Thursday, January 18, 2018
Le Sia opens today on 7th Street
Today is the grand opening (per Facebook) for Le Sia at 11 E. Seventh St. near Cooper Square.
The restaurant will serve Chinese barbecue, seafood and an assortment of kebobs. Here a look at their menu via Facebook (there isn't much more information about the place at the moment) ...
As previously noted, the space was home to Surma Books & Music for 98 years until June 2016. Third-generation owner Markian Surmach cited a decline in business and the expense of property tax and other charges related to owning the building. Public records show that the Surmach family sold the property to Icon Realty for $5.75 million.
Kulture moves on St. Mark's Place
Kulture, the tattoo-piercings-jewelry-smoke shop, is leaving its home at 23 St. Mark's Place ... and headed east several storefronts to the upper level of No. 31 here between Second Avenue and Third Avenue...
This opens up a prime storefront in the same complex that houses the St. Mark's Market and Chipotle. Kulture arrived here in in 2011. Previously, the space was the short-lived St. Mark's Cafe, Red Mango, Quizno's and, until June 2008, the CBGB shop...
Wednesday, January 17, 2018
'Candy Coated Evil' — live
"Candy Coated Evil," a solo exhibition by Samoa, is up through Feb. 11 at the Howl! Happening space on First Street.
To date, we've heard really good things about the exhibit, especially the special live events put on in conjunction with the show.
Here, Walter Wlodarczyk shares photos from this past Saturday evening, when Samoa and Kembra Pfahler, the curator of "Candy Coated Evil," performed for an enthusiastic audience. (The two are the founders of the Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black.)
Caroline Tennessee was also on hand to perform her song "I Want Some Sweet Corn."
Tomorrow (Thursday!) from 7-9 p.m., Samoa and Pfahler host an evening of films ... selections include Samoa’s short features "My Way to Hell" and "Until the Day I Die" as well as performance videos from the Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black.
Find more details on the exhibit as well as the dates and times of the other special events here.
Howl! Happening: An Arturo Vega Project is located at 6 E. First St. between the Bowery and Second Avenue.
Thanks to Walter Wlodarczyk for the photos! Find more of his work here.
Veselka honored for its workplace practices with employees over the age of 50
[All photos by Dorian Block]
Veselka is one of 13 NYC businesses that the Columbia Aging Center — part of Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health — is honoring today for its efforts to hire and retain workers over the age of 50.
I asked Tom Birchard, the longtime owner of the diner on Second Avenue at Ninth Street, for his reaction to the recognition. From our email exchange:
Honestly hiring and retaining an older work force isn’t something that we’ve done consciously or as a matter of policy. When I first started working at Veselka in the late 1960s, the small staff was comprised almost entirely of older Eastern European women who lived in the neighborhood. They were incredibly hard working and very reliable.
When I took over the business in the mid 1970s, I just naturally continued to seek and hire similar type people, many of whom came to us through word-of-mouth from the existing staff. In general, we’ve found that older people are more reliable, more stable and more loyal to their workplace so they tend to stay for longer periods.
We have a soup cook who has been with us for 30-plus years who is extremely devoted to her work. When I hired her she lived down the street from Veselka and walked half a block to work every day. As their family grew, she and her husband bought a home in Perth Amboy, N.J. So she has been commuting by bus and train every day since they moved. In spite of the long distance and difficult commute, she comes to work on time every day without complaint.
One of her younger co-workers commented that even a war would not keep her from showing up and making her borscht. She and I are the same age, 71, so I guess I have a special place in my heart for mature people and I especially appreciate the opportunity to continue to do the work I love.
A rep for the Columbia Aging Center listed several reasons (many of the practices benefit all workers regardless of age) about what makes Veselka, which opened in 1954, such a good employer of people 50 and over.
Those practices include strong benefits, opportunities for advancement, responsiveness to employees’ ideas to improve the work environment, a culture and atmosphere that demonstrates workers are valued, educational opportunities and flexible work arrangements.
Specifically, Veselka offers health insurance to its employees and pays 60 percent of the cost of it, which the Columbia rep said is unusual in the restaurant business. They also have a profit-sharing program, paid vacation time and a meal plan that lets employees eat whatever they want for $2.50 a meal. In addition, Veselka offers opportunities for advancement. For instance, prep cooks have risen up the ranks, including one who is now their executive chef. Veselka paid to send him to culinary school.
Said Birchard: "We are honored to be considered for this recognition but we have also been honored over the years to have had the privilege of working with some incredible people."
Unique former 10th Street residence is now a nail salon
[Photo by Michael Sean Edwards]
In 1971, Tom Mulligan moved into a former storefront on 10th Street between Avenue A and First Avenue that had been outfitted as a live-in woodworking shop.
Mulligan died in July 2016 at age 79.
The ground-floor unit, a cozy-looking space that was filled with books and plants, had remained empty since his death.
At the end of 2017, EVG regular Daniel noted that the space looked to be in use as a nail salon...
There isn't any sign up yet... but they are open for business...
EVG regular Scuba Diva called this one in the comments upon hearing about Mulligan's death: "I have to wonder if Tom's apartment will become a bar, a nail salon, or a dry cleaners now, though."
Previously on EV Grieve:
Remembering Tom Mulligan
Saying goodbye to a familiar presence in Tompkins Square Park
[Updated] You literally can't say this word now at the Continental
Slum Goddess spotted this sign up on the front door at the Continental, 25 Third Ave. near St. Mark's Place.
Not sure if they are serious about this offense ... [updated: see the comments. Trigger, the bar's owner, says the sign is meant to be tongue-in-cheek] in any event, per the sign:
Sorry but if you say the word "literally" inside Continental you have 5 minutes to finish your drink and then you must leave.
If you actually start a sentence with "I literally" you must leave immediately!!!
This is the most overused, annoying word in the English language and we will not tolerate it.
Back in November, Trigger, the owner of the bar, which opened in 1991, announced that he would close the Continental this summer. (He left open the possibility of a relocation.) The updated closing date is now June 30.
As previously reported, Real Estate Equities Corporation plans to demolish the existing low-rise buildings at 3 St. Mark’s Place, 23 and 25-27 Third Ave. to make way for a 7-story office building.
Updated 1/24
A new version of the sign explains that this literally ban is to help end "Kardashianism" ...
Report: 186-188 First Ave. changes hands for $14-plus million
There's a new owner for 186-188 First Ave., a pair of 5-story walk-ups between 11th Street and 12th Street.
News of the all-cash transaction earlier this month was posted in a piece at The New York Times yesterday:
Hubb NYC, described as a local investor, bought the buildings from Allen Park, who owned the properties since 1980, for $14.25 million.
Per the Times:
They offer 16 two-bedroom apartments, which are mostly free-market, as well as three retail spaces occupied by a computer store, Handsome Dan’s candy shop and Uogashi, a Japanese restaurant. Air rights come to about 5,000 square feet.
New Citi Bike docking station for Avenue A and 2nd Street
A Citi Bike docking station has arrived on the northwest corner of Avenue A and Second Street... as far as I know this is new within the last few days... can any Citi Biker confirm this arrival?
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Report: NYPD looking for suspects behind several East Village business break-ins
The #NYPD is looking to identify this person who along with another is #wanted for a pattern of burglaries in #NYC. The pair has struck several commercial establishments in lower & upper #Manhattan. If you have any information we ask you to call #800577TIPS pic.twitter.com/EKz8VIACAu
— NYPD 9th Precinct (@NYPD9Pct) January 12, 2018
The NYPD is looking for at least two suspects believed to behind more than 16 burglaries in the city, including several in the East Village late last month.
Here's part of the story today via Town & Village:
On either late December 30 or the morning of December 31, they got into Red House, a Chinese takeout place on 203 East 14th Street and Third Avenue, by forcing open the basement door. There they snatched $1,000 in cash.
On December 31 at 2 a.m., three individuals forced open an exit door at Otto’s Tacos at 141 Second Avenue and East 9th Street. They attempted to pry open the cash register and an office door but were unsuccessful. They fled the location emptyhanded when a store employee entered the establishment. (The owner declined to comment when called about the incident.)
At around the same time, the burglars successfully managed to get inside Mango Mango at 23 St. Marks Place by forcing open the front door. They stole $350 in cash and the business’s surveillance system hard drive.
In total, the suspects have taken nearly $54,000 from the various businesses. The NYPD's descriptions of the suspects are quite vague: white and male, basically.
Anyone with information that could help in the investigation is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477). You may also submit tips online.
Head trip
A look at one of the new murals in the First Street Green Art Park ... Kathy Griffin (as Bat Woman) holding the head of Harvey Weinstein, courtesy of SacSix ...
RIP Adela Fargas
[Photo from @casaadelarestaurant in 2015]
Adela Fargas, owner of the Avenue C institution Casa Adela, died yesterday morning, according to friends of the Puerto Rican restaurant.
There wasn't much information immediately available about her death.
Meanwhile, there is a memorial in her honor outside the restaurant here between Fourth Street and Fifth Street...
[Photo by Bayou]
And there are several tributes to Fargas, who was born in 1936, on social media ...
A post shared by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀VCAM (Valerie) (@vcamed) on
#RIP Adela Fargas 1936-2018 You will be dearly missed. Te extrañaremos. 😢 #CasaAdela #Loisaida
A post shared by The Loisaida Festival (@loisaidafest) on
A post shared by Viajero © (@viajero) on
Before opening Casa Adela at 66 Avenue C in 1976, she ran a luncheonette one block to the south. It was there, as a feature in The New York Times from 2015 points out, that she perfected the seasoning for her famed rotisserie chicken.
Said her son Luis Rivera, a longtime manager at Casa Adela, in that article:
“She makes people feel like they are eating from Grandma’s hand,” he said. “Many people, their grandmothers are back home,” he said, meaning in Puerto Rico. “So they come here.”
The viewing for Fargas is Friday from 4-9 p.m. at the Ortiz Funeral Home, 22 First Ave. between First Street and Second Street...
The Joint (fka 99 Miles to Philly) has closed on 3rd Avenue
Multiple readers have shared the news that The Joint closed earlier this month on Third Avenue between 12th Street and 13th Street. (The first report that I heard was on Jan. 5.)
There's now a for rent sign on the space. The cheesesteak specialists started as 99 Miles to Philly in February 2005. They rebranded as The Joint this past July. Here's what 99 Miles partner Neil Barsky told me at that time:
"After 12 years and outlasting every other cheeseteak joint that did not have a bar attached to it, we could no longer survive the costs of doing business in NYC with only having basically one product," he said via email. "We had a choice — close or take advantage of the vacancies left by the closing of Blue 9 and other restaurants in the area. We felt by rebranding with an expanded new menu, which will ... feature Pat LaFrieda's burgers, specialty hot dogs and monthly specialty sandwiches, we could continue to survive and keep good people employed."
I did not hear back about this closure.
The Joint's neighbor, Blue 9 Burger, closed earlier in 2017. That space remains on the rental market...
Ricky's is closing on 3rd Avenue
The Ricky's location on Third Avenue between 13th Street and 14th Street is closing this month. (H/T Goggla!)
Some products at the accessories, cosmetics and novelties store are up to 90 percent off, per the sales signage.
While this location is closing, there is a Ricky's opening on Broadway next to the Strand at 12th Street...
The Ricky's on First Avenue between Sixth Street and Seventh Street closed without any notice in March 2016. The one in Chelsea on 23rd Street near Eighth Avenue closed last May while the Union Square location followed suit in November.
Ricky’s NYC president, Michael Long, told the Commercial Observer last fall that the chain is closing "underperforming stores" and that the company is now profitable.
Ricky's started as Ricky Love in 1989. Today, Ricky's has 17 locations around NYC and one in Miami. (The number was 30 at the time of the First Avenue closure.)
Previously on EV Grieve:
The Ricky's on 1st Avenue has apparently closed
A buffet for 1st Avenue
Signage is up for Goloday Halal Buffet at 222 First Ave. between 13th Street and 14th Street... the signage promises authentic Western African and Mediterrean [sic] cuisine.
The space was previously a Joey Pepperoni.
Village Craft Beer and Smoke coming soon to 1st Avenue
The recently closed Classic Gourmet Deli between St. Mark's Place and Ninth Street is getting a new name (and owners?) ...
This incoming Village Craft Beer and Smoke is not to be confused with the coming-soon Beer & Smoke Shop one block to the north...
Meanwhile! In other recent vaping and smoking switcheroos, the Exclusive Smoke Shop and Deli on Avenue B between Third Street and Fourth Street is now ... Vape and Smoke (new owners)... which is not to be confused with Vape N Smoke opening on Second Avenue.
Monday, January 15, 2018
Monday's parting shots
Two views of the sunset this evening from 14th Street and Avenue C ... courtesy of EVG reader Durk Snowden...
MLK weekend at Middle Collegiate Church with Civil Rights icon Ruby Sales
Text and photos by Dan Efram
Middle Collegiate Church, 112 Second Ave., yesterday hosted “Redeem the Soul of America,” a special discussion honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.‘s legacy with Civil Rights icon Ruby Sales.
Sales described her work with The Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), the critical role of women in the Movement, and gave the attentive audience context as to the foundations of racism and bigotry that have permeated American society.
“For black people, the streets and the fields have always been subversive sites,” Sales contextualizes. “It was the same during the Southern Freedom Movement. The streets that once upon a time where places in the South where black people should not be caught. We transformed them from dangerous places to liberating spaces.
“One of the things that the Movement literally did was to transform sites of terror, sites of oppression, into sites of liberation and sites of honor,” she said. "It was an honor to go to jail. It was an honor to be arrested on the streets of America.”
Though there were many enlightening moments, perhaps the most salient point was her description of a movement.
“A movement is dangerous, it’s not warm and fuzzy and cozy,” Sales said. “It doesn’t happen without a community to cover and guard you. It’s not an action of a few justice elites. It’s a community enterprise. You can’t be in a movement if you are afraid to die.”
The talk was led by Middle Collegiate Church’s Senior Minister Rev. Jacqui Lewis (above, left), who told of Sales’ direct impact on her life. Watch the full discussion here.
EV Grieve Etc.: Tommy Wiseau at the Sunshine; NYC's best bagels — mapped
[Photo on Houston and the Bowery yesterday by Derek Berg]
No-heat complaints at the Max Meltzer Senior Center on First Street (PIX 11)
Firefighter stationed at Ladder 11 on Second Street accused of trafficking fentanyl (The Daily News ... NY1)
City announces new deal to replace facilities lost in Rivington House fiasco (Curbed)
SLA nixes proposed restaurant at Allen and East Houston from Sons of Essex team (The Lo-Down)
SLA suspends liquor license for the troubled Delilah on Rivington Street (The Daily News)
One last glitzy premiere at the Sunshine (Page Six ... previously)
And then there was Tommy Wiseau at the Sunshine (Slum Goddess)
Map: Where to find the city's best bagels (Eater)
U.S. theatrical premiere of "Pow Wow" starts Friday at the Anthology Film Archives (Official site)
Rivington Street deli robbed at gunpoint (PIX 11)
The 1950s-1960s NYC street photography of Jonathan Brand (Creative Boom)
Conflicted thoughts on the Astor Place Kmart (Flaming Pablum)
When Lou Reed and the Talking Heads teamed up for "Femme Fatale" (Dangerous Minds)
Julian Eastman tribute at the Kitchen (The New Yorker)
Lower Manhattan in 1642 (Ephemeral New York)
Some history of Stuyvesant Street (Off the Grid)
And on that note, here's a postcard of the St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery from 1906 ... via the NYPL Digital Collections...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)