The city yesterday removed the remaining barricades on Second Avenue south of
the blast site… so the sidewalk on the west side of the Avenue is now open up to Seventh Street … making it easier to visit the storefronts along here, like New Yorkers Foodmarket and Moishe's Bake Shop, which happens to be closed for the holiday until Sunday.
[
Photo yesterday by Derek Berg]
As
Crain's reported, the maze of barricades and fire trucks in the days after the deadly explosion on March 26 cut business by 50 percent at New Yorkers Foodmarket, according to owner Michael Schumacher.
The south side of Seventh Street at Second Avenue is now open to pedestrian traffic as well. The building on the corner, No. 117, is also owned by Maria Hrynenko, who is at the center of an investigation over an illegally tapped gas line at 121 Second Ave., where an explosion at Sushi Park killed two men and injured more than 20 people.
She is also the landlord of the adjacent building at 119 Second Ave., which collapsed in the ensuing fire.
With the barriers gone around No. 117,
a Stop Work Order dated March 27 is now visible…
[
No. 117 photos yesterday by EVG reader Ryan]
No. 117 had been going under extensive renovations in recent years, as we reported
here.
According to DOB records, there's a complaint on file for a "
gas meter installed in a prohibited location" (dated March 28) and "
installation of two new gas boilers and gas piping" without a permit (dated yesterday).
As several media outlets have reported, Hrynenko inherited 117, 119 (aka 45 E. Seventh St.) and 121 Second Ave. from her husband Michael, who died in 2004. He operated the Kiev,
the popular diner at No. 117 from 1978 to 1990.
The corner space is now home to San Marzano,
which remains closed.
[
Photo of No. 117 from 1979 by Michael Sean Edwards]
The
Post reported yesterday that investigators have "six prime suspects" in the blast at 121 Second Ave.: Maria Hrynenko, her son Michael Jr., contractor Dilber Kukic as well as an unidentified subcontractor and two workers.
Per the
Post: "In addition to murder — which carries a maximum 25 years to life in the slammer — other charges said to be under consideration include second-degree manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide."
Hrynenko is also the owner of 46 E. Seventh St. and 96 Second Ave., though through different companies,
according to The Wall Street Journal. Per the
Journal: "Both buildings have complaints with the Department of Buildings dated April 8, citing a need to verify compliance for the plumbing system, and both were cited by the Department of Housing Preservation and Development in February for failing to register with the department."
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For further reading: Landlord Of Destroyed East Village Apartments "Didn't Know Any Better" (
Gothamist)