Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Beaming up on Fifth Street

A few weeks back Curbed dropped the details on what the new building will look like at 532 E. Fifth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B...Six floors and 10 units of glass and shine...



Now the steel is rising from the pit...



...and soon, the neighbors to the west of this property will lose their light and views...




Perhaps someone inside will document the coming darkness.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Demolition on East Fifth Street

On the way: A five-story apartment building for Fifth Street

Coming soon to East Houston: Construction, hell, rodent control stations

Nearly one year has passed since first hearing about the reconstruction of East Houston from the Bowery to the FDR. The plan calls for the widening of sidewalks, enlarging of medians, installating new pavement markings and bicycle lanes from Second Avenue to FDR Drive and creating two new plaza areas.

EV Grieve reader Elliot noted that some prep work has begun. For instance, the M21 stop on the northeast corner of Avenue A and Houston has been moved to the middle of the cab stand on First Street and Houston. "Really not a good place for a bus stop," he said. Indeed.




"Not looking forward to having the street all torn up like it's been further west on Houston for so long, but I guess it will be nice when it's done..."

The Lo-Down had a report last week on just what's happening here:

A sweeping reconstruction of Houston from the Bowery to the East River. In the second phase of a project that began on the West Side, the city will rebuild the entire street, including sewer lines, sidewalks and the roadway itself. They will also install new greenways and bike lanes. The work will begin in a few weeks and continue for three years. Expect lane closures, street closures and a lot of noise and dust. The Department of Design and Construction said they were committed to working with residents to minimize the inconveniences. They’re even installing "Rodent Control Stations."

For this East Sixth Street co-op, all you need is cash



There's a new listing for a fouth-floor unit at 440 E. 6th St. between First Avenue and Avenue A. Currently priced at $550,000... (and no mention of square footage...)

A steal for this charming one bed in the heart of the East Village. Loaded with pre-war detail including hardwood floors, picture moldings and high ceilings. Gracious entrance through a long hallway with double closets. Eat-in windowed kitchen with slate floors. Enjoy 3 exposures and tree top views from this sunny 4th floor home of an elevator building with a live in super. Please note the purchase must be all cash.


We'll check back in a year to see if it's still on the market...

Caffe Buon Gusto continues to remain restaurant-free

Caffe Buon Gusto on Avenue B at Fifth Street looks to remain vacant for a little bit longer... CBG was scratched from last night's CB3/SLA liquor license docket... Meanwhile, perhaps the space can continued to be used by those in need of shelter for the night...



Previously on EV Grieve:
Caffe Buon Gusto's shelter

Monday, March 15, 2010

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition


I forget what the sun looks like.

Art inspired by the Meatpacking District (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)

Looking at the new liquor bill (Save the Lower East Side!)

A walk in the rain on Astor Place (The Gog Log)

An upgrade for 87 Rivington (BoweryBoogie)

History of NYC in 100 buildings (The Bowery Boys)

FOX films Ray's volunteer delivery crew (Neither More Nor Less)

A Miss Heather video: Short skirts and spiked heels for the rain on St. Mark's Place Saturday night (New York Shitty)

And I love Jorge Colombo's cover art this week on The New Yorker...

March sadness: Superdive transfer off tonight's CB3/SLA docket



Superdive was originally on tonight's docket for a full transfer of their liquor license.... no more, though, as a look at the updated rundown shows... Perhaps the Super brass is too busy planning that Vegas expansion?

East Fourth Street's Novogratz-designed penthouse now on the market



Prepare yourselves for 238 E. Fourth St. near Avenue B, where the superduperfaboo Bob and Cortney Novogratz designed the $4 million penthouse apartment...



The listing is now live. Let's see just how superduperfaboo it is! According to the Corcoran listing:

Step directly from your private, key-lock elevator onto your 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath Penthouse condominium. Offering the highest caliber of finishes, every detail is customized from the Boffi Kitchen outfitted with Macassar Ebony cabinetry and stainless steel countertops to California Closets in all 3 bedrooms. The Great Room soars with 10.5 foot loft ceilings, woodburning fireplace and sunflooded, oversized windows with North and South open city views. Then take your private stairs or elevator directly onto the largest ipe-and-concrete decked terrace you've ever seen in the EV with sweeping Empire and Chrysler building views. Enclosed with sleek glass railings, this terrace is equipped with a Summer kitchen and wiring for outdoor theatre. The first floor of this duplex lends a gracious air of privacy for the 3 bedrooms, all of which have gorgeous sunlight and charming treetop views. The Master bedroom has TWO walk-in custom Cali closets, a sumptuous 5-fixture Master bath suite with dual vanity, oversized glass-enclosed shower and freestanding soaking tub. A large window floods the Master bathroom with all-day natural night. Additional luxury add-ons include radiant heat in all rooms, Crestron security system, and custom baseboard moldings. This finish quality is seen only is magazine-ready, designer homes. Extremely low common charges. Walk to the chicest East Village restaurants, steps to trendy Lower East Side and hottest upscale Bowery venues and gallerie.


At this point in the post, EV Grieve has passed out, overcome by the most wretched excessive East Village real-estate description this week! So please look at the photos and floor plan...







And the price: $3.75 million.

P.S. See more of the Novogratz clan on Bravo when their "9 by Design" reality show debuts April 13 on Bravo.

Tearing up the Telephone

If you were a fan of the Telephone Bar and Grill on Second Avenue, then you may want to avoid looking at this photo... I caught a glimpse inside the bar, which closed at the end of January. Looks as if the new owners are doing a complete gut renovation of the space... they've already auctioned off most of the old fixtures and equipment....



The bar is still there, but little else remains. And on the right is a pile of what can be best described as rubble...

Previously on EV Grieve:
East Village to somehow get frattier: What's coming to the former Telephone Bar

Ringing in the 13th Step: Old Telephone Bar will lose its Telephones

Tri-colored party bus makes pit stop on Avenue C

Anyone know anything about this groovy party bus spotted tooling around the neighborhood on Saturday afternoon...?



The bus made a pit stop on Avenue C near Ninth Street... Inside, I could hear someone explaining the rules of a drinking game over a loudspeaker...



And the reason for the stop? So that a passenger, who brought along her drink (that cup on the ground), could use an ATM...

Monk is opening at former Dance Tracks space

First came word that a thrift shop was opening on Third Street near First Avenue at the former Dance Tracks space...



Then there was the confusion to where, exactly, the Monk Thrift shop was relocating...

Anyway, the thrift shop on Third Street looks ready for business. It was closed yesterday. But a business card on the counter confirmed the store name...



Wonder if Monk will keep the Dance Tracks sign?

Heart of India says hello on Second Avenue



The canopy went up for the new restaurant taking over the former Madras Cafe space near Fourth Street. A commenter said the new restaurant is owned by the folks who ran Curry Majal across the Avenue...

Noted

You've probably seen these signs up the last week or so... I'm not sure who's responsible for them ... and I'm not sure what to think of them...






I think I agree with the reader who sent me an e-mail and the bottom two photos: "not quite art, and not deeply philosophical, but it caught my eye nonetheless."

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Pizza that may be better than it sounds



At Veloce Pizzeria on First Avenue.

New SLA chief not a rubber stamper


Crain's has a feature on new SLA Chairman Dennis Rosen titled "The Gunslinger: State's new top liquor cop shrinks license backlog, leaves community groups unsure." If you have an interest in the future of liquor license approvals in the neighborhood, then you may want to give the piece a read...

An excerpt:

I'm not a rubber stamp for either the community boards or business,” says Mr. Rosen, a former state assistant attorney general who led a state investigation of the SLA in 2005.

Mr. Rosen, who took over in August, is overhauling the SLA from top to bottom. He has dramatically reformed the agency, once seen as a symbol of failure and corruption. He has reduced the nine-month wait for a liquor license to as little as two weeks in some cases, slashed the backlog of applications from 3,000 to 1,800, and stepped up enforcement actions by partnering with local cops to crack down on businesses that flout the law.

Balancing the interests of city residents who want quiet neighborhoods and business owners who serve alcohol late at night is a big challenge for Mr. Rosen. Restaurants and bars have long complained that overzealous community boards overstep their statutory rights by, say, declaring moratoriums on new liquor licenses on busy blocks, and that they call in political favors to get their way.

Mr. Rosen is sympathetic to residents' concerns and is meeting frequently with them, discussing ways in which the agency can help. But community boards were surprised when the SLA recently removed a question from the license application that asks for the business's hours of operation, because city law allows bars to serve alcohol until 4 a.m. Now, many boards are requiring businesses applying for a liquor license to sign an affidavit in which they state their hours of operation. That way, the boards can force the venues to close when they promise to.


For further reading:
Liquor Authority Chief Listens, As Residents and Bar Owners Vent (The Lo-Down)

[Photo by Buck Ennis via Crain's]

First Avenue, 9:12 a.m. or 10:12 a.m., March 14



Dozens of fallen umbrellas.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

The long history of 104-106 Bowery



Thanks to the EV Grieve reader who passed along this link to a great story in the Times by Dan Barry that I missed. A few years back 106 Bowery was the flophouse Stevenson Hotel... and Barry traces the building's evolution through the years... An excerpt:

The building at 104-106 Bowery, between Grand and Hester Streets, has been renovated, reconfigured and all but turned upside down over the generations, always to meet the pecuniary aspirations of the owner of the moment. Planted like a mature oak along an old Indian footpath that became the Bowery, it stands in testament to the essential Gotham truth that change is the only constant.

Its footprint dates at least to the early 1850s, when the Bowery was a strutting commercial strip of butchers, clothiers and amusements, with territorial gangs that never tired of thumping one another. Back then the building included the hosiery shop, which promised “all goods shown cheerfully” — although an argument one night between two store clerks, Wiley and Pettigrew, ended only after Wiley “drew a dark knife and stabbed his antagonist sixteen times,” as The New York Times reported with italicized outrage.


Read the whole article here.

One of those days



On the Bowery.

Vote for the 20th Annual Village Awards


From the EV Grieve inbox

Since 1991, GVSHP has presented its Village Awards in recognition of those people and places which make a significant contribution to the quality of life in Greenwich Village, the East Village, and NoHo. This year, GVSHP will present the 20th Annual Village Awards at our 30th Annual Meeting in June.

But we need your help!

Won’t you take a moment to nominate a Village treasure?
You can nominate almost anything or anyone: an individual, business, organization, streetscape, front stoop, restoration, or garden, from anywhere in Greenwich Village, the East Village, or Noho — someone or something you would miss if it was no longer around.

Nominations must be received by April 9, 2010. More information, a list of prior winners, and a nomination form can be found on the GVSHP Web site.

Nominate a Village treasure today!

Friday, March 12, 2010

At Ray's, the "line in the sand" for the East Village


At the Observer, W.M. Akers checks in with a nice story on Ray's titled The East Village's 'Line in the Sand.'

Here's an excerpt:

He is a neighborhood fixture, and since January he has emerged, inadvertently, as a cause. Caught between high rent and slow business, he is suddenly a symbol for local residents who feel they have seen every quirk of their neighborhood ironed out and turned into a Chase Bank. East Village organizer "Reverend" Billy Talen called Mr. Alvarez "a line in the sand." But besides being a symbol, he is a person, one who just wants to keep doing what he has done for so long, even though it's no longer marketable.


Read the whole article here. And the Save Ray's clothing/accessories are here.

What we learned about the owner of new EV pizzeria PJ Hanley's yesterday in the Post and Daily News


Jeremiah has an update today on PJ Hanley's, the new pizza place opening on First Avenue between St. Mark's and Seventh Street... Meanwhile, in case you missed this story in the tabloids yesterday... according to reports, PJ Hanley’s owner James McGown has been accused of renting out his TriBeCa condo for "extreme parties." Reports the Post:

A Brooklyn pizza man transformed his basement TriBeCa condo into a cheesy "extreme party" spot, complete with a stripper pole and a 15-foot slide onto a sunken dance floor, court papers charge.

In a bid to avoid possible legal liability for the bacchanalian bashes, the owner, James McGown, transferred the deed for the apartment to his 6-year-old daughter, his disgusted neighbors claim in papers filed in Manhattan Supreme Court.

The real-estate developer and restaurateur -- he owns South Brooklyn Pizza and PJ Hanley's bar in Carroll Gardens -- bought the basement unit on Reade Street in 2006.

He then allegedly stopped paying condo fees and mortgage payments, and improperly leased the space to a man named Dimitri Dimoulakis.

The filing seeks to stop the revelry and show the door both to McGown and Dimoulakis.

McGown claimed the parties are legal, he's been holding them for 10 years "and there's never been a problem."
Daily News has a story too.

[Image via Grub Street.]