Friday, January 8, 2010

Hello again: Revisiting the past of St. Mark's Place and Second Avenue



On Wednesday night, we noted that the sidewalk shed was finally being removed from the northwest corner of Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place...And seeing the corner again....




...got me thinking about one of its former occupants, the St. Marks Cinema. According to Cinema Treasures, a theater was in operation at this location from 1914 to the spring of 1985. (Jeremiah had a Jim Jarmusch-related post on the Cinema in July 2008 that you should read.)

There are many fine remembrances of the place in the Cinema Treasures comments section, such as this one:

We lived on the Bowery near the St. Marks from the 60's thru the 80's. It was fondly nicknamed "The Itch". Nobody dared sit in the front row because it was reserved for the "Hell's Angels" ... Everyone was stoned. I remember a triple feature of "Eraserhead", "Freaks", and at midnight "El Topo" ( or El Poto"). After the show we staggred out and had cabbage soup at the Kiev. Those were the days.


Meanwhile, here are some shots that were linked to the Cinema Treasures page...





...the theater also showed "Return of the Jedi." (Last listing in the Manhattan section.)



Cinema images via here, here and here.

For further reading:
St. Marks Cinema and Theatre Condos both via Jeremiah's Vanishing NY.

Dunkin' Donuts week in review

Monday:



Wednesday:


[Photo by Melanie!]

Thursday:



Related:
From the Post today: "Since the city began compelling restaurant chains to post calorie information, coffee drinkers have proved likelier to get their java from a Starbucks than from the Dunkin' Donuts down the street. A Stanford University study found drink revenues up 5 percent at Starbucks stores within 100 yards of Dunkin' Donuts since health officials made it mandatory that menus include nutritional data."

A short history of tags outside Kurve/Rhong Tiam East/that crazy looking Thai place on Second Avenue and Fifth Street

Last April, Eater noted the arrival of the first tag on the Fifth Street side of the eatery formerly known as Kurve...



Since then, the place has started to attract a few more street artists...






And earlier this week we welcomed the latest member of the street-art family here...




And maybe in a few more months...


[Photo via CityRag]

East Village rents fell in 2009


In his Mixed Use column this week at The Villager, Patrick Hedlund summarizes 2009 in rent...

The East Village and Lower East Side experienced the steepest residential rent drops of any Downtown neighborhoods last year, making them among the most desirable areas across Manhattan for discount-driven renters. According to the Real Estate Group New York’s year-end rental market report, the East Village and Lower East Side saw average decreases of 5.98 percent and 6.25 percent, respectively, for all doorman and non-doorman unit types combined in 2009. Doorman studios led the downward trend in both neighborhoods, with such units falling by 12.1 percent in the East Village and 22.4 percent on the Lower East Side over the past year. Over all, the East Village recorded drops for each one of its unit types, while the L.E.S. saw modest gains for non-doorman studios and two-bedrooms only (up 1.1 percent and 1.7 percent, respectively).


So can we say now that rent is just really expensive instead of unfucking-believably expensive?

A Norfolk Street Now and Then

Jill at Blah Blog Blah found this great site, Dino's NYC Now and Then Pics. Pretty self-explanatory.

Here is one of Dino's now and thens...looking north on Norfolk Street on the LES in October 1942...



...and this past December...



And here's a Now and Then group on Flickr of random various cities...

Not so hot

Last week I noted a sign that I was likely misreading at Klimat on Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue...Hot beer?



Perhaps that I wasn't the only person confused: The sign has been changed

Field of nightmares

The lead today from an article in the Times titled Commercial Real Estate Slumps in New York:

There are 920 football fields of available office space in Manhattan. More than 180 major buildings totaling $12.5 billion in value — from Columbus Tower at 1775 Broadway to the office tower 400 Madison Avenue — are in trouble, meaning in many cases they face foreclosure or bankruptcy, or have had problems making mortgage payments. Rents for commercial office space fell faster over the past two years than in any such period in the last half century.

Trees remain under watchful eye on eve of MulchFest

Hey, it's the city's annual MulchFest this weekend. If you have an old, now-dead tree in your living quarters, then you can bring it to Tompkins Square Park, now or this weekend.



And do not worry about leaving your tree behind for tree thieves: The piles are being closely guarded!





Although last night it looked as if someone came through and the trees all around the place...


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Snacklicious Cinderella story officially over



Being dismantled right now... At Second Avenue near St. Mark's Place...another low-budget food option gone...remember when falafels were marked down to a $1?

Benefit for a Fug



St. Ann's Warehouse is hosting NOTHING, A BENEFIT FOR TULI KUPFERBERG on Friday, Jan. 22. Proceeds from the concert, produced by Hal Willner and featuring The Fugs, John Kruth, Lou Reed, Sonic Youth, Elliott Sharp, Pete Stampfel, John Zorn and others, will go to covering medical expenses for the Fugs co-founder, who suffered two strokes last year that have left him blind and in need of 24-hour care. Details here.

[Photo of the Fugs with Allen Ginsberg during a 1966 anti-war parade in NYC via Bettmann/CORBIS]

Deadline Friday: Ray's Candy Store in imminent danger of closing



Bob Arihood has the troubling story:

"[W]e regrettably have to report that according to Ray at 10PM tonight the managing agent of his building--accompanied by her bodyguard-- informed him that he has until Friday to pay the 2 months rent that he owes . The agent noted that the next time she comes to the store she will have a chain and padlocks to close the store."


This can't happen. Per The Villager, his rent is $4,000 a month... Ray is 77 and has been here on Avenue A near Seventh Street since 1974.

What's doing at 229 E. 13th St.?

We're a little baffled by that new unit on 13th Street near Third Avenue... it has been sitting empty for months. An EV Grieve commenter said that these apartments were being shown last spring for a June 1 occupancy..... As far as we can tell, the entire building remains free of residents.

Meanwhile, nearly three weeks went by recently before anyone decided to fix the "for rent" sign out front....



If you're peddling $3,000 apartments, do you want your sign to look like that?

Still, there seems to be some movement now. According to StreetEasy, there are four rentals available: two bedrooms for $3,300; one bedrooms for $2,595. Last summer, the two-bedroom apartments were ambitiously listed at $4,200. The price was decreased 20 percent on Dec. 23, according to StreetEasy. (The listings are at Weichert Realtors.)

The units look nice enough with quality amenities like "European style Washer/Dryer combo." A little on the dorm-roomy side, though, perhaps?






Also, the paper on the front door has been removed....



...looks more inviting now....




Then there's the mystery lot and its frozen-in-EV-time landscape that's directly next door to this space. We're curious what potential residents — particularly those from elsewhere — might think walking up for an open house....





Though it can be a winter wonderland ....



Previously on EV Grieve:

Meanwhile, darkness falls on 13th Street

Dog gone (groan)

The dog days of summer

Noise, then darkness

On the CB3/SLA docket for 13th Street: Hung Ry America

Speaking of 13th Street, there's a new restaurant in the works here just east of First Avenue...at the site of this former boutique...



Hung Ry America will be going before the CB3/SLA on Monday evening...they're aiming for a beer/wine license and sidewalk seating...



Looking forward to hearing more about what's in store here...

Canadian wrestling magazine raves about Avenue A's La Lucha


I haven't been to La Lucha, the new taco eatery/wrestling boutique on Avenue A bewtween Ninth Street and 10th Street. Perhaps I will go, though, after reading this review from a source that wasn't on my food reviewing radar.... Here's an excerpt from the The SLAM! Wrestling food reviewer:

For fans of Lucha Libre wrestling and authentic Mexican food, La Lucha is a must-go destination. Happily far away from the tourist trap of Times Square, the journey to La Lucha takes you through the hip East Village, and a suggested street to take you there would be St. Mark's Place, where punk and goth fashions will prep anyone for the even more extravagant costumes of Luchadors. The restaurant itself is located at the border of the East Village and Alphabet City, which adds to its alternative mystique.

The food is some of the best Mexican food one will ever taste outside of Mexico. Please note that this isn't horrible Tex-Mex food, but real Mexican food. La Lucha's menu states in bold faced letters for all to read: "We proudly do not serve Burritos!" This was a fact that actually surprised some obese patrons seated near this writer, in WWE T-shirts, who were then perplexed as to what to order, and then complained "Who are these wrestlers? Where is Rey Mysterio Jr.'s poster?"


By the way, the SLAM! Wrestling food reviewer is Ranjan Chhibber, a former WWE TV writer with a Ph.D. in Film History...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Coming soon to Avenue A: "Best taco shop and boutique in NY!"

Trump SoHo now accepting reservations, probably

We were reading the following at BizBash: 2010 Preview: 10 of New York's Most Anticipated New Venues

And on that list:

8. Trump SoHo New York
The multimillion-dollar hotel project from the Trump Organization has been slowly rising in SoHo and, according to the most recent announcement, will open its doors on February 1. Beyond 391 rooms, the Trump SoHo will house the 190-seat Quattro Gastronomia Italiana, an 11,000-square-foot spa, and three bar and lounge areas. To top it off, SoHi penthouse is available for events of as many as 150, and the third-floor function spaces total more than 10,000 square feet.


So I went to the Trump site to see what was what. (Had already been primed via Curbed's, uh, primer). And, per the Web site, I saw that the hotel is now accepting reservations... And I went ahead and tried to make a reservation for some time next month to see what rooms would cost....and saw that NO ROOMS were available in February. (Those red x's...)



Sold out? Or just not going to be ready? (And I never could make any reservation for any time...And I tried on two different browsers...could have just been me...maybe just a temporary glitch.)

Anyway, here's a look at some screenshots from the site...







And is this Ivanka walking out of the spa?

And so we don't forget:
High school is rocked by Trump’s pile driving (The Villager)

Village Activists Decry Plans for Taller Trump SoHo (The Observer)

Deadly construction collapse at Trump building (ABC-7)

Trump Soho Is Not an Oxymoron (New York)

Trump and His Critics Square Off in SoHo (City Room)

Trump SoHo Project Is on Hold After Discovery of Human Remains (The NY Sun)

The Trump SoHo feature: All is well here! (EV Grieve)