Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Window shopping on Fulton Street




DOB 111 still on the block

Yesterday, Eater listed a slew of neighborhood restaurants for sale... including Tonda on East Fourth Street and the shuttered Munchies on Essex...

Here's one other eatery on the market: Michael Bao Huynh's DOB 111 on St. Mark's Place near Avenue A ...



According to the listing, rent is $6,250, with $125,000 key money... The eatery opened back in March... they were turned down for a beer-wine license in the spring....

Fork in the Road first pointed out that DOB 111 was on the block this past July. Huynh denied plans to shutter DOB. Via his publicist, he told Fork in the Road "that the spaces may have been listed simply to test the real estate waters."

We noted last month that DOB had been closed for a few too many days for comfort... and I still haven't talked with anyone who has ever eaten here....

Paper jam at 34 Avenue A

The windows at 34 Avenue A, most previously home to Aces & Eights, were papered over this past weekend...




We're not sure what's in store now, if anything. Owner Jevan Damadian wanted to reimagine the space as an upscale tapas joint, by CB3/SLA said otherwise back in November. Per one Avenue A resident with some knowledge of this block what's going on here: "I figured either remodeling without paperwork or trying not to get robbed. I would also vote for skeeball speakeasy."

Tree stump celebrates birthday



Somewhere along Cooper Square the other day.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

A tribute to Ruta




On East 10th Street via EV Grieve reader Bobby Williams.

Developing story! Someone dares enter the haunted house on East 13th Street

Last month, we had that great discussion on the possibly haunted and definitely abandoned building at 222 E. 13th St. The building has been sealed up for years.... until now....



EV Grieve reader Adam walked by minutes ago... and the door is open!



To be continued...

Previously on EV Grieve:
A haunted house on East 13th Street?

EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition



Christmas tree vendor hit with $1,500 fine at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery (DNAinfo)

"There's been an alarming 16 percent spike in vehicle and bicycle collisions over the past year that investigators blame in large part on rogue cyclists who have turned city streets into demolition derbies." (New York Post)

Comparing the new and old Fedora signs (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

190 Bowery, circa 1905 (BoweryBoogie)

Sassy holiday gifts that we like (Slum Goddess)

Faustina closing in the Cooper Square Hotel (Diner's Journal via Grub Street)

East Fourth Street's Tonda on the market (Eater)

And today marks the three-year anniversary of EV Grieve. As always, thank you for being part of this. (EV Grieve)

With that, I introduce my new site...


There are now 194 Starbucks in Manhatan


News releases from the EV Grieve inbox...

The Center for an Urban Future, a think tank based in Manhattan, today published its third annual ranking of national retailers that have the most stores in New York City.

This year’s report reveals that that despite the sluggish economy, more national retailers have expanded their presence in the five boroughs over the past year than those that have reduced their number of stores here. The report shows that every borough registered a net increase in national chain stores during the past year, with Brooklyn experiencing the greatest percentage increase of any borough. And for the third year running, Dunkin Donuts comes in as the national retailer with the most stores in the city. Dunkin Donuts now has 210 more stores in the five boroughs than Starbucks, the retailer that came in third on our list.

Overall, the 280 national retailers listed in our 2009 report now have 4.1 percent more stores in the five boroughs than a year ago — increasing from 6,335 stores in 2009 to 6,595 in 2010. Thirty nine percent of those retailers have expanded their footprint in the city during that time, while 20 percent now have fewer stores and 41 percent have the same number of locations. Only one of the chains on last year’s list closed all of their New York City locations this past year, compared to four that shut down between our 2008 and 2009 reports.

Brooklyn had the largest percentage gain of any borough over the past year. The retailers counted in our 2009 report now have 1,325 stores in Brooklyn, up from 1,258 last year — a 5.3 percent gain. Manhattan had the next largest percentage gain (5.1 percent), followed by the Bronx (4.7 percent), Queens (1.9 percent) and Staten Island (1.5 percent).

To make our annual ranking of national retailers as accurate as possible, we add new retailers to our list every year — some of which have entered the New York market in the past year other which we inadvertently left of the list before. This year’s report includes 26 new national retailers, from Red Mango (14 stores) to Lego (2 stores). Overall, this year’s report includes 306 retailers, which have a total of 6,703 stores in the city.

This year, there are 13 retailers with at least 100 stores in the five boroughs—up from 12 in both 2009 and 2008. The new entry is T-Mobile, which now has 117 stores in the city, up from 96 in 2009 and 82 in 2008.

Dunkin Donuts is still far and away the largest national retailer in New York. It now has 466 stores in the city, up from 429 last year and 341 in 2008. Though Dunkin Donuts is only the fourth largest national retail chain in Manhattan — with 115 stores in the borough, it trails Starbucks (194), Subway (163) and Duane Reade (161) — it has the most locations in each of the other four boroughs.

Despite its 2009 announcement that it would close some of its New York City locations, Starbucks actually has 11 more stores in the five boroughs this year. It moved up to third place in the rankings, from fourth in 2008 and 2009. Duane Reade climbed up one notch, to fourth place, while McDonald’s has fallen to fifth from its third rank in 2008 and 2009; the burger chain has 17 fewer chains than last year (from 258 to 241 stores).

T-Mobile wasn’t the only cell phone store to increase significantly over the past year. Metro PCS grew from 7 locations in 2009 to 35 this year, a staggering 400 percent increase, while Sprint (from 24 to 33) and Verizon Wireless (45 to 50) also registered notable gains.


Find a PDF of the whole shebangy report here.

Image via.

Bowery Poetry Club to get literary cafe, roast beef

The Bowery Poetry Club has a new tenant...



According to a partner in the deal, the plan is for a literary cafe that also will serve a Massachusetts-style roast beef sandwich. The roast beef will be via Harrison's in North Andover, Mass., which gets mostly rave reviews on Yelp. This will be the city's first Harrison's outpost. Tentative opening date: Feb. 1.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Bookstore-cafe wanted for the Bowery Poetry Club

Shockers: Former Village Fabrics has a new tenant, and it isn't an upscale eatery or bank branch

High rents apparently doomed Village Fabrics, which closed on First Avenue and 11th Street back at the end of the summer... We all figured something Momofukuey would take over the corner spot... Well! EV Grieve First Avenue correspondent Blue Glass brings us the news of the new tenant:




A consignment shop called Eleven... with the tagline "where style is only the beginning." I'll take it.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Closing sale at Village Fabrics

Village Fabrics to close next month

Papa John's decides to rename the East Village




The reader who passed this along also notes that Papa John's delivers their pizzas via cars...

Party guy Dr. Doom bringing his hedge funders and models to East First Street penthouse

I meant to mention this from Friday... Bloomberg reported that Nouriel Roubini, the NYU economist (dubbed Dr. Doom) who predicted the global financial crisis, bought that swanky $5.5 million, 3,700-square-foot home at 6 E. First St. that I featured back in June ...



This place had been on the market for nearly four years... At one point, the three-bedroom apartment with a custom walnut wet bar was renting for $25,000 a month.

Maybe Dr. Doom should have rented it instead?

Felix Salmon at Reuters did the rent-vs-buy calculation using that handy-dandy Buy-Rent Calculator at the Times. You can read Felix's assessment here. (Too many numbers for me...)

Anyway, The Wall Street Journal notes that the Doominator owns a loft on Leonard Street... "The apartment was famous for Mr. Roubini's parties, which drew hedge-fund managers and models and occasional coverage in the gossip columns."

Forbes had more on the party angle:

"Rumors of Roubini being a party animal have been wide-spread, reaching vast corners of the internet. Internet gossipers have hit back at Roubini for liking to party, considering him sort of hypocritical given his serious, quasi-painful professional demeanor. Roubini is said to have partied with Russian oligarch Roman Abramnovich, owner of English soccer team Chelsea FC, at St. Baart’s alongside celebrities like Gwen Stefani, Beyonce, and Prince. Daily Intel even reports, with pictures, that Roubini’s “walls were ‘indented with plaster vulvas,’” at his current Tribeca apartment."




No word just yet if the plaster vulvas — which seem so 2007 — will make the trip to his new home. Read more about his party side on Gawker. [Bottom photo via Gawker]

Previously on EV Grieve:
After nearly 4 years, First Street penthouse finally in contract

Upright Citizens Brigade's future home on Avenue A now has stools in bags, so to speak



Just noting the continued progress here on Avenue A near Third Street. Those bar stools may cause a lot of cargo shorts owners to lose stuff out of their multiple-pocketed cargo shorts. (OK, so multiple-pocketed cargo shorts is redundant.) Hope they have a big lost and found.

Previously.

I'll be back again some day



Gudrun Georges took this photo of the lunar eclipse last night... she was on Seventh Street between Avenue A and First Avenue....

Meanwhile, LES NYC Window has a few shots too...

Monday, December 20, 2010

MTA always prompts holiday cheer


Per a reader from our post earlier today on the nostalgic MTA bus and train:

MTA can take this feeble attempt at holiday cheer and shove it up its poorly-managed ass. What could be more pointless. The last thing people need from the MTA are acts of nostalgic whimsy. What they really need are trains and buses that keep to something that resembles a schedule. They need a transit authority that is at least well managed enough so as not to require a fare increase every other fucking year. This Christmas, eat shit MTA.

Countdown to the lunar eclipse




Is there a Lunar Eclipse pub crawl?

Miracle on 34th Street, sort of



EV Grieve reader Crazy Eddie passes along this shot taken between First and Second Avenues... The MTA broke out the vintage rides for the holidays... And look — even the old buses don't get respect ... someone is parked in the bus lane!

Meanwhile, BoweryBoogie caught the holiday nostalgia train here.

While the buses and trains are vintage... the MTA is charging what fares are expected to be in 2020: $71.25.

Just kidding on that last part. (I hope.)

At the Mystery Lot: Spirits in the materialistic world



Ah, Jeremiah beat me to this today... an art installation of sorts along the 13th Street side of the Mystery Lot that reads MATERIALISTIC, though a few letters appear to be missing now...

Tompkins Square Park, 10:17 a.m., Dec. 20


WTF: 'Le Souk is back to Avenue B for New Years!'

A rather terrified Avenue B resident passes along this info about a New Year's Eve bash at the shuttered Le Souk...




The description mentions Le Souk's West Village location, but everything else points to Avenue B... where the restaurant/club lost its liquor license last year... Anyway, The Harem VIP Table Service Ticket is $250.