Thursday, August 19, 2010
The dangers of the mayor's office trying to be cool
From our friends at Neighborhoodr.... and, uh, as they point out, the Ramones made their debut 36 years ago...
And there's something Bloombergy about Mr. Burns...
"I just want folks to know that the whole neighborhood is going to crap"
Quite a piece by Shefali Kulkarni in Runnin' Scared about the soon-to-close Village Fabrics.
Here's a chunk of it:
In June, Pamac Realty filed suit against Kurban Ali Kokan, the store's owner, after Kokan did not pay $27,400 in back rent. The Kokan family claimed that the store had water damage that was never properly repaired. The suit ended on August 9, when a judge ruled that Kokan must pay the back rent with interest and vacate the building. Pamac's attorney created a stipulation that reduced the amount to $20,000.
But that's still too much money, says Kokan's wife, Cemile, who is currently working at the store with their son Sadik. (The Kokan's rent was $4,400 each month for the last five years, during which business slowed down, her husband fell ill, and medical bills needed to be paid.)
Then Pamac Realty posted a For Rent sign above the storefront. "He came one day and he said 'pay or ship out' -- those were his words," Cemile says. "I'm not blaming him, but some of things he does are unfair. He's not a bad landlord, but he's fed up with me too. I guess 18 to 20 years doesn't count."
Cemile, 65, wipes tears from her eyes as she sells a few yards of brown vinyl to a customer. "I'm sorry," she says. "It's just that there's been no peace in my house for a while," she tells the customer. "We are getting older now, my husband is 80. We still have a mortgage to pay. What are we going to do after this?"
"I just want folks to know that the whole neighborhood is going to crap," Sadik, 33, says. "I mean [my parents] are senior citizens, you know? We're just tired of being honest and loyal, when apparent greed is all that matters. This just shows you what is happening to our community now."
Pasquale Coppolechia, the president of Pamac Realty, says that the tenants were never a problem, when they were paying the rent. He says the Kokans were at least eight months behind in rent and that after their 10-year lease expired, they went on a one-year lease and eventually a month-to-month one. "We offered an installment plan as well," he says. "I know they were going through some 'apparent' difficulties and that they were clearly struggling, but even these negotiations just took up time."
Coppolechia says that there are already businesses interested in the First Avenue location. "We've been collecting several requests from the broker, pardon my French, but they were like flies on shit."
Previously on EV Grieve:
Closing sale at Village Fabrics
Village Fabrics to close next month
Long live Gizmo
Given what's happening the next block up on First Avenue with Village Fabrics... here's an appreciation for Gizmo Notion...a seemingly rare breed these days around here...
Appreciating two newsstands before they are Cemusaed
These days, whenever I see a newsstand that hasn't yet been Cemusaed, I'll take a photo... such as these two down in the Financial District...
For further reading:
Two old-school newsstands that are still holding on (EVG)
Union Sq. Newsstand (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
For further reading:
Two old-school newsstands that are still holding on (EVG)
Union Sq. Newsstand (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Hey Is Dee Dee Home?
Flashback August 1996: A two-week tribute for Merlin
I wanted to follow-up on the Merlin's Memorial post from yesterday...
Bob Arihood, who took the shot above, documented the scene on Avenue A and Sixth Street on Neither More Nor Less after Merlin passed away on Aug. 16, 1996...
As Bob wrote:
Here's Merlin on his corner as many people here remember him...
Jeremiah also writes about Merlin today, asking the following: "Could such a memorial happen for a homeless man in the East Village today?"
Bob Arihood, who took the shot above, documented the scene on Avenue A and Sixth Street on Neither More Nor Less after Merlin passed away on Aug. 16, 1996...
As Bob wrote:
A wake and vigil of considerable moment, lasting for the better part of 2 weeks , was held in the neighborhood at Merlin's corner . Some nights the sidewalk and street around the memorial were so densely packed with people that it seemed that everyone in the neighborhood and the surrounding communities was attending , crowded together ,all kinds of folks , from all professions and callings , from high and low paying their respects to Merlin .
Here's Merlin on his corner as many people here remember him...
Jeremiah also writes about Merlin today, asking the following: "Could such a memorial happen for a homeless man in the East Village today?"
Another corner prepping for change on First Avenue
159 First Ave. at 10th Street recently went on the market. Here's the listing:
Existing 6 Story mixed use asset with 4 commercial spaces on the main floor and 30 one and two bedroom units. Corner, Walkup apartment building, 100% occupied. 25 Free Market Units, 4 Rent Stabilized Units, one super occupied. 6 homes per floor: 4 One Bedrooms/ 2 Two Bedrooms with a total of 24 One Bedroom Homes and 12 Two Bedroom Homes. High traffic location. Prime East Village. Air rights.
The current asking price is $12.75 million. Aside from the "air rights" part, there's nothing necessarily alarming about this... But, given the way things are going around here, why not come in, fix up the joint, double the rent, throw a few extra floors on, boot out all the ground-floor businesses for a high-end eatery.... OK, OK.. don't mean to speculate.... but the combination of this with its corner mate on Ninth Street currently looking for a restaurant or two leaves me uneasy...
[Photo by Blue Glass]
On Avenue A, a flower replaces armpit-sniffing photo of Mariah Carey
FINALLY! Since I can remember, Luster Photo on Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's has had this stupid photo of Mariah Carey in the window. The one in which she's sort of sniffing the armpit and showing off the hair extensions. Why do they have this photo in the window? What does she have to do with the East Village? This is just embarrassing. Back when the store was on Avenue B near 10th Street, they at least had a Lou Reed photo in the window. (Nothing against Luster... it's just that photo!)
But! No more! The store has changed the photo in the front window.
For now, we will savor this moment....
But! No more! The store has changed the photo in the front window.
For now, we will savor this moment....
An ode to the truck bomb
As noted yesterday, Cheap Shots — in an effort to be less youth friendly — has done away with the truck bomb (you know, shot in a pitcher of beer)....
And now, in loving memory of wolfing down truck bombs at Cheap Shots, let's travel to YouTube...
Previously on EV Grieve:
Cheap Shots — sans truck bombs and graffiti — gets the OK for a license renewal
And now, in loving memory of wolfing down truck bombs at Cheap Shots, let's travel to YouTube...
Previously on EV Grieve:
Cheap Shots — sans truck bombs and graffiti — gets the OK for a license renewal
Former Western Union now delivering tacos
Workers have been refurbishing the former Western Union location here on First Avenue near 10th Street....
...per the sign in the window, a taqueria is opening here...
...per the sign in the window, a taqueria is opening here...
EV Grieve Eatery Etc: Plants for 325 Bowery; cherries for Cherry Tavern; Latin for Italian place
Bello's, the Italian place on St. Mark's near Avenue A...
...is ready to debut a new menu.... (and their entire menu of soon-to-be-leftover Italian fare is now 30 percent off...)
The new diner coming to Bowery and Second Street shows off its new plants....
East Village Thai on Seventh Street near Cooper Union is closed for renovations...
...and, based on the sign, it doesn't seem to be reopening anytime soon...
On Sixth Street near Avenue A... the always-reliable Cherry Tavern...
[Photo by Konstantin Sergeyev via New York]
...now has some cherries outside... (and, uh, I can't say for sure when this happened....)
The Film Academy Cafe on Astor Place East wants you to eat wine...
The new restaurant coming to Second Avenue and Second Street has some fancy lights embedded in the sidewalk...
And if you're a fan of Il Bagatto on Second Street near Avenue B, they're closed per usual this time of year until after Labor Day....
The former dry cleaners here on 11th Street near Second Avenue...
...has moved into the former Plump Dumpling space next door... Plump Dumpling moved to the corner at Second Avenue in December, of course...
[Thanks to Blue Glass for this tip]
...is ready to debut a new menu.... (and their entire menu of soon-to-be-leftover Italian fare is now 30 percent off...)
The new diner coming to Bowery and Second Street shows off its new plants....
East Village Thai on Seventh Street near Cooper Union is closed for renovations...
...and, based on the sign, it doesn't seem to be reopening anytime soon...
On Sixth Street near Avenue A... the always-reliable Cherry Tavern...
[Photo by Konstantin Sergeyev via New York]
...now has some cherries outside... (and, uh, I can't say for sure when this happened....)
The Film Academy Cafe on Astor Place East wants you to eat wine...
The new restaurant coming to Second Avenue and Second Street has some fancy lights embedded in the sidewalk...
And if you're a fan of Il Bagatto on Second Street near Avenue B, they're closed per usual this time of year until after Labor Day....
The former dry cleaners here on 11th Street near Second Avenue...
...has moved into the former Plump Dumpling space next door... Plump Dumpling moved to the corner at Second Avenue in December, of course...
[Thanks to Blue Glass for this tip]
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Dumpster diving on 10th Street
Blue Glass took these shots from earlier today... the fellows seemed pleased with what they were finding in the dumpster on 10th Street near Second Avenue.....
Dining in the dark soon to be a reality on the LES
We've talked a little about last night's CB3/SLA meeting.... The Lo-Down has the scoop on more action, including a new eatery that will generate a good 10,000 or so blog posts among all of us...:
The most intriguing concept of the night came from the team behind “Dans Le Noir,” the “blind dining” franchise from Paris. Having just flown in from France yesterday, the owners walked community board members through an impressive proposal for the former “Tonic” space on Norfolk Street. The idea, they said, is simple: “Diners eat in the pitch dark and are served by blind people, creating an interesting sensory experience.”
Dans Le Noir co-founder Etienne Boisrond, elaborating on the concept, said, “you become the blind and they (the servers) become your eyes.” It’s a fusion menu with french accents. The owners noted that 10-percent of the profits go to charities around the world.
Read The Lo-Down's full report here.
Meanwhile, several people have asked me... I did not get to play the Community Board/State Liquor Authority Drinking Game last night. But these babies are flying off the shelves....
A memorial for Merlin
There's now a tribute to Merlin here on Avenue A at Sixth Street by the ConEd substation.... marking the anniversary of his death.
Per the Times:
[Thanks to EV Grieve reader Anna for the photos]
Per the Times:
There are few certainties in this changeable city. But on Avenue A and Sixth Street, a place that has been convulsed by change in recent years, one thing has remained constant through the riots and real-estate booms: Merlin, a 41-year-old homeless man who uses only one name, has made the intersection's southeast corner his residence for eight years. Neither blizzards nor blistering heat have routed him from atop a set of wooden pallets in front of a Con Edison substation.
"People move in and out of the neighborhood, but I never budge," he said last week, lounging beneath a pair of tattered umbrellas, his only guard against the sting of the sun. A stroke has left him partly paralyzed, and frostbite cost him several toes three winters ago.
To strangers, he is but another intrusion on the East Village's gritty streetscape, a reason to avert their eyes. But to many local residents, he is a cherished asset: a timekeeper, a message center, a town crier and a source of good, solid conversation. "Merlin is a social hub," said Tatiana Bliss, 25, a local artist. "If you're looking for someone, Merlin probably knows where they are. If you want to leave something for a friend, he'll make sure they get it. He makes this crazy city feel like a small town."
[Thanks to EV Grieve reader Anna for the photos]
Labels:
Avenue A,
ConEd,
East Village,
east village icons,
Merlin
CBS 2 finds that some bicyclists ride through red lights and stuff in the East Village
CBS 2 camped out in the East Village to find some outlaw bicyclists. And they did! It's Bike Bedlam! (Catchy!)
There's video, but CBS embedded the wrong code....
Thanks to EV Grieve reader Creature for the tip.
StreetsBlog discussed some of CBS2's week-long report here.
NEW YORK (CBS 2) – The NYPD is on a ticket blitz, giving cyclists more than 15,000 violations so far this year. Many pedestrians say it’s about time and fear the city’s push to get people pedaling has led to danger on the streets and sidewalks. Some have even dubbed it “bike bedlam.”
The Big Apple is racing to become the bike capital of the world and the Bloomberg administration has added more bike racks, paths and lanes.
However, as CBS 2’s Tony Aiello found out, spending a few minutes along the new bike lane on First Avenue makes clear that plenty of New Yorkers have little liking for the biking.
“It would be one thing if the bike riders obeyed the lights and things — they don’t,” Lower East Side resident Amber Rogers told Aiello.
In a recent 20 minute period at First Avenue and Sixth Street, CBS 2 counted 17 bike riders running red lights and more than two dozen riding the wrong way and against traffic.
There's video, but CBS embedded the wrong code....
Thanks to EV Grieve reader Creature for the tip.
StreetsBlog discussed some of CBS2's week-long report here.
Cheap Shots — sans truck bombs and graffiti — gets the OK for a license renewal
Cheap Shots was first up last night on the CB3/SLA docket.... Back in June, the fuzz busted the First Avenue joint for allegedly serving minors... (and I thought the new incarnation was to be called Spanky and Darla's? Well, no matter... this wasn't mentioned... )
The bar's attorney was there, as was the newish owner ... she also owns the lost bra parlor the Patriot Saloon down on Chambers (where they were hiring "shameless slut bartenders" — woo!) ... anyway, the kindly lawyer, who struck me as a little grandfatherly, discussed how the bar has been trying to change its image.... with a straight face, the lawyer said Cheap Shots had a reputation for being "a young person's bar."
So! The management:
• Removed all the video games
• Cleaned off all the graffiti from the interior
• Changed the jukebox
• Added soundproofing
• Removed the all-you-can-drink-for-free special for people who were celebrating their birthday
• Stopped serving pitchers of beer with shots in them (truck bombs! Woo!)
(I haven't been here since the spring or so, so I can't independently verify any of these claims...)
And so on... There have been four recent complaints under the new ownership....one in December, two in March and one in June... But the owner said that they've had friendly discussions with neighbors... and helped rectify noise problems... Per the underage bust, they now have two bouncers working on weekends and an ID scanner... two residents spoke out against the bar... one resident said that she felt uncomfortable walking by the bar when the patrons are outside smoking. She said she found their body language — unpleasant.
The owner seemed genuenly concerned upon hearing this... A CB3 board member suggested that the bar figure out a sidewalk traffic control system, perhaps adding a corral to keep people more separated from passersby....
In the end, the committee approved a license renewal for Cheap Shots...
After hearing about the bar's efforts to be less youth friendly, I decided to walk by after the meeting... and here's the sign greeting folks on the sidewalk...
The East Village gets two new sidewalk cafes
Also on the CB3/SLA agenda last night — two applications for sidewalk cafes..... First up, Penny Farthing on Third Avenue and 13th Street.... The former restaurant here, Cafe DeVille, had a sidewalk cafe...In addition to nine tables (18 seats) on Third Avenue, Penny Farthing will have four tables (eight seats) on 13th Street.... The hours: Noon to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursdays; to 11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. Not much discussion... People seem to like this place... and it was quickly approved....
Then! Team DBGB took the stand, the lawyers with by far the best-looking suits in the audience. (Actually only one lawyer took the stand; the other two sat in the back.) Head DBGBer Daniel Boulud was not in attendance, by the way... So the DBGB sidewalk cafe plans to have 15 tables (30 seats) on the Bowery... with some kind of self-supporting grates as barriers... Hours of operation: Noon to 11 p.m. Monday through Thursday; till midnight on Friday and Saturday; and 10 p.m. on Sunday.
The committee quickly gave their approval, with someone even throwing in a gratuitous Daniel Boulud compliment...
Westville East debuts its sidewalk cafe
Speaking of sidewalk cafes...
As you may recall, Westville East (WE) applied for a sidewalk cafe in the spring... and it didn't go so well.... the drama included posting a note on their door calling out their "mean-spiritied neighbors." (Doing so in a 29-word run-on sentence, no less!)
Anyway! Long story! And now WE has debuted the tables....
Oh, and there was more drama... we heard that Councilwoman Rosie Mendez intervened to help get the number of tables reduced for neighbors who are upset over the sidewalk cafe... (Updated 9:29 a.m.: Mendez's office confirmed this.)
Perhaps with fewer tables, WE can spring for some barriers to block out the ample pedestrian and vehicular traffic...
As you may recall, Westville East (WE) applied for a sidewalk cafe in the spring... and it didn't go so well.... the drama included posting a note on their door calling out their "mean-spiritied neighbors." (Doing so in a 29-word run-on sentence, no less!)
Anyway! Long story! And now WE has debuted the tables....
Oh, and there was more drama... we heard that Councilwoman Rosie Mendez intervened to help get the number of tables reduced for neighbors who are upset over the sidewalk cafe... (Updated 9:29 a.m.: Mendez's office confirmed this.)
Perhaps with fewer tables, WE can spring for some barriers to block out the ample pedestrian and vehicular traffic...
Avenue B loft with Corinthian columns is apparently "every hipster's dream"
Oh, disregard that top photo. Those are the Corinthian columns out front of my apartment, which were given to me by late great-great grandfather, Zeus Grieve...
Now back to the post....
Well, when we last checked in at the former Newsboys' and Bootblacks' Lodging House and Tompkins Square Lodging House for Boys and Industrial School, Children's Aid Society .... Jeez, OK — you know, that place where Matt Dillon has been living on Avenue B and Eighth Street...
...we were checking out a loft with a stage ...
Now, another milestone loft is on the market in the building, which was erected in 1887...
Per the listing:
Live and work in this huge, open loft . Facing Tompkins Square Park, on Avenue B, in the most incredible landmark East Village building. 12 foot ceilings and huge windows, this 2 bedroom corner loft apartment is every hipster's dream! Live totally "outside the box" in every way and wow your friends as they enter this one-of-a-kind space. Corinthian columns. Great south and west light. Steps to the best of the East Village. Nothing else like it. Video intercom system. Sorry no shares.
And hipsters — keep dreaming... the rent is $7,000.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Remembering the Revolutionary
Or if that dump on East Eighth Street is too fancy for you, then try this one...
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