the signs, a blind man cut his hand on one of the diner's "7-9 commercial bikes that are always blocking the East 5th Street sidewalk." And the Moonstruck Diner "refuses to move those obstacles."
I walked by the Moonstruck several times over the weekend to see how many bikes were around... or if the owners responded...
Here's what I saw...an abandoned ATM...and a few bikes...not 7-9, though, at least when I was around.
And there weren't any bikes around Saturday morning.
According to the signs, a blind man cut his hand on one of the diner's "7-9 commercial bikes that are always blocking the East 5th Street sidewalk." And the Moonstruck Diner "refuses to move those obstacles."
I walked by the Moonstruck several times over the weekend to see how many bikes were around... or if the owners responded...
Here's what I saw...an abandoned ATM...and a few bikes...not 7-9, though, at least when I was around.
And there weren't any bikes around Saturday morning.
Mini Bar getting ready to open on Seventh Street (just a block away from Big Bar)
The new small plates-type place is coming along on Seventh Street near Avenue A...(will this cause confusion with Big Bar goers?)... Signs are up, with a "coming in November" notice.
This will be the third business here in fairly quick succession...
Previously on EV Grieve:
A Cure for this location?
This will be the third business here in fairly quick succession...
Previously on EV Grieve:
A Cure for this location?
Labels:
Cure,
East Village,
new restaurants,
Seventh Street
Sunday, November 1, 2009
The Post continues tradition of exposing celebrity crotches
Cabs, Sleepy's truck collide on First Avenue and 10th Street
Not many details just yet. One witness said he thought the Sleepy's truck ran the light... No word on injuries either.
Cooper Square Hotel wants graffiti on building "to fit in with the edgy local art scene"
On Friday afternoon, we noted that some sort of graffiti mural was going up on the wall at the Cooper Square Hotel. (Curbed posted photos too.)
Yesterday, we walked by for an update...
Today, the Post follows up on the story.
Yesterday, we walked by for an update...
Today, the Post follows up on the story.
Graffiti vandalism is apparently so cool that an East Village hotel has decided to fake it.
In a wacky attempt at earning street cred, the swanky Cooper Square Hotel has commissioned four graffiti "artists" to tag the Fifth Street wall of an adjacent building it recently bought.
One of the taggers, Joyce Pensato, was going to town yesterday on her section of the mural, which the hotel owners hope will be finished by Nov. 10, and then updated annually.
Pensato and three others -- who go by Nick 1, Vizie and Shinique -- were each paid to fill one quarter the wall.
His section spells out the words "Tropical Fantasy," a tribute to a friend who died over the summer and a reference to a local soda company.
Klus Ortleib, the hotel's managing partner, wants the place to fit in with the edgy local art scene.
"When I came up with the idea, people said I was crazy," he said.
At least one tenant of the tagged building agreed.
"They came in without regard for others," says Katy Able, 63.
"They say they can't fix a leak because they don't have money, but now they've paid to have a crane to put up graffiti."
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