Monday, February 23, 2015

Construction watch: 76 E. Houston St.



The construction at 76 E. Houston St. is now visible above the plywood here between the Bowery and Elizabeth, where a 2-story building is in the works for the former Billy's Antiques space.

The listing at Sinvin notes that this location is "surrounded by edgy apparel, chic restaurants, cultural landmarks, and residential anchors."



… the rent for the new building with "expansive roof deck" is upon request.



Seems as if the work has been plodding along here. (Check out BoweryBoogie's coverage for more background here.)

Meanwhile, apparently the space already has a fake retail client…



Charming!



Also, the mural wall will remain adjacent to the property.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Deal off to bring Crif Dogs to the former Billy's Antiques space

The Houston/Bowery Mural Wall has been boarded up

Full stop work order for 76 E. Houston St., and the return of Billy's Antiques (sort of)

Expanded lobby on the way at Eleventh and Third



There's still some work going on at Eleventh and Third, the 12-floor building that recently went through a top-to-bottom luxury renovation.

Approved work permits show that crews are expanding the lobby and adding a second level to the east on 11th Street, as the rendering on the plywood shows...





… and how it looks as of Saturday…





The building here at Third Avenue includes a gym, yoga studio, rooftop terrace and lobby with espresso machines. According to Streeteasy, the units, which all include self-closing drawers and cabinets, average about $4,800.

It's not clear exactly what will be housed in the expanded lobby.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Someone actually paid $57 million for this East Village building

Reimagining this 12-story East Village building, now on the market

NY Copy & Printing forced out of longtime E. 11th St. home, opening second location on E. 7th St.

Eleventh and Third indulges in some nonsensical branding

Rebranded 'Eleventh and Third' will have rentals upwards of $10k

Retail space housing The Smith and M2M asking $25.5 million on 3rd Avenue

Verdigreen vintage furnishings boutique coming to East 7th Street



Coming soon signs are up at 122 E. 7th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue, where Verdigreen will be opening a new shop.

The Montclair, N.J.-based store is described on their website as "a vintage redesigned furnishings boutique and handmade haven" with lightning, home goods and paint supplies, among other items, for sale.

This space was previously home to La Belle Crepe.

Nicky's Vietnamese Sandwiches hasn't been open lately on East 2nd Street



Last April, a Nicky's Vietnamese Sandwiches reopened on East Second Street just east of Avenue A.

Anyway, we haven't seen the place open in about a week. There aren't any "closed for renovations" signs up on the gate or any outgoing voice messages.

Perhaps they are just on a late-winter break?

To recap from a previous post!

Vicky's Vietnamese Sandwiches took over the Nicky's Vietnamese Sandwiches space nearly four years ago. Vicky's then closed at the end of November 2013.

The folks at the all-new Nicky's said that they are the original Nicky's.

HOWEVER. We later emailed the family who ran the original Nicky's (and who still have two restaurants in NYC). Here's what they had to say:

"No. They are not the original Nicky's. We only have two locations now. One in the Financial District and one in downtown Brooklyn."

A family member said that they are aware of the name use here, but that it was OK.

We never thought that the new Nicky's was as good as the old Nicky's. Maybe others thought the same.

A few details about the Tompkins Square Park igloo


[Photo yesterday by Bobby Williams]

Here's more info about this price piece of real estate located in the middle of Tompkins Square Park…

Via reliable sources on Twitter…



And!



No word yet what the going rate will be for a summer sublet…

Sunday, February 22, 2015

A lot of people are saying the East Village smelled like smoke or burning tires or something tonight


[Photo tonight by William Klayer]













There hasn't been anything official yet … just a few reports of several manhole fires tonight… here and elsewhere

Report of a fire at 133 E. 7th St.



The FDNY arrived en masse at the corner of Avenue A and East Seventh Street shortly after 4 p.m. … where there was a report of a fire at 133 E. 7th St….



We haven't heard exactly what happened so far… (firefighters were on the roof above Yuca Bar) … the FDNY had things under control fairly quickly…



Updated

A few more photos via Bobby Williams…





… and Yuca Bar is closed due to "water issues," per the sign….

Week in Grieview


[Tompkins Square Park photo via Ex Vacuo]

Tracking the coming changes to East 13th Street between Avenue A and 1st Avenue (Thursday)

Photos from the 1970s-80s on East Eighth Street (Monday)

RIP Joy Ryder (Friday)

Out and About with Sheila Rothenberg (Wednesday)

Manitoba's crowdfunding campaign a success; bar will remain open (Thursday)

Hot properties for sale on East Seventh Street in 1836 (Monday)

The Casimir revamp (Wednesday)

Nimble Fitness opens on St. Mark's Place (Thursday)

644 E. 14th St. prepped for demolition (Friday)

Officially down to one 2 Bros. on St. Mark's Place (Wednesday)

Raclette now serving croques and tartines on Avenue A (Tuesday)

Behold the miniature Cadillac with the Tiger in it! (Tuesday)

A look at the two soon-to-be-demolished East Village gas stations (Tuesday)

Lou Reed's musical favorites (Tuesday)

Happy Birthday McSorley's (Monday)

What's coming to 50 Clinton St. (Thursday)

Amona Deli & Grocery leaving the Red Square strip on East Houston (Wednesday)

Heights + Kenchi Bespoke Clothier coming to East Fifth Street (Tuesday)

Casablanca now serving hookahs and French-Moroccan cuisine on East Third Street (Thursday)

Restaurant wanted for 12 St. Mark's Place (Tuesday)

Fun in the snow with the adorable Tompkins Square Park wildlife



Awww, that's so sweet the way the rats and squirrels play together…



Photo this morning by Derek Berg

A look at Little Tokyo in the East Village

Over at Eater, Robert Sietsema has filed a comprehensive look at the neighborhood's Little Tokyo, highlighting some of the specialty shops and restaurants by category. Find the article here.

Sunrise Mart photo via Foursquare

Tompkins Square Park's February Wonderland



Photo yesterday by Fenton Lawless

Saturday, February 21, 2015

The East River's ice age (circa 2015)



An EVG reader checked in on the East River earlier this morning… we no longer have the Freezepocalyptic conditions that we saw from Monday, but ice floes remain…



… and a panoramic shot…


[Click on image to enlarge]

Meanwhile, if you were planning on using the ferry service today… no luck…

Window shopping for the next holiday!



Looking at Ricky's on Third Avenue near East 14th Street.

This looks like a promising item to help class up the day!

#Woo

Something other than a bar or restaurant is opening on the Lower East Side



The New York Times reports that Richard F. Taittinger — a great-grandson of the founder of the Taittinger Champagne empire — is opening a 5,000-square-foot art gallery at 154 Ludlow St., where a rent hike forced The Living Room to decamp to Williamsburg.

Here's more from the Times about the gallery:

It will show the work of a roster of internationally established, midcareer contemporary artists who are underrepresented in the American market, Mr. Taittinger, 34, said.

And!

He said he had chosen the Lower East Side over Chelsea as a location for the gallery because of the neighborhood’s potential.

“It is better to be a big fish in a small pond,” he said.

Work on the space got underway last month. The gallery is expected to open on March 3.

Previously, Lucky Cheng's was hoping to open a new LES outpost at No. 154 between Stanton and Rivington. However, the landlord reportedly pulled out of the deal.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Wind chill? What wind chill?



Christo in Tompkins Square Park today… apparently he was seen checking out even more new real estate in the area for nesting…

Photo by Bobby Williams

Blow Out



Here is Made Violent with "Two Tone Hair," a track from their new EP that is out on Tuesday. And the Buffalo-based band plays an early set tomorrow night at the Mercury Lounge.

How Zoltar passes his down time?



By reading Time Out?

Wait.

OK.



Or maybe this a paid product placement? Or just highjinks? After all, poor Zoltar had to endure another fallen piece of plexiglass on this frigid day ...



Photos by Derek Berg

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition


[2nd Avenue this morning via Derek Berg]

Sheldon Silver's indictment (DNAinfo)

Trying the Sri Lankan vegetarian fare at Sigiri on First Avenue (Fork in the Road)

Adding art to the construction containers and cement blocks along East Houston (BoweryBoogie)

A look at Marco Canora's new Fifty Paces on East 12th Street (Gothamist)

Kim Gordon discusses her new memoir (The New York Times)

Bring on the hipsters: Gentrification is good for the poor (The Economist)

Check out "The Dryline," a flood barrier for the East River (The Lo-Down)

Oh, and a photo of an icy East River this morning (East River Ferry Instagram)

No one apparently recognized "Fifty Shades of Grey" star Dakota Johnson dining at Avenue A's Black Market (Page Six)

Third Street Music School Settlement will undergo a $5.3 million construction project (Bedford + Bowery)

Chuck Connelly: The Spirit of Vision continues on East Ninth Street (Dorian Grey Gallery)

Heh: A workout video for fans of the Talking Heads (Dangerous Minds)

Broome Street Bar isn't closing after all (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

Revisiting Chantal Ackerman’s "News From Home" (Flaming Pablum)

Cool photos of a band that we like: A Place To Bury Strangers, "Transfixiation" record release show at Music Hall of Williamsburg (Walter Wlodarczyk)

Montauk in the winter (Gog in NYC)

Getting 'Physical' again on St. Mark's Place



EVG reader Allen Semanco came across this scene this morning at 96-98 St. Mark's Place, the buildings between Avenue A and First Avenue that served as a backdrop for Led Zeppelin's 1975 studio album "Physical Graffiti."

A photographer said she was setting up this shot as part of next week's release of a 40th anniversary remastered/expanded super-duper-deluxe version of the album.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Tenements of the holy: 'Physical Graffiti' 40 years later

RIP Joy Ryder



Penny Arcade shared the following with us…

The iconic rhythm-and-blues singer Joy Ryder passed away a few minutes after midnight on Valentine's Day, in keeping with the hours she kept for the past 4 decades since her early days at CBGB at the beginning of the punk era, losing her battle with liver cancer caused by Hepatitis C.

Joy Ryder embodied the best of all possible styles ... Although Ryder has been called a blues singer, she was a jack of all trades: jazz stylist, punk diva, and rock 'n' roll rabble rouser and deeply and widely loved by the whole of NY's musical community who are the poorer for her loss.

Brooklyn-born Ryder (nee Denise Whelan) was the daughter of jazz singer and bassist Phil Whelan, who had a hit with the song "One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer" with his band The Five Encores. Her childhood was filled with her father's rehearsals and her own piano lessons from the age of four.

I met Joy when she was 16 and I had just turned 17 on St Mark's Place and Second Avenue in front of Gem Spa in the fall of 1967. We both worked with Wavy Gravy and The Hog Farm performing at the Electric Circus, attended peace demonstrations, volunteered with The Yippies, UATWMF, and The Diggers.

Joy also worked with Kusama, the famed avant-garde painter in her large-scale happenings. In 1968, after the summer of love, when the East Village was awash with pedophiles lured by the massive population of homeless teenagers and the flower power vibe changed to hard drugs and violence ushered by not only the murder of Linda and Groovy who we both knew and the brutal murder of another friend, a boy named Sunshine, who was beaten and burned alive, Joy decided to leave NY to study at the University of Hawaii.

She started singing in bands that played local Army bases and then changed her name to Joy Ryder. She dropped out of the University of Hawaii, returning to NY and looked for singing work. She studied acting at the Lee Strasberg Institute, then at an audition, she met guitar player, Avis Davis and they started a band, The Davis/Ryder Band, and toured the underground rock circuit, opening for acts like the Ramones, John Cale and Iggy Pop.

After recording their rock anthem "No More Nukes," they performed for a quarter of a million people at Battery Park City in 1979 with Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt, Crosby, Stills and Nash, and others.

In 1980, Joy moved to Berlin to work with underground theatre director Tony Ingrassia, where she appeared in films, plays and had several mainstream recording contracts with RCA, Polydor, CBS and Mercury Records. Since the late 1980s Joy made her home on Staten Island and was a much beloved figure in the NY music scene known for her generosity, kindness and sweetness.

She is survived by her son Jessie Franklin of Staten Island. Joy's funeral is tomorrow (Saturday, Feb. 21) at 11 a.m. at All Angels' Church at Broadway and West 80th Street, where Joy sang in the gospel choir. In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to Joy's fund for medical and funeral expenses.