Monday, March 28, 2011

Last day for Houston Deli & Grocery

As I first reported last month, Brooklyn's Union Market will open a fancy new shop on Avenue A and Houston that will include a beef-aging facility and personal shopping services...


Meanwhile, the current tenant at 240 E. Houston St., Houston Deli & Grocery, closes today...


I stopped by during the weekend. I asked about the closing date. The owner, shaking his head and fighting back tears, said several times, "They wouldn't offer us a lease..."

Not much left...


New hope for 35 Cooper Square

During the weekend, workers arrived at 35 Cooper Square to begin removing the sewer and water from the property...


[Photos by Bobby Williams]


...the next steps in the demolition of the historic building... However, there is some positive news about the home via David Mulkins, chair of the Bowery Alliance of Neighbors (BAN). City Council member Rosie Mendez's office has brokered a meeting between developer Arun Bhatia and BAN members to discuss possibly sparing the building.

Meanwhile, as we pointed out five weeks ago, workers have left the roof exposed to the elements. You may write to the developer's rep, Jane Crotty (Jane@gacnyc.com), and ask them to put the protective covering back on the rooftop.


Updated: DNAinfo reports the meeting is set for April 12.

Nevada Smith's turning red

Here on Third Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street.

Before!


Saturday!


Sunday!


Perhaps the new exterior will put to rest the years-old rumors that they're moving to a bigger space?

Cat adoption center opens on East Ninth Street

Atomic Passion, the vintage clothing shop on East Ninth Street between Avenue A and First Avenue, closed early last spring.



The space remained vacant until a few weeks ago... after some renovations, it appears the new tenant is ready for business.


It's Ollie's Place, a branch of the Mighty Mutts organization and veteran Murray Hill cat adoption center. A fire knocked them out of their 26th Street location. (No cats were harmed — you can read about it here.) And here's the Ollie's Place website.


They're open 6-8 pm Monday through Thursday, and from 12-6 pm on the weekends.

Village Sheeple


A new sign by Timothy Dark outside Billy's on East Houston...

Retail comings and goings and comings

On Seventh Street, Fab 208 has closed one shop in preparation of moving across the street to smaller quarters... The new store opens Friday.



And East Village Pharmacy has relocated from Avenue A and Fifth Street to its new home down the block on Third Street...


Now we can speculate what is coming to Fifth and A ... the "for lease" sign says no restaurants, but food OK...

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Late-day FDNY, NYPD action

A few late-Sunday actions involving the NYPD and FDNY via Bobby Williams... Police responded to a call about a "sick person" on Avenue C near 10th Street...



... A police officer crawled into the apartment in which the person was supposed to be.. but no one was home...


And on the 500 block of East Sixth Street between Avenue A and B... The FDNY responded to a call about a gas leak ... the FDNY ended up turning off the gas in the basement of the building ...



During times like these, we need photos of adorable dogs

Thanks to Allen Semanco for these photos from the Tompkins Square Park Dog Run...







Honoring Japan and the memory of Mark Enger


The latest mural outside the Mars Bar for the latest art show, which starts today ... by Hamlet Zurita.

Artist Mark Enger died in January of oral cancer. See more of his work here.

The Times champions sex and ping pong, sort of

Today, a newspaper called The New York Times has an article that has something to do with ping pong. The piece includes mentions of the new table in Tompkins Square Park.


The article ends this way:

In 1971, a United States Ping-Pong team visited China. The ostensible purpose was to conduct some exhibition matches, but the effort has been credited with helping pave the way for President Richard M. Nixon’s historic trip the next year and has been described as “Ping-Pong diplomacy.”

Could the sport that paved the way for more open relations between two cold-war powers improve relations among New Yorkers, still shivering from a blustery winter?

Clearly, some are already counting on it. At the Duane Reade on Avenue B and East Second Street, one vertical display positioned in front of a wall of beer features Ping-Pong balls on one side, condoms on the other. Let the games begin.

[Photo by Bobby Williams]

DOH temporarily closes Mulberry Street Bar; plus, Barry Manilow

NYC the Blog reported yesterday that the DOH has temporarily shuttered the century-old Mulberry Street Bar — an EV Grieve favorite most of the time. NYC the Blog called the bar and was told they'd be back open tomorrow. Read the whole post here. Gothamist has more details here.

[Top photo via the Voice]

PS

While looking for an image to run with this post... I found these of Barry Manilow at the bar via Getty!



Ah, the old jukebox.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

The Post thinks Mason Dixon and the Ace Bar are dive bars

The Post has a feature today titled "Gimme dive! NYC’s seedy saloons are holding on — with a twist." Not quite sure of the point here. Perhaps the lead can explain: "World class museums. Four-star restaurants. Broadway,Divebars. All very important New York institutions. But with some classic dives — such as Max fish and Mars — in danger of extingtion, we take a look at some seedy watering holes with secret weapons that will hopefully keep them afloat."

And why, for example, is Mason Dixon down on Essex Street on the list? To the listicle!


This is the only Lower East Side saloon with a mechanical bull to get your “Urban Cowboy” on. While a fine bourbon collection and $9.95 barbecue pork dogs may have purists calling this place more a kitschy honky-tonk than traditional dive, we’re giving it the nod because patrons routinely end up on the floor without being thrown out of the bar.

Per a Post commenter: "This is probably the worst article about dive bars in the history of articles [on?] dive bars."

[Photo via]

Next step in the demolition of 35 Cooper Square

Yesterday, we noted the presence of rodent control signs at 35 Cooper Square... today, crews are on the scene to remove the water and sewer lines... all necessary steps that the developer needs to complete before demolition can commence...





A face lift for Nevada Smith's



Third Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street. Will the workers clear out before Wales-England at 11 a.m.?

East 11th Street, 9:27 a.m., March 26


Today in photos of a large crane on Avenue A




Putting in the new sign for the 7-Eleven? (KIDDING! I know, not funny...)

Friday, March 25, 2011

Bike gang overruns East Village

Oops! Check that...



Photos by EV Grieve correspondent Bobby Williams...

Then from his eyes, Spring fireflies



Siouxsie and the Banshees with "The Killing Jar." 1988.

Mara's Homemade blames their closing, in part, on the East Village bike lanes

Word is getting out this afternoon (via Twitter and Eater, for starters) that Mara's Homemade, the Cajun eatery on East Sixth Street, is closing at the end of April.

Via a letter linked to on Twitter, they mention multiple factors for the closing.


But the reason for closing that might generate the most discussion?

We accepted a short term lease to give us time to re-locate or negotiate a longer term with our current landlord. Since that time, the BP explosion took place, bike lanes were installed on First and Second Avenues which reduced parking and the signs of future property tax increases have occurred.

Report: craft-beer-focused bar-restaurant coming to old Kurve space



Grub Street gets the word on what's coming to the former Kurve-Rhong Tiam space on Second Avenue and Fifth Street: a craft-beer-focused bar-restaurant. And it's from the team behind Dempsey's and Sláinte. And don't call it an Irish pub! "The food will be in the American comfort-food mode with some twisted-up Irish dishes mixed in for good measure," owner Tom O'Byrne told Grub Street.

They're just one of the 40 items on next month's CB3/SLA docket.