Friday, March 27, 2015

[Updated] Citi Bike is shutting down for the weekend



Per the Citi Bike Tumblr:

We’ll be taking Citi Bike offline at 10 pm Friday through the weekend for maintenance. After 10 pm you will not be able to check out a bike.

During this time members will not be able to access their accounts. The membership sign-up page, Citi Bike station map and Citi Bike app will also be unavailable.

We’ve timed this work to make sure we’re back online in time to get our members pedaling by Monday morning.

We will be extend all active Citi Bike memberships by three days and issuing refunds for anyone who purchased a 24-hour pass on Friday 3/27. We will also offer refunds to anyone who purchased a 7-day pass earlier in the week.

We apologize for any inconvenience this might cause. We wanted to make these upgrades to improve Citi Bike before the nicest riding weather begins.

Updated 3-28 5:56 p.m.



From the blast zone



The NYPD removed some of the vehicles parked adjacent to the fallen buildings late this afternoon…

Photo by Derek Berg

...and a few more shots via EVG reader Daniel...







The Mayor's Fund collecting donations for the East Village building collapse



Details here

Sago is missing



Spotted on Second Avenue and East Sixth Street via @edenbrower

The off-duty firefighter who was first on the scene yesterday after the 2nd Avenue explosion



In the video that Troy Hinson (aka Troyquan) took in the moments after the explosion, you can see a man climb the fire escape above Sushi Park at 121 Second Ave. and search for any people inside the building.You can see him kick in some windows during his search.

His name is Mike Shepherd, a third-generation New York City firefighter. Shepherd, of Squad 41 in the Bronx, was off duty and had just finished lunch nearby.

Al Baker at The New York Times has Shepherd's story.

“As I got closer to the corner I could feel the concussion bounced off the building across the street and kind of hit me in the chest and I said, ‘Oh man, it’s a big one.’ ”

“Then I looked and I turned and I see the whole building is out in the street and people laying there, and I said, ‘Oh man, this is bad.’ And I looked up and I thought, ‘I got to check above.’”

He saw a girl out on the fire escape, and she could not get the ladder unhooked.

“Me and a couple of other guys were trying to get the drop ladder down for her. It was too heavy. She was panicking. I told her, I said, ‘Honey, you got to calm down and listen to me.’ I said, ‘Bend with your legs and lift it up so it unhooks and then just let it go.’ And she was like, ‘I can’t.’”

He told her she could do it.

“I just kind of instilled confidence in her.”

Read the whole article here.

The Stage is open on 2nd Avenue


A little positive news to pass along... The Stage, across the Avenue from the blast site, was able to open today...

[Updated] Report: Plumbing work at Sushi Park didn't have proper permits


[Image via Facebook]

From The New York Times this afternoon:

The investigation into the explosion and fire on Thursday that reduced three buildings in the East Village to rubble and injured more than 19 people is focusing on plumbing and gas work that appears to have been done without a permit at a restaurant on the ground floor of one of the buildings, according to city officials and public records.

The restaurant in question was Sushi Park at 121 Second Ave. Head on over to the article here... it gets a little complicated about who did (or didn't do) what and when.

Updated 6:23 p.m. DNAinfo has more about what may have likely happened at the scene.

Investigators believe a worker may have turned off gas to the original, improperly used pipe, before Con Edison arrived in order to prevent them from discovering that it was being improperly tapped, sources said.

Con Edison workers inspected the new, larger pipe, but once again it did not pass muster, and Con Ed refused to turn on gas to it, and they departed.

Investigators suspect that once they left, a worker went back to the original pipe, and somehow damage the pipe when he turn the gas back on and created the leak, which exploded a short time later.

Read more here.

The FDNY remains on the scene along 2nd Avenue



And we have more photos... a view of the three destroyed buildings at the northwest corner of Second Avenue and Seventh Street ... via EVG reader Laurie...





And a few dramatic shots from last night by EVG reader Conway Liao...









Noted

Report: DA eyeing contractor working at 121 Second Ave.


[Photo this morning by peter radley]

Per DNAinfo:

The Manhattan District Attorney's Office and other agencies are investigating whether contractor Dilber Kukic, 39, played a role in the blast that started at 121 Second Ave., sources said.

Kukic — whose construction firm performed work at the address in the past — was already under the scrutiny of Manhattan prosecutors in an unrelated case. He was arrested last month for an alleged role in a widespread bribery scandal involving city inspectors.

Read the whole article here.

The view of 2nd Avenue and East 7th Street this morning



Photo by EVG contributor jdx



Photo by Dean Neistat via Twitter

Morning update

Update: 2 people now reported missing; 25 injured after yesterday's 2nd Avenue explosion


[2nd Avenue this morning via Vinny & O]

NY1 has an update on yesterday's explosion:

Two people are listed as being unaccounted for as investigators keep looking into Thursday's explosion in the East Village that injured more than two dozen people and brought down three buildings.

The NYPD says official missing persons reports have not yet been filed, but are under further verification and investigation.

The FDNY says the number of those injured now stands at 25. They include 20 civilians, four firefighters and one EMS worker.

Four of the injured are in critical condition.

While the cause of the blast and subsequent fire that destroyed 119, 121 and 123 Second Ave. remains under investigation, Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro told reporters: "To the best of our knowledge, they were working on the gas in the building [No. 121]."

Also, NY1 reports that, according to City Councilmember Rosie Mendez, 11 nearby buildings in the area have evacuation orders, which includes 144 apartments.

"Mendez says 80 people — 79 adults and one baby — have registered with the Red Cross. She says 30 people — 29 adults and one baby — need a place to stay."



Updated 9:54 a.m. Here is a photo of Nicholas Figueroa, 23, who was eating at Sushi Park with a co-worker at the time of the blast. He remains unaccounted for...



The Wall Street Journal reports that Moises Lucon, who worked at Sushi Park, 121 Second Ave., is the second man missing after the blast.

Previously

The News



The article.

2nd Avenue and East 6th Street, 7:04 a.m.



...and another photo via Vinny and O from just before 8 a.m. ...

[Updated] The remains



Late-night photos of 119-123 Second Ave. via @edenbrower



119 Second Ave. at the corner of East Seventh Street (one-time home to Love Saves the Day) is gone … as is 121 Second Ave., where the blast occurred yesterday afternoon (Sushi Park is the retail tenant), and 123 Second Ave., where Pommes Frittes and Sam's Deli were the retail businesses. We do not know the status of Enz's, the shop at 125 Second Ave., though we did hear via Facebook that owner Mariann Marlowe got away safely. The folks at B&H Dairy at 127 Second Ave. reported on Facebook that they are OK and will be open for business soon…

The latest published reports say that 19 people were injured, four critically. Two men are still missing. Will continue to update today throughout the day.


[Via Google Streetview]

The Village Chinese Therapy Center and King's Copies were also destroyed on East Seventh Street...


[Via Google Streetview]

Next-door neighbors Jimmy's No. 43 and Standings are day to day...

FDNY continues into the night at 121-123 2nd Ave.