Sunday, November 20, 2016
Week in Grieview
[Photo in Tompkins Square Park by Bobby Williams]
Stories posted on EVG this past week included...
RIP Carmen Pabón (Wednesday)
Annual New York Cares coat drive underway (Thursday)
A new art gallery on Second Street (Friday)
Village View ends talk of privatization (Monday)
Out and About with Eric Paulin (Wednesday)
A look at East Houston before the arrival of Red Square (Friday)
McSorley's reopens after bout with DOH (Monday)
Patisserie Florentine coming soon to 10th Street (Tuesday)
Chipping away the exterior detail at 112-120 E. 11th St. (Friday)
East Village is closing after tonight (Saturday)
FryGuysNYC coming soon to Second Street (Thursday)
Vivi Bubble Tea coming to former Organic Avenue space on Third Avenue (Monday)
Report: Pretty ugly AMC Village 7 building sells for $32 million (Thursday)
CB3 douses plans for hookah bar Fire and Ice on Third Street (Thursday)
Ray's Candy Store named best East Village restaurant (Thursday)
Kati Roll Company is now open on Second Avenue (Tuesday)
The cube and Astor Place officially welcomed with ribbon cutting (Wednesday) Then Astor Place closes for "Game of Thrones" fan event (Thursday)
East Village Burritos & Bar is now Spicewala Bar Indian Cuisine (Monday)
Dean & Deluca vet bringing Fat Cat Kitchen to 14th Street (Tuesday)
Switch Playground now open on 12th Street "for the body and soul" (Wednesday)
Future Swiss Institute gets the plywood treatment on Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place (Monday)
Coyote Ugly opens its first location in Kyrgyzstan (Wednesday)
The pilot program to house NYU students with local seniors
The Post brings news of a pilot program that NYU will debut next fall in partnership with University Settlement, a Lower East Side nonprofit that provides social services to low-income seniors.
Per the Post:
While the the initial program "will consist of 10 mature juniors, seniors or grad students," the Post dropped in this lead: "Beer pong at Grandma’s?"
There is a similar housing program for college students in Chicago.
Per the Post:
Students who opt in to the “home stay” program would slice their $14,000-per-year housing bill in half.
Under the plan, cash-strapped students will get a break on rent, and seniors will get extra cash.
While the the initial program "will consist of 10 mature juniors, seniors or grad students," the Post dropped in this lead: "Beer pong at Grandma’s?"
There is a similar housing program for college students in Chicago.
Saturday, November 19, 2016
East Village Tavern closes for good after tomorrow
[Image via Google Street View]
Management of the corner bar on 10th Street and Avenue C posted the following on the East Village Tavern Facebook page:
The bar opened in May 2008.
Updated 7:45 p.m.
Public records show that Steve Croman's 9300 Realty is the landlord of the building at 158 Avenue C. (H/t to the commenter who mentioned this.)
H/T Shawn Chittle
Another day, another equine sighting on 2nd Avenue
@evgrieve yep! #yep pic.twitter.com/csnP1DP9FY
— EdenBrower (@edenbrower) November 19, 2016
Outside the Village East Cinema on Second Avenue and 12th Street ... a little promo for the film "Unbridled."
And flashback to yesterday here. (OK, so it was a pony.)
Noted
Several readers have noted this new coming soon signage for #notourpresident on an empty storefront (No. 64) on Second Avenue between Fourth Street and Third Street.
The space previously housed NYC Velo, who moved next door in March.
East Village soup kitchen administrator wins competition on the Food Network's 'Chopped'
Here's some news about Trinity's Services And Food for the Homeless (SAFH) on Ninth Street and Avenue B. Via the EVG inbox...
This past week, our administrative director, Alex Lawrence, was selected as one of the competitors on Food Network's Chopped.
The episode had a Thanksgiving theme — titled Turkey Day Heroes — featuring employees and volunteers who work with various soup kitchens or feeding programs.
Contestants are asked to make dishes with "mystery ingredients" that are only revealed to them minutes before they begin cooking. Alex was able to make it all the way through to the end, and ended up winning the competition! If you haven't had a chance to watch the episode, upcoming showings can be found here, in addition to wherever you stream television.
By working alongside other contestants who have committed themselves to feeding the hungry, Chopped was able to bring to a wide audience the very real challenges and needs that organizations like ours face.
The episode airs again tonight at 11 on the Food Network. Details here.
And if you are interested in making a donation to SAFH, which was officially founded 30 years ago, you may go here.
Just in time for Thanksgiving, Whole Foods Market® Bowery is selling the 'table top' trees
The small Christmas and/or holiday trees are here on East Houston at the Bowery. And I didn't think about stopping for a price check. Sorry!
Friday, November 18, 2016
Forever and a Day
This is "The Dog-End of a Day Gone By" from the debut record by Love and Rockets ... the song/album was released in the fall of 1985... and has always reminded me of the fall (the season, not the band).
[Updated] This afternoon in tweets about a pony sighting on 9th Street and 2nd Avenue
@evgrieve Two women walking a pony on east 9th st. Yep. #yep pic.twitter.com/MInPZ4qk8j
— EdenBrower (@edenbrower) November 18, 2016
Updated 11/19
Thanks to a commenter for this link... Hello Apple!
Memorial Sunday for longtime East Village resident Richard Kopperdahl
Longtime East Village resident Richard Kopperdahl died in August. Kopperdahl, a writer for The Village Voice who previously spent time down and out on the Bowery and in Bellevue’s psychiatric ward, was 83.
On Sunday, friends are coming together for a memorial at Trinity Lower East Side Lutheran Parish, 602 E. Ninth St. at Avenue B from 3-5 p.m. Here are the details via the Facebook invite:
Come gather with friends and neighbors for a potluck and performances remembering the life of Richard Kopperdahl, a writer who worked at the Village Voice and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. Richard lived for forty years in a 6th-floor walkup apartment just around the corner from Trinity Church, which looks out on Tompkins Park where Richard walked and sat nearly every day. Bring food, drink, words, or music to share, or just bring yourselves.
Contributions to help cover the memorial expenses will be gladly accepted. In lieu of flowers, donations in memory of Richard can be made to the Bowery Mission.
Read some of his work from the Voice here.
EV Grieve Etc.: Slow Zone update; L train shutdown plans
[Photo outside 51 Astor Place via Derek Berg]
Jared Kushner, whose company Westminster City Living is the second-largest East Village landlord (following Steve Croman), eyes a White House job with father-in-law Donald Trump (The Wall Street Journal)
The new plan to beef up bus and train service for L train riders when the shutdown happens (Streetsblog)
Benefits seen from the East Village slow zones (The Villager)
[Window work on Avenue B by Shawn Chittle]
Seth Rogen and his wife Lauren Anne Miller Rogen checked out new First Street condos (New York Post ... previously)
Quality time with Dora (Laura Goggin Photography)
Thanksgiving at Katz's (The Lo-Down)
Video: The huge dumpling at Drunken Dumpling (Eater)
Isabelle Huppert retrospective (Metrograph)
David Lynch's "Lost Highway" at midnight this weekend (Sunshine Cinema)
Pearl River Mart reopens in Tribeca (NY1)
'Blue Bloods' turns the Whitehouse into a hotel again for a day on the Bowery
The CBS drama "Blue Bloods" is filming on the Bowery... and some faux signage arrived outside 340 Bowery for the Wyckoff Hotel (and drink Abewell soda!).
The address is the former Whitehouse Hotel, the hostel/flophouse combo that stopped accepting reservations for back-packing thrill seekers in September 2014.
Plans were filed via Sam Chang in April 2014 to "convert 4-story lodging house into a 9-story hotel," according to DOB records. The city disapproved the plans again in September 2014, records show.
Meanwhile, the four-story building erected in 1916 between Great Jones and Bond still serves as a permanent home to a handful of low-income residents.
And, according to a report in the Post, current resident Roland Davis is no longer allowed to file suit against current or former owners without proper legal representation or approval from a chief judge. Davis has sued the past or current owners of the Whitehouse Hotel 23 times in seven years, losing every time, the Post notes.
Davis, an $8.32-a-night resident, would file claims in Housing Court demanding that management make repairs to his tiny windowless room, and would then refuse to let the workers in, according to court papers.
Previously on EV Grieve:
More tenant meetings for White House residents; plus the bed bugs will be exterminated
Another round of plans to convert the Whitehouse Hostel on the Bowery into a 9-floor hotel
The Whitehouse Hostel on the Bowery is 'temporarily closing down'
The Whitehouse Hostel has closed for good on the Bowery
A look at East Houston before the arrival of Red Square
The apartment complex at 250 E. Houston St. between Avenue A and Avenue B has been in the news this fall. Ahead of the former Red Square's sale, workers removed the statue of Lenin from atop the 13-story building that opened in 1989.
EVG reader James Knapp shared this photo from the late 1980s taken just a little east of where the main building stands now... the site of the one-level row of businesses...
[Click to go big]
In this photo, which Knapp believes is from 1987, there's a view of the gas station that was on the property for 25 years...
Some good Karma for 2nd Street?
[EVG photo photo from March]
Work has been ongoing at 188 E. Second St., a former beverage distributor housed between Avenue A and Avenue B. The single-level, 2,600-square-foot space arrived on the market at the beginning of the year. (Per the listing at Leslie J. Garfield, the monthly asking rent for the raw space was $13,000.)
The plywood came down this week to reveal (via this EVG reader pic) ...
Turns out the space is the new home for Karma, the art bookseller and gallery. Karma opened in 2013 on Great Jones Street, and later moved to a temporary space back in March on Orchard Street.
Here's more on Karma and founder Brendan Dugan via ARTnews when he opened the Orchard Street space:
Karma’s roots are in publishing, but it has become known for hosting shows by contemporary artists including Mark Grotjahn, Brice Marden, Dike Blair, Rudolf Stingel, and Marianne Vitale.
He said he was working on a program schedule to host events once a week on Orchard Street, veering away from the usual schedule for galleries, which organize new exhibitions every six weeks. “It’s a way to keep busy while we finalize our space,” Dugan said. “This is an interesting moment to kind of not rush into anything.” He described the real-estate market as “really overpriced. I don’t know if we’ll find any relief, but it’s helpful to have time to look.”
He wouldn’t say where else he was looking for a permanent spot, but added that it would be somewhere in Manhattan. He did allude to the fact that Karma may stray from the pack, as it were. Dugan mentioned the absence of galleries on Great Jones Street, as well as at Karma’s Amagansett space, which will begin its 2016 exhibition schedule in May. “I like being in places just where we’re on our own,” he said.
The opening reception was last evening for the initial exhibit here.... featuring the works of Lee Lozano. The exhibit is up through Dec. 17. Find more details here.
Chipping away the exterior detail at 112-120 E. 11th St.
As previously noted, demolition crews have been removing asbestos and whatever else from the five buildings at 112-120 E. 11th St. ... as you know, these five former residential buildings between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue are coming down to make way for a 13-story hotel for Marriott’s Moxy brand.
According to the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation (GVSHP), who helped organize several rallies here, the five buildings were ruled "landmark-eligible" by the city in 2008. However, when the buildings faced the threat of demolition this past summer, the city said that they no longer qualified for landmark status, per GVSHP.
Probably a good thing they are no longer qualified... a closer look at the buildings (thanks to EVG reader Jason Solarek for these photos) shows that the ornate details on the buildings have been chiseled off...
According to the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation (GVSHP), who helped organize several rallies here, the five buildings were ruled "landmark-eligible" by the city in 2008. However, when the buildings faced the threat of demolition this past summer, the city said that they no longer qualified for landmark status, per GVSHP.
Probably a good thing they are no longer qualified... a closer look at the buildings (thanks to EVG reader Jason Solarek for these photos) shows that the ornate details on the buildings have been chiseled off...
Thursday, November 17, 2016
1 day after dedication, Astor Place closed to prep 'Game of Thrones' fan event on Astor Place
Local elected officials and city reps came together yesterday morning for the official ribbon-cutting ceremony marking the return of the cube to Astor Place (as well as mark the end of the ongoing reconstruction).
Today, as several EVG readers noted, the Alamo off limits.
Per EVG reader Sheila: "Yesterday the Alamo was dedicated and today we can't even see it, let alone access it."
Here's what the deal is tomorrow and Saturday:
The event is 12:30 to 8 p.m. each day. Find more details here.
Everything will be back to normal on Sunday, William Kelley, executive director of the Village Alliance, told me via email.
Updated 11/18
A view from this morning via Vinny & O...
Today, as several EVG readers noted, the Alamo off limits.
Per EVG reader Sheila: "Yesterday the Alamo was dedicated and today we can't even see it, let alone access it."
Here's what the deal is tomorrow and Saturday:
Game of Thrones® Comes to Life in Epic Fan Event at Astor Place!
The Emmy® Award-winning HBO® series Game of Thrones is known for many things: shocking deaths, breathtaking special effects and, when it comes to DVD releases, extensive and captivating bonus content. To celebrate the November 15 release of Game of Thrones: The Complete Sixth Season on Blu-ray™ and DVD, HBO is bringing the box set’s exclusive bonus features to life in three groundbreaking events with interactive experiences including photo, video and virtual reality that take fans behind the scenes and immerse them into the world of Game of Thrones.
The event is 12:30 to 8 p.m. each day. Find more details here.
Everything will be back to normal on Sunday, William Kelley, executive director of the Village Alliance, told me via email.
Updated 11/18
A view from this morning via Vinny & O...
Annual New York Cares coat drive underway
The #CoatDrive is in full swing at @BoweryMission pic.twitter.com/Y1C8ukeTPJ
— New York Cares (@newyorkcares) November 15, 2016
The 28th annual New York Cares coat drive started up this week with a group distributing 50 winter jackets to residents of the Bowery Mission.
Per ABC 7:
Individuals and organizations can donate gently used, freshly laundered coats at hundreds of locations throughout the five boroughs through Saturday, December 31, including at all New York City police precincts ... major transit hubs, and many other sites.
As a new addition to this year's New York Cares Coat Drive, individuals can text "COAT" to 41444 to donate $20 to cover the cost and delivery of one new coat to New Yorkers in need of warmth this winter.
Since 1989, the New York Cares Coat Drive has collected 1.7 million winter coats for men, women, and children in need throughout the city.
In the East Village, you can drop off coats at the 9th Precinct on Fifth Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue and Police Service Area 4 at 130 Avenue C and Eighth Street. There's also a drop-off spot at the Manhattan Mini Storage on Second Avenue between Second Street and First Street. Find a full list of distribution centers here.
An early look at FryGuysNYC coming soon to 2nd Street
Text and photos by Stacie Joy
Marco Lanuto and McKenzie Foster, East Village residents partnered in business and in life, plan on opening their 1970s-inspired retro fry shop FryGuysNYC with a touch of grit, glitter, rainbows and an affordable menu at 150 E. Second St. between Avenue A and Avenue B by the end of the year.
FryGuysNYC will sell meals for less than $10, with main courses such as fried chicken and brisket alongside a large variety of french fries and toppings. (The store also plans on offering dessert fries, such as caramel-infused tater tots with chocolate and sea salt, topped with marshmallow drizzle.)
The recently completed mural next to the storefront (formerly a short-lived vape shop, and prior to that, a Vietnamese sandwich shop) is by artist Theresa Kim, who works under the name Resa_Piece. The owners have given Kim a one-year residency at the shop. In addition, Mosaic Man Jim Power is set to decorate the storefront with his work, and plans are in place for a floor made out of old vinyl records and a ceiling hung with lighted disco balls.
The restaurant’s hours are to be determined, but Lanuto and Foster want to be open for breakfast through late-night snacking. They said they will eventually apply for a beer/wine license and offer $3 beers like PBR.
Report: Pretty ugly AMC Village 7 building sells for $32 million
[Photo from last December!]
The rather cinder-blocky building that houses the recently refurbished AMC Village 7 on Third Avenue at 11th Street has been sold for $32.3 million.
The Real Deal had the details: A joint venture between ABS Partners Real Estate and Benenson Funding acquired the 7-story building at 66 Third Ave. that houses the AMC Loews theater.
Should we be worried that this will become a dorm or part of the Moxy hotel?
No! Appears just to be an asset for the ol' portfolio. Late last month, the Post reported that AMC has a ground lease through July 2037, so that's another 21 years — or roughly 12 more X-Men movies.
[If you don't like 4-floor movie posters of En Sabah Nur strangling Mystique, then move to...]
The renovated theater debuted last Dec. 25 with reclining seats ... and reserved seating. (Nice to shave off 25 minutes of commercials for Coca-Cola and the AMC Stubs Premiere Club, where members enjoy a free size upgrade — as if the Imperial Popcorn Tub isn't big enough.)
Anyway!
Previously on EV Grieve:
Renovations at Village 7; reclining seats coming soon
Report: CB3 douses plans for hookah bar Fire and Ice on 3rd Street
[Photo from August]
The revolving doors of bars-restaurants at 189 E. Third St. between Avenue A and Avenue B was about to get another go-round.
Since May 2014, the address has been home to Lumiere, Casablanca and Tut, which closed in February after just a few months in business.
Applicant Amar Patel, who managed Lumiere and Casablanca (and his mother managed Tut), appeared before CB3's SLA committee on Monday night to pitch a hookah bar-cafe called Fire and Ice. Patel was proposing daily hours of 3 p.m. to 4 a.m. (See their application here.)
Neighbors and CB3 weren't really into it.
Per DNAinfo:
"When I come home at 2 in the morning, the last thing I want to do is deal with another loud-ass bar that I have to try to sleep above," said building resident Michelle Brilliant, who works late hours at a restaurant.
"We just don't want to have to deal with it again," she continued. "It literally is a nightmare."
And!
District Manger Susan Stetzer said the board had spoken to police about the bar, and that 9th Precinct officers considered the spot a "serious problem."
"The history of this place is among the worst that we've had," Stetzer said.
Patel tried to assure community and board members that his restaurant would in fact be "calming," centered around tea and conversation rather than dancing and liquor.
The committee subsequently issued a denial for Fire and Ice, arguably the least calming name in CB3 applicant history.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Restaurant space that has been a lot of things lately ready to be something else
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