Monday, June 9, 2014
347 Bowery wrapped and ready for demolition
We first spotted the permits to demolish the Salvation Army's former East Village Residence on the Bowery at East Third Street back in January.
Now workers have apparently finished with the sidewalk bridge and scaffolding at the site. (The first of the demo gear arrived on May 28.)
Bowery Street?
The sidewalk bridge partially collapsed on June 1. Witnesses said it was struck by a box truck.
The three-story building will give way to a 13-floor, 30,000 square-foot mixed-use residential development that may or may not include same-floor parking privileges.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Whatever happened to that really ugly hotel planned for the Bowery?
Permits filed to demolish former Salvation Army residence on the Bowery
The Salvation Army's former East Village Residence will be demolished on the Bowery
Looks like 347 Bowery will be home to a 13-floor mixed-use residential development
Oh and another $1 (99 cent) pizza choice for the East Village
This one just opened at 71 Second Ave. near East Fourth Street.
An aside, kinda: Any idea why the fresh is so small on the sign?
The space was previously home to the Cool Gear shop.
Purple Rain on Avenue A
Just noting the rather awesome new roll-down gate art at Mikey Likes It, the four-week-old ice cream shop at 199 Avenue A near East 12th Street.
The Prince mural, created by Bronx-based artist Andre Trenier, is in honor of the shop's Flavor of the Month: Purple Rain (double blueberry ice cream with cheesecake chunks).
The Mikey is the owner Mike Cole, a lifelong resident of Stuy Town.
[Photo via Instagram]
Read more about the shop here.
Raising Keith McNally's Cherche Midi sign on the Bowery
We entertained ourselves for a few minutes Saturday morning watching workers hoist signage for Keith McNally's Pulino's replacement on the Bowery and East Houston …
Dunno too much about Cherche Midi. Eater says they will feature French food from Shane McBride, who's currently executive chef of Balthazar. Zagat reports that they are taking reservations starting on Friday.
As for the sign, much more understated than the red beacon that was Pulino's.
Bugs is temporarily closed for now on East 12th Street
Bugs, the well-regarded, 15-seat sushi restaurant at 504 E. 12th St., is now closed … though it is only temporary …
As you can see, the sign on the front window here between Avenue A and Avenue B mentions a bereavement leave … with a return next month.
Sunday, June 8, 2014
Puke Island 2014
Here are a few photos from Puke Fest 2014 today in Tompkins Square Park via John Penley … the first two photos are of Tibbie X and Gash …
… and Spike Polite of Sewage …
Fight Night on St. Mark's Place
Someone posted this to YouTube today … it's a brawl of sorts on St. Marks's Place near Second Avenue … the YouTube description: "Held It Down: Man From NYC Is Outnumbered In A Fight But Comes Back & Stands His Ground!"
The video is not too recent. The 7-Eleven is still open across the way … and the sidewalk shed remains outside No. 32 and 34 …
So it you want to watch some testosterone in action …
Week in Grieview
[AM/PM in Tompkins Square Park Friday]
NYPD searching for suspect who tried to assault East Village resident (Wednesday)
A new home for Gino the tailor! (Monday)
Plans filed for the 8-floor hotel next to the Merchant's House (Thursday)
Part 2 of our interview with retired police officer Christopher Reisman (Wednesday)
Why yes, there are a lot of bars and restaurants here (Friday)
BP station on Second Avenue is closing (Monday)
RIP Dok Suni (Monday)
THINK BIG arrives at Union Square (Friday, 31 comments)
What it costs to rent a storefront (Thursday)
"Sharknado" sequel salutes the Citi Bike (Thursday)
Saint Mark’s Church Greenmarket returns (Tuesday)
Sidewalk shed safety (Wednesday)
Big Pink on the CB3/SLA docket for former Company Bar and Grill space (Wednesday)
Union rat arrives outside Shaoul-owned building on East Fifth Street (Wednesday)
The future of the former home of the Yippies (Tuesday)
Citi Bikes are safe, says Citi Bike (Tuesday)
Construction watch at 185 Avenue B (Tuesday)
RAINBOWS, yay (Tuesday)
Liquiteria opens on Fourth Avenue (Monday)
Coyote Ugly grand re-opens (Tuesday)
Après closes three weeks after revamp; Unidentified Flying Chickens taking over (Monday)
How often does your mail get delivered? (Thursday)
Today in photos of cats in Tompkins Square Park
Thanks to Facebook for telling me this is the Sphynx, a breed of cat known for its lack of a coat.
You don't really need a coat in this weather. Haha. (Sorry!)
Photo by Bobby Williams.
Saturday, June 7, 2014
The latest edition of the 10th Street Free Press
[Click on image to enlarge]
Between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue … site of the doomed one-level structure.
Check out the archives at Jeremiah's Vanishing New York for more on The Scribbler (prior to the 10th Street Free Press branding).
[Updated] A bloody crime scene on Avenue D and East 7th Street
Multiple readers have pointed out that there's a crime scene at Manhattan Express Deli Grocery on the southwest corner of Avenue D and Seventh Street … from an incident early this morning …
Officers are collecting evidence from the store … no official word on what happened here … one witness was telling onlookers that it was a stabbing. We'll update if/when more details become available.
Police also had the dumpster across Avenue D cordoned off…
Updated 2:06 p.m.
According to the Post, a man was slashed in the face around 4:30 a.m.
"The suspect, who remains unidentified, slashed him with a sharp object across the right side of his face and fled, cops said."
Everything that you wanted to know about the Cadillac with the Tiger in it
EVG readers may know that we've long admired the Cadillac on East Second Street ... the one with the stuffed Tiger in it. In previous weeks we've present three true East Village stories from the view of the Cadillac with the Tiger in it. It comes to an end today, though, as the Cadillac with the Tiger in it moves on to a new owner. There is a farewell for the car today from noon-3 p.m. on East Second Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue.
Hello from the Cadillac with the Tiger in it
Part 4: Fun Facts about the Cadillac
• My Year, Make & Model: 1978 Cadillac Sedan Deville
• My name: "the Cadillac"
• The Tiger's name: "Tiger"
• Engine: 425 8 cylinder
• Mpg: City 10-12 Highway: 18-20
• Color: Pistachio Green w/White Vinyl roof
• Mileage: Approximately 450,000 (odometer stopped working at 207,362 about 20 years ago) This is almost the distance to and from the earth and the moon.
• Purchased in 1992 for $450
• Current owner is the 3rd owner
• All mechanical equipment has been replaced at least once except the engine and timing chain
• 1st came to East 2nd Street in 1992 when the black locust trees bloom in the cemetery
• Most memorable road trip moment: Crossing the state line into Alabama while my owner sang the line from Neil Young's song, "Alabama": "...Your Cadillac has got a wheel in the ditch and a wheel on the track..." until his cat pawed him in the face to get him to shut up
• Estimated number of photos taken of me by passersby each week: 350-650
• Most mysterious photographer: A woman who took one photo of me every day for a year and then she vanished
• The Tiger decided to get a gold leash when the Lorde song, “Royals,” was released.
• Vandalism damage to car while parked on East 2nd Street 1992 to 2011: $0
• Vandalism damage to car while parked on East 2nd Street 2011 to present: $1,900
• Vandalism damage since the tiger has been in the front seat: $0
• Date of retirement: Today. The black locust trees bloomed two weeks ago.
Previously on EV Grieve:
That Cadillac that we've long admired on East 2nd St. now has a stuffed tiger on the front seat
And now, stories from the Cadillac with the Tiger in it on East 2nd Street
And now, another story from the Cadillac with the Tiger in it on East 2nd Street
Alas, the end is near for the Cadillac with the Tiger in it on East 2nd Street
Also! The Cadillac with the Tiger in it now has its on website. Find that here.
Friday, June 6, 2014
Modern 'Lovers'
The new record from Echo & The Bunnymen (now Ian McCulloch and Will Sergeant) arrived this past Tuesday... and here's the first video from Meteorites, titled "Lovers on the Run."
They'll be at Irving Plaza on Aug. 16-17.
EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition
[Photo from Tompkins Square Park by Fallopia Tuba]
Stuy Town's overlord is now officially Stuy Town's owner — for now (Curbed)
More on the end of East Village Radio (Fast Company)
Remembering a little brick building on Grand Street (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
Lunch with Christo and the fam (Gog in NYC)
Love for Unoppressive Non-Imperialist Bargain Books (Off the Grid)
A look at Flinders Lane on Avenue A (The New York Times)
Calvin Trillin visits Russ & Daughters Café (Eater)
Checking out Smart Crew's installation in Chinatown (Animal NY)
Lobster Joint ready to reopen? (BoweryBoogie)
About the big-ass yacht moored off Pier 36 (The Lo-Down)
All about the opening of the Ludlow Hotel (The New York Observer)
Opening today: "Frightening and fascinating, 'Master of the Universe' offers a penetrating glimpse behind the curtain of high finance, revealing the psychology, the mechanics, and the sobering reality of a world that deeply affects all of us but that few of us fully understand." (Anthology Film Archives)
The origin of counterculture icon Alfred E. Neuman (Dangerous Minds)
--
Volunteers erected a stage in El Jardin del Paraiso (East 4th Street between C and D) this week for the year-end show by East Village Dance Project. Seventy kids will dance here tomorrow and Sunday at 5 p.m. More details here.
CB3 study: More restaurants, higher rents and less retail diversity
[Random EVG photo]
The Villager this week summarizes the results of an East Village retail diversity study that Columbia University students recently presented to CB3's Economic Development Committee.
Among the not-really-shocking bullet points for the CB3 area (the East Village, the Lower East Side and part of Chinatown):
• Struggle to retain affordable housing stock
— 42% increase in average rent between 2000 and 2012
• Struggle to retain local businesses
• Rapid displacement of family owned businesses
— Ever growing bar and restaurant industry
— Increasing rents
• Increase in liquor-licensed establishments
— Decreased quality of life
— Nighttime noise complaints
— Inactive daytime storefronts
— Little attraction to residents
— Lack of local retail services
— Increased vehicular and pedestrian traffic congestion
From the Villager article:
The study also found a big increase in median household income — by an average of nearly 45 percent, from just under $37,000 in 2000 to $62,000 in 2012. (In some census tracts in the study area, the median household income jumped 100 percent to $144,821, as The Villager noted.)
Back to the article:
The report included some recommendations, including:
• Maintain existing but limit future restaurant, bar, and chain store openings
— Develop initiatives to inform and persuade building owners to look for and keep small business tenants
Materials to support these initiatives:
1) An updated land use inventory
2) A list of retail needs other than restaurants and bars
Require special permits or special zoning regulations to make it difficult for these retail types to open in the area
The meeting was May 7. As The Villager article noted, "Despite the issue’s purported urgency, however, turnout was low at the meeting, which drew few local community members."
We don't recall hearing anything about it … outside the usual monthly email listing all the committee meetings, a number which can be as high as 15.
Find a PDF of the study here.
The Villager this week summarizes the results of an East Village retail diversity study that Columbia University students recently presented to CB3's Economic Development Committee.
Among the not-really-shocking bullet points for the CB3 area (the East Village, the Lower East Side and part of Chinatown):
• Struggle to retain affordable housing stock
— 42% increase in average rent between 2000 and 2012
• Struggle to retain local businesses
• Rapid displacement of family owned businesses
— Ever growing bar and restaurant industry
— Increasing rents
• Increase in liquor-licensed establishments
— Decreased quality of life
— Nighttime noise complaints
— Inactive daytime storefronts
— Little attraction to residents
— Lack of local retail services
— Increased vehicular and pedestrian traffic congestion
From the Villager article:
More startling perhaps was what the data showed about full-service restaurants and watering holes. In 2004, there were 248 food-services and drinking places in Alphabet City. By 2012, that number had ballooned to 514, significantly outpacing any other kind of business and increasing these businesses’ area "market share" to 32 percent.
Yet, Alphabet City’s number of bars has actually fluctuated, from 24 in 2004, up to a high of 80 in 2008, and back down to 59 in 2012. Meanwhile, full-service restaurants have simply exploded, from 175 in 2004 to 380 in 2012.
The study also found a big increase in median household income — by an average of nearly 45 percent, from just under $37,000 in 2000 to $62,000 in 2012. (In some census tracts in the study area, the median household income jumped 100 percent to $144,821, as The Villager noted.)
Back to the article:
The data also added some weight to claims that city planners under former Mayor Bloomberg targeted the East Village as a "destination neighborhood" for tourists. This is a view with which Stacey Sutton — a Columbia urban planning professor and mentor to the students who did the report — somewhat agrees. A 2012 report prepared for CB3 by Mary de Stefano, the board’s former planning fellow, reached a similar conclusion about the former mayor's intentions.
The area’s food-services and drinking places drew in a hefty $200 million in 2012, according to the report. These were also far and away the area’s chief employers among types of businesses studied, with more than 6,100 workers, up from more than 5,200 in 2006.
The report included some recommendations, including:
• Maintain existing but limit future restaurant, bar, and chain store openings
— Develop initiatives to inform and persuade building owners to look for and keep small business tenants
Materials to support these initiatives:
1) An updated land use inventory
2) A list of retail needs other than restaurants and bars
Require special permits or special zoning regulations to make it difficult for these retail types to open in the area
The meeting was May 7. As The Villager article noted, "Despite the issue’s purported urgency, however, turnout was low at the meeting, which drew few local community members."
We don't recall hearing anything about it … outside the usual monthly email listing all the committee meetings, a number which can be as high as 15.
Find a PDF of the study here.
Alas, the end is near for the Cadillac with the Tiger in it on East 2nd Street
EVG readers may know that we've long admired the above Cadillac on East Second Street ... the one with the stuffed Tiger in it, yes. So then we are especially thrilled to be presenting four stories from the Cadillac with the Tiger in it in the coming weeks... these are all true East Village stories told from the view of the Cadillac with the Tiger in it.
Stories from the Cadillac With the Tiger in it: Part 3: The End is Near
OK people — you have until tomorrow to say goodbye to me and the tiger.
It was too long of a winter. I'm tired. I'm done. But I'm going out on my own terms. After I smell the sweet fragrance of the black locust trees in the cemetery one last time.
I made it but other neighbors haven't been so lucky. Pete and Sandy used to keep an eye on me while they were living in their car. Pete is in his late 60s and he was born and raised on East 2nd Street. They were the supers in the building down the block for several decades until the new building owner kicked them out and had marshals confiscate their personal effects from the basement.
They lived in their car for a year after that turning down offers of housing in other boroughs. "Why are you doing that?" everyone asked Pete. "Because I live on this block" Pete would say "and I want to remind the new owner of my building of that fact."
You know what? That's the real reason I've stayed around as long as I have. It started when the newcomers started complaining about my presence and I was vandalized by the weekend partygoers. My owner and I decided I would be a reminder — a big middle finger to all that's gone on here.
Twice a week in the morning my owner starts me up with a roar to move me for the street sweeper. On the few occasions he drives me to the gas station we pass everyone on their way to work — drawing smiles and "thumbs-up's" from the local old-timers and gasps and looks of disdain from most of the white collar professionals.
To the old-timers, I'm a relic and a connection to the old neighborhood — a survivor.
To the newcomers, I'm an eyesore and nuisance. I don't fit in with the new demographics and people are coming after me. I still can't figure out who called the four fire trucks and three cop cars who surrounded me late Easter Eve/early Easter morning.
Most little kids like me, especially since the tiger took up residence in my front seat. (Although some well-heeled moms will tug the arms of their kids and pull them away from me if they show too much interest.)
And I sure am popular with the tourists. (If I had a buck for each photo taken of me, I could be restored mechanically and cosmetically from top to bottom!)
My owner doesn't mind them taking photos as long as the tourists are not too obnoxious.
----------------------------------------------
All in all, it's been a good long ride — and I"m finally ready to go. But, where do I go, who do I go to?
My owner put up a "for sale" sign in my window last year to gauge interest and, while he got a few responses, there were only three serious offers.
One guy from Bleecker Street who said he was a mechanic for years has no place to store me.
Another fellow from Avenue D said he's been walking past me the entire 22 years I've been on East 2nd Street. He said that he wants to park me on his block so he can look out his window every day and see me. He also wants me to accompany him every Wednesday when he picks up groceries from the supermarket with his meager extra cash to deliver to the homeless shelters on Bowery. (What's left of them anyway). He does this weekly run because he said a young priest helped him out at one of those missions in the 1960s when he was a former Gold Gloves boxer turned junkie. The priest helped him get clean and he never forgot that favor.
And then there's Ernest. He's been hounding my owner ever since he saw the "for sale" sign my owner put in my window. He's young and works as a custodian at the school on the corner. He claims he has a spot in a garage for me in either Brooklyn or the Bronx and wants to take his time and restore me. Ernest has been saving up each week so he can give my owner about $500 for me.
So who's it going to be? Well, my owner is going to surprise Ernest and give me to him for free. I'm OK with that. Ernest said he's going to take good care of me and the tiger. And who knows, if he follows through and does a good job on me, maybe someday I'll come back to my block.
So that's what's happening, folks! Hurry up and say your good-byes. My owner is having a little farewell gathering for me on the block tomorrow from noon until 3 p.m. between First Avenue and Second Avenue. All of my local admirers should stop by — maybe take a photo and drop a buck or two in the bucket for Ernest's restoration project of me.
Until then, I'm going to smell those black locust trees and get ready for my big farewell!
Previously on EV Grieve:
That Cadillac that we've long admired on East 2nd St. now has a stuffed tiger on the front seat
And now, stories from the Cadillac with the Tiger in it on East 2nd Street
And now, another story from the Cadillac with the Tiger in it on East 2nd Street
Also! The Cadillac with the Tiger in it now has its on website. Find that here.
Stained-glass windows removed ahead of condo conversion at Congregation Mezritch Synagogue
There's finally activity to report at the soon-to-be-condoed Congregation Mezritch Synagogue at 415 E. Sixth St.
On Wednesday, workers removed the stained-glass windows here where Eastern European immigrants founded the synagogue in 1892, per Goggla's photo above.
Otherwise, it has been pretty quiet here.
As previously reported, the city approved the condo-conversion plans back on Dec. 27. Workers will renovate the building and add two floors.
The landmarked building was in disrepair and the congregation's population had dwindled. Synagogue leaders signed a 99-year lease with East River Partners worth some $1.2 million. The renovations include a penthouse addition and an elevator. The synagogue will reportedly retain space on the ground floor and basement for their use.
The sign out front points to a winter 2015 completion.
And if you're keeping track at home, this is just one of 26 NYC houses of worship that are being replaced by condos.
[Photo from April by Bobby Williams]
Previously on EV Grieve:
Plan to add condos to historic East Sixth Street synagogue back on
Play spot the potential penthouse atop the East Village synagogue
A final look inside the Anshei Meseritz synagogue on East Sixth Street
[Updated] You may THINK BIG in Union Square through October
[Photo via @UnionSquareNYC]
Sculptor Jim Rennert's 12-foot THINK BIG sculpture arrived Wednesday on Union Square. And today, you can meet Rennert from 10 a.m.-noon at the site of the work — the southeastern triangle at Union Square East, between 14th and 15th Streets.
Per the press materials:
The monumental bronze businessman stands at over 12-feet tall gazing up at the Manhattan skyline, considering the endless possibilities that lay ahead. Rennert encourages visitors to consider his message that anyone can achieve their dreams and goals if they 'think big.'"
The sculpture will be up through October.
Updated 1:47 p.m.
So far, the early word on THINK BIG has been fairly negative, at least here in the comments and on Facebook... Here, East Village resident Courtney Lee Adams Jr. shared her feelings about the sculpture ...
"I think this is an enormous mistake."
East Village Shoe Repair resurfaces in Bushwick
[EVG file photo]
The sliver of a shoe-repair shop on St. Mark's Place at Third Avenue rather abruptly closed late last November, as we noted here.
Then there was a rumor that the owners were taking over the now-vacant David's Shoe Repair on East Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue. Those plans never materialized.
Now BoweryBoogie learns that East Village Shoe Repair, with its name intact, reopened under the JMZ line at 1083 Broadway in Bushwick last month.
[Photo via Popdiatry]
Wonder if Francesca Vuillemin ever got her shoes back?
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