Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Afternoon at the Beekman




Near City Hall.

Breaking: It's Election Day!

Remember, if you don't like the results of today's elections, then you can also help develop a new political party... A reader sent along a shot of one of the detailed, tiny-type flyers that seem to be everywhere, such as this one on Houston and First Avenue...



The discussion is Thursday night at the Ukrainian Restaurant on Second Avenue...

[Updated] Destination Bar robbed

Via the bar's Twitter feed...



We just reached out to one of the owners of the bar here on Avenue A and 13th Street for more information.

[Updated] An owner to get back to us this morning... He wants to hold off on releasing any further details for the time being...

Howard O'Brien, 1954-2010



Several Sophie's regulars have passed along word that Howard O'Brien, a longtime bartender at the East Fifth Street bar, passed away early Saturday morning. Howard, who was 56, had been battling cancer. He had worked at Sophie's since 1986.

As one regular described him, he was "wonderfully reserved, incredibly erudite, peculiarly comic, full of bardic tradition and a straight talking, no nonsense scholar and gentleman in the right way." Indeed.

Meanwhile, there is a memorial service for Howard on Friday:

11 a.m. in the Lower Church of St. Francis of Assisi
135 W. 31st St. (between Sixth Avenue and Seventh Avenue)
(212) 736-8500
Friends will be meeting at Sophie's afterwords, roughly around 12:30.

[Photo by Thomas Donal Ward via Facebook]

'Making or breaking dreams' at Community Board 3


Here are excerpts from today's Wall Street Journal article on Community Board 2 and 3....

The owner of a new tea lounge in the East Village wanted a liquor license. After her community board denied the request, she started crying, "shocked by the backlash," according to one board member.

Welcome to Community Board 3. The restaurant and night-life industry may be buzzing downtown, but some of the biggest fireworks take place in dreary meeting rooms where tempers flare, tears are shed and the back and forth can stretch on for up to eight hoTrs. Confrontations have gotten so bad that some businesses have just given up and withdrawn applications.

Now, a group of high-profile restaurateurs are trying to form a trade association. One of their main gripes: Community boards are unfair.

"In a way, we're making or breaking dreams," said Ariel Palitz, who has straddled two roles, as nightclub owner and member of Community Board 3's committee. She said she was speaking as an individual, not for the committee.


And!

Some restaurateurs say community boards can be the biggest obstacle to doing business in the city. "They should call them communist boards instead of community boards," said Keith Masco, whose application for a liquor license for a proposed seafood restaurant and market in the Lower East Side was denied several months ago. "What they're doing is really unfair."


And!

Community Board 3 District Manager Susan Stetzer says a real concern of residents in her district is having a diversity of businesses, not just bars and restaurants. "It's about having services for people who live here," she said.

This week in First Avenue bike lane hazards





ConEd is still working on First Avenue near Ninth Street after last week's little manhole mishap... St. Mark's was closed yesterday between Second Avenue and First Avenue...



First Avenue correspondent Blue Glass went by later last evening as work continued... the reflection makes it seem as if ConEd is working with a giant laser..



...and despite the noise, some folks are still choosing to rest here under the sidewalk shed on the Ninth Street corner...

Two signs, two eras



Second Avenue and Sixth Street.

Monday, November 1, 2010

In case you are waiting for someone coming down on the M15 Select Bus


As EV Grieve reader Mike notes at 42nd and Second, "Both of the machines were frozen on the post-transaction 'thank you' screen. One finally started working again but the second is still frozen. Big line to buy tickets."

Hotel project revived for 13th Street; will include 'exclusive rooftop lounge'



Curbed reports that the long zombified hotel project on 13th Street and Fourth Avenue has a new life via a Hyatt subsidiary...

Per the news release:

The other Hyatt-branded property announced today, slated to open Fall 2011, will be located at 13th Street and 4th Avenue, a block off Union Square, and near Washington Square Park. Union Square is adjacent to some of Manhattan’s preeminent residential and commercial neighborhoods including Chelsea, Gramercy Park, and the Flatiron District. Some of Manhattan’s most celebrated restaurants and popular nightlife spots surround the hotel. The area is extremely popular with residents and tourists alike, and is an activity hub for major hospitals, universities and retail centers. The hotel will offer stunning accommodations to its guests, including private terraces on the second floor, a well-appointed fitness center and an exclusive rooftop lounge. The historic façade and 23 foot ceilings in the lobby will create a grand space for the stylish lounge opening up to 13th Street and a restaurant concept inspired by the local and organic Greenmarket.


Previously on EV Grieve:
Is Sam Chang's Fourth Avenue hotel too tall?

Halloween night on St. Mark's Place: 'truly unheralded'


A reader comment that deserves its own post...

Living on St Marks place (b/t 2nd & 3rd no less) for 33 years is bound to have some effect on a person (me), but I have to say last night was something truly unheralded. As close as I can describe between 12-4, the street resembled nothing so much as Times Square on New Year's Eve. What was even more sobering (ha) was the arrival of cops who placidly navigated the drunk, screaming, traffic stopping, collectively shouting crowd without even attempting to clear the street or the sidewalk. Living on SMP for so long, one adjusts to the fact that inhabitants are deprived of certain civil rights — quiet, privacy, garbage pick up, but this was stunning. I have seen everything here — 70s speed freaks to 80s junkies to the riots in the park. I thought for sure, the same cops (and helicopters) who turned out for that event — or the Republican convention — would show. Nope. What up with that?

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition



Housing Authority board member Margarita Lopez pays $250 in rent on East 11th Street (New York Post)

Remember to vote tomorrow (The Lo-Down)

Looking at "New York the Way It Was: Greenwich Village" (Nonetheless)

A cupcake with skeletons (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)

150 Bowery on the market (BoweryBoogie)

Another round of NYU vs. residents (Daily News)

Save the date: A Bowery Celebration at Dixon Place on Nov. 30 (Dixon Place)

More EV Halloween photos at Nadie Se Conoce ... Melanie's East Village Corner ... Slum Goddess ... and one cool costume at GammaBlog...

Halloween scenes (reader edition)

Many thanks to everyone who passed along some Halloween-related photos...

From Editrrix...







From Bobby Williams...




From Blue Glass...



From 68 Comeback... (and Batman has to wait in line!)



A favorite ... the blood drive truck in front of the vampire store on Avenue A... Via NYCETC



Fox and Hounds at Lakeside Lounge via Bonnie...



A morning-after walk home by a Cat Woman on Third Avenue via someone who didn't leave a name...



And two morning-after shots from readers showing two different takes on St. Mark's Place and Second Avenue...

At 6 a.m., showing a rather apocalyptic scene...



And a few hours later, where some zombies were on the prowl...

Weekend at Sin Sin

We first heard that Sin Sin was calling it quits last Thursday.



However! The beleaguered bar/club was open on Second Avenue and Fifth Street on Friday night...



and Saturday night...




...and yesterday morning, workers gutted the space....





Word is the owners will rebrand the bar as something else in the coming weeks....

"Lives" live at 98 Bowery

Marc H. Miller sends along word about the latest addition to the 98 Bowery site...



Lives: exhibition and catalogue organized by Jeffrey Deitch
The Fine Arts Building, 105 Hudson St., NYC
November 29 - December 20, 1975


Here's a little bit more about it....:

The "Lives" exhibition by Jeffrey Deitch that opened in November 1975 at the Fine Arts Building featured the experimental artists that I had admired and identified with in the early 1970s. The exhibition also marked the start of a brief period when the Fine Arts Building, a large, eleven-floor office building at 105 Hudson Street, was the center of an energetic art scene that helped rejuvenate the deserted neighborhood just south of Soho -- the now fashionable Tribeca. With its abundance of cheap live-in studios, offices and exhibition spaces, the building fostered the camaraderie and networking that helped nourish radical new directions in the 1980s. For those who were there it was a stimulating time that ended abruptly when the building went co-op in the late 1970s. The young artists and fledgling galleries that helped develop the building and neighborhood were priced out and had to seek new quarters. Most migrated to the East Village and the Lower East Side where a new phase in the evolution of the art of the period began.



[Flyer from 1978, via 98 Bowery]

Today, 105 Hudson is home to, among other things, Nobu....

For further reading on EV Grieve:
Life at 98 Bowery: 1969-1989

Revisiting Punk Art

Q-and-A with Curt Hoppe: Living on the Bowery, finding inspiration and shooting Mr. Softee

Voices from 98 Bowery's past

Halloween outside Diablo Royale Este

Outside the Halloween party at Diablo Royale Este on Avenue A Saturday night...








... featuring the new outdoor urinal...

'Chocolate Library' coming soon to St. Mark's Place

Here between Avenue A and First Avenue...




Dunno what exactly this will entail... there is a Chocolate Library in the UK.

'Restaurant/cafe use preferred' on corner of Second Avenue and First Street

The corner space at Avalon Bowery Place on First Street and Second Avenue has remained vacant since work ended on the apartment complex ...



However, I recently noticed a new "for lease" sign on the doors... noting that "restaurant/cafe use preferred."