Thursday, March 15, 2018

A memorial for Elizabeth Lee on Cooper Square



During yesterday's #NationalSchoolWalkout, students from Grace Church School also left a memorial with a bed of roses on Cooper Square where longtime staff member Elizabeth Lee was shot and killed as she arrived for work this past Nov. 2 ...



Police have said that she was allegedly gunned down by Vincent Verdi, a onetime boyfriend.

According to the Daily News, Verdi spent four months stalking and harassing Lee. Police had arrested him previously for stalking, per the News. She had an order of protection barring him from contacting her, which was in place the morning he shot her.

Verdi, who survived a self-inflicted gunshot to the head, made his first appearance in Manhattan Supreme Court on Feb. 22.

The DA's office charged him with murder, weapons possession, aggravated criminal contempt and stalking.

Per the Daily News:

Verdi’s lawyer Robert Soloway declined to comment on the charges but said his client feels for Lee-Herman’s family.

“My client has great regret over the family’s loss — more than he’s able to express,” Soloway said.

Last November, school administrators established a trust to help provide for the education and other critical needs, such as medical coverage, of Lee's two children, Sasha and Hunter. Between GoFundMe and physical donations, $169,000 was raised for the family. The funds were turned over to the Elizabeth Lee Family Trust.

This really nice townhouse is for sale on 7th Street



The townhouse at 263 E. Seventh St. between Avenue C and Avenue D is new to the market. (H/T Curbed!)

Let's go to the listing at Corcoran:

Historic 1880s townhouse re-imagined by the architect of the DIA Beacon Museum, features lush garden views from floor to ceiling windows and terraces on every floor. This 25-foot wide house with modernist addition offers a total of 4,900sf interior space plus over 2,400sf of outdoor space, facing onto a community garden with protected views.

Configured as an owners duplex and income producing apartment with roof deck, and separate guest quarters. Easy to combine back to its original layout as a single-family home, and currently zoned for up to 3 residences. Loft-like parlor floor with custom sliding glass doors open onto an expansive outdoor patio. Exposed brick, beamed cathedral ceilings, wood-burning fireplaces, and original wide plank oak floors interplay with modern touches of polished concrete, ebonized oak and cedar.

And here are a few photos before we get to that price...









Price: $6.495 million.

Robataya to become Sakagura on 9th Street



The former Robataya space on Ninth Street between Second Avenue and Third Avenue is staying in the family.

Shuji Bon Yagi, who owns six nearby Japanese establishments, including Soba-ya, Curry-Ya and Rai Rai Ken, has plans to convert the restaurant to Sakagura ...



The address is on this month's CB3-SLA docket for a new liquor license. (The meeting is Monday evening at 6:30 p.m.)

The questionnaire on file with CB3 shows that Sakagura will have a lunch and dinner service daily. Lunch hours are 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., with dinner from 6 to 11 p.m. The proposal calls for 10 tables seating 42 diners (and a 16-seat counter).

There's also an extensive sample menu on the questionnaire (PDF here) showing a variety of dishes, including housemade soba noodles and rice bowls.

Robataya, which featured the robata technique of cooking proteins over a charcoal grill, closed at the end of 2017 after nine years in operation.

About the Juice Generation opening soon on Astor Place



You may have noticed the signage up for a new Juice Generation (the 19th outlet in the chainlet) at 4 Astor Place between Lafayette and Broadway.

As Lois Weiss reported at the Post, this Juice Generation is partnering with another tenant in the building — Harvey Milk High School, known as the nation’s first public school for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students.

Per the Post:

Juice Generation will be partnering with the school and working with students to develop a juice to celebrate Gay Pride month in June, with all proceeds benefiting the school, said Eric Helms, Juice Generation’s founder and CEO.

It will also launch a health and nutrition awareness campaign with the students.

Sticky's bringing the chicken fingers to Union Square



A new outpost of Sticky's Finger Joint — "New York City's finest gourmet Chicken Finger restaurant" — is opening in a retail space in the Zeckendorf Towers along 14th Street between Irving Place and Fourth Avenue.

EVG regular Pinch, who shared the above photo, believes this space was previously a GameStop (which moved to another storefront a block or so away).

This will mark the fifth Sticky's location in NYC.

If you're new to Sticky's, then here's background via their website:

Created in 2012 by Paul Abrahamian and Jon Sherman, Sticky’s Finger Joint is New York’s first variety gourmet chicken finger restaurant. Sticky’s takes the classic chicken finger to an elevated level by not only locally sourcing ingredients and using farm raised, antibiotic-free, hormone-free, chicken, but also by putting unique, flavorful, and creative spins on this childhood favorite.

Thoughts on Raphael Toledano: 'The dude was imploding'

The Commercial Observer has a Q&A with Michael Shah, who runs East Village-based Delshah Capital, which boasts "a diverse portfolio of New York City real estate assets approaching $1 billion in value."

The interview touched on a variety of topics, including Delshah Capital's recent deals to scoop up "commercial mortgages and particularly debt that is nonperforming or on properties that have slipped into bankruptcy."

That's when the conversation turned to Raphael Toledano, who quickly established himself as a terrible landlord in the East Village.

To the Observer's Q&A:

[T]hose deals have also earned you enemies like landlord Raphael Toledano, who allegedly said he would “bury you” after you bought the note on his building at 97 Second Avenue. What did you make of that? [In November 2017, a federal bankruptcy court judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by Toledano seeking to block Shah’s acquisition of the property.]

The dude was imploding, and it was pretty clear vultures were going to pick his carcass dry, and I wanted to be one of them. From the time Madison Realty Capital made the loan [a $124 million mortgage on Toledano’s acquisition of a 16-building East Village portfolio], it wasn’t a question of if he was going to default — it was when.

I don’t really know how anybody in their right mind believed [Toledano] was going to out-litigate us; he’s not very litigation-savvy. I think it was a lot of noise and press — he’s a colorful guy.

Before we did the deal, we had analyzed the litigation risk and knew how a bankruptcy would end, and it played out exactly how we planned. [Note: Toledano and his firm, Brookhill Properties, could not be reached for comment.]

Previously on EV Grieve:
Foreclosure notice arrives on Raphael Toledano-owned building on 12th Street

Claim: Landlord of 444 E. 13th St. threatened 'to drop dynamite on the building'

Report: State investigating East Village landlord Raphael Toledano

Health Department to inspect Raphael Toledano's East Village properties for toxic levels of lead dust

Foreclosure notice arrives on Raphael Toledano-owned building on 12th Street

Report: Raphael Toledano files for Chapter 11; $145 million deal for EV portfolio is off the table

East Village tenants pay landlord Raphael Toledano a visit at his Upper West Side home

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Scenes from National School Walkout



Thousands of students across the country today took part in #NationalSchoolWalkout, a growing movement to protest gun violence in the aftermath of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.

In a show of solidarity, students at several East Village schools took part at 10 a.m., walking out of the classroom for 17 minutes — one minute for each person murdered at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School one month ago today.

EVG reader Christine Champagne shared the above photo from Avenue A, where she spotted students from East Village Community School.

Per Christine:

Some of [the students] were stationed on chairs at various points along the route, holding signs with photos of the people who were killed in the Parkland shooting. I spoke with a teacher and told her how moved I was, and she told me it was all the kids. They wanted to do this, and they organized it.

Here are a few other images from the neighborhood this morning via Instagram ...

A post shared by Brian C Veith (@briancveith) on





Go TEENS, GO! #nationalwalkoutday ✨ 📷 courtesy of David Mack @buzzfeed

A post shared by The Women Tribe (@thewomentribe) on

A blank canvas awaits at the Bowery Mural Wall



Workers painted over the Bowery Mural Wall here at East Houston yesterday ... to provide a blank canvas for the next artist to make his or her mark here. (Haven't heard just yet who this might be...Updated: Oh, Banksy.)

The most recent mural was a collaboration by London-based artist Lakwena along with Instagram and Goldman Properties. The mural, which promoted Instagram’s #KindComments campaign, seemed to get tagged on an almost-daily basis in recent months...


[Photo from Jan. 24 by Lola Sāenz]

The rhinos have arrived on Astor Place

They were dropped off last evening...


And this morning, as you may have noticed...





The official unveiling is tomorrow morning. Here's a repeat with the info from the previous post:

Gillie and Marc Art have recreated the last three Northern White Rhinos – Sudan, Najin, and Fatu – in a 17-foot bronze sculpture to inspire, educate and mobilize the global community to raise their voices and affect real change against illegal rhino poaching trade.

Please join us in unveiling "The Last Three" to create a legacy of the Northern White Rhinos, and save future species from extinction.

Order of Events

9:00am - Introduction
9.15am - Speeches
10.00am - Unveiling
10.15am - Photos
10.30am - Interviews

Gillie and Marc’s sculpture will be used to raise critical awareness about the plight of the rhinos and ways people can help.

“Our mission is to collect at least 1-million goodbye messages and put them towards a petition for approaching governments about eliminating the demand for rhino horns through education” says Gillie, “You can help by leaving a goodbye message for Sudan before he’s gone forever.”

The sculpture will be here temporarily. (Haven't heard an exact timeframe just yet.) You can read more about the project here.



Previously on EV Grieve:
A sneak preview of the world's largest rhino sculpture, coming to Astor Place early next year

World's tallest rhino sculpture arrives on Astor Place this week

Call of the wild: Seems like old times for Christo and Dora in Tompkins Square Park

There had been talk this past week that Christo and Dora had started mating in Tompkins Square Park.

And yesterday, the two shared a private moment in front of a group of photographers ... including Steven, who passed these pics along...





Well, you get the idea!

And afterwards... Christo, in the front, takes off for parts unknown...







Now a lot has been made about Christo's relationship with Nora/Not-Dora, the red-tailed hawk that entered his life when Dora was off in wing rehab.

Goggla has an excellent theory about all this now. She spotted Christo and Nora/Not-Dora on the Baruch Houses south of Houston several days ago.

In addition to Christo and Dora, there has been a second pair of red-tails on the Lower East Side for quite some time, at least a year. I don't know if they nested last year, but they were definitely around. A few months ago, there were reports of a dead hawk on an air-conditioner at PS188 on East Houston. I think that hawk may have been Nora's mate.

Around the same time, or a short while later, Dora went into rehab, so Nora and Christo were suddenly single neighbors. I think they were close enough to be acquainted and it was convenient for them to team up. This would explain Nora's odd behavior, being so uninterested in spending time in Tompkins Square and her reluctance to participate in building the ginkgo nest with Christo. She already had her own territory in the Baruch Houses and preferred to spend her time there.

It makes sense ... read the rest of her post here.

Goggla has also suggested a new name for the admittedly confusing Nora/Not-Dora moniker. "I'm thinking of calling Nora 'Barucha' since it reflects her territory. She is much more than 'Not Dora'" ..." (Make your voice heard on that matter at Goggla's poll.)

To date, Christo and Dora have had 10 hawklets together. Perhaps some more will be on the way this summer.

Construction watch: 127 Avenue D



Here's a look at the 7-floor building that has slowly been going up on Avenue D between Eighth Street and Ninth Street.

As previously reported, plans call for a mixed-use building via developer H Holding Group. The approved permits now show 11 (previously 13) dwelling units with a commercial space on the ground floor.

To date we haven't seen any listings for the (presumably) rentals.

And here's the rendering via the H Holding Group website...


[RIP Wacky Wok]

The previous building here was a one-level structure that housed Sergio Deli Superette.

Previously on EV Grieve:
On Avenue D, Sergio Deli Superette will yield to a 7-story building

East Village Cheese lives on in Season 2 of 'Jessica Jones'



An EVG reader shared this screenshot from season two, episode four of "Jessica Jones" ... showing the shop on Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

In the scene (looks like summer!), Jess and Trish walk past the still-open East Village Cheese ... pause for a moment, and head inside East Village Wigs next door to question the owner. (I have never seen the show, so I'm not sure on the whys and what not behind what they are looking for...)

As for the non-Netflix version of the shop... still no sign of activity here...


[Photo from Monday]

EV Cheese quietly closed in early December ... On Dec. 21, co-owner Lobsang Tsultrim was spotted at the storefront along with a Remove All My Junk truck. Before some of the perishable items had been discarded, the aroma of ripe cheese had been noticeable in the adjacent storefront.

The nonpayment of rent notice arrived the second week of January. And the shop has been quiet ever since.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Blowing the doors off of the Horseshoe Bar in the name of television

Former Out East space for lease on 6th Street



The former Out East space on Sixth Street between Avenue A and Avenue is on the market. (And someone replaced the black trash bags on the windows with brown paper.)

Here's part of the listing (via Sinvin — PDF here) for the two-level space, which underwent an extensive gut renovation to make it Out East:

$22,035/month (including taxes & common charges) - Key money - $239,000 - Two full 2 AM liquor licenses - Public Assembly permit for 140 people - New million dollar installation - Legal lower level has kitchen, dining room, bar and lovely glass atrium with soaring 20' ceiling - New handcrafted wood storefront - In the heart of the East Village

The seafoody restaurant, which reportedly took its inspiration from coastal Long Island , opened last April before quietly shutting down in mid-December.

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Fired up to start a new year at La Plaza



The 9th Annual Zoroastrian Fire Jumping Event took place this evening at La Plaza Cultural on Ninth Street at Avenue C... EVG reader Cheyenne shared these photos...



Per tonight's invite:

Jumping over fire is a symbolic gesture to start a fresh new year. This tradition is celebrated for ringing in the Persian New Year and has been celebrated since at least 1700 BCE of the early Zoroastrian era.



... and by most accounts there was a nice turnout... (perhaps due to the new J/Z stop on the corner?)

Updated: Now that is a sinkhole on 1st Avenue and 7th Street



Crews are on the scene this afternoon to tend to the sinkhole that formed nearly in the middle of the intersection here on First Avenue and Seventh Street thanks to a broken pipe... looks like traffic is down to one lane for now... and perhaps the near future.

Thanks to @Cool666_ for the photo!


Updated 6:11 p.m.

Raquel Shapira shares these photos...



And Mr. John is on the scene — this is a big job, this sinkhole.



Also: Seventh Street is closed to vehicles for now between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

Updated 9 p.m.

And an in-progress shot of the fill-in a little earlier via Derek Berg...



Updated 3/14



Just one lane (and the bus lane) are open... the bike lane if closed off too...



Updated 3/15

Still working!




[1st Avenue north of 7th Street]

Wheel trouble on 2nd Avenue



EVG reader Chris Rowland shares this photo this afternoon... showing a broken-down car in the middle of Second Avenue between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place...

Possibly (or not!) related: The good-sized pothole near the car...



Ciao for Now starting a Tuesday evening soup service



Ciao for Now at 523 E. 12th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B is returning to service every Tuesday evening from 5-10 p.m. — starting tonight.

The family-owned cafe shut down its dining room after 17 years at the end of January. However, ownership was continuing on with their catering business as well as using the space for community events.

Here's part of Ciao for Now's message yesterday via Instagram:

We are hoping to create a place to gather and enjoy a casual cup of soup together to promote community engagement (and deliciousness). We will have our ginger green tea, wine and beer available along with turkey chili, lemon chickpea leek and tomato bisque soup for sale. You can take a container to go or sit and enjoy your soup here.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Ciao For Now is closing after 17 years on 12th Street; will continue with catering business

Upcoming restaurant openings: French for 7th Street; Italian for 2nd Avenue

Last night's CB3-SLA docket included beer-wine applications for two incoming restaurants. Committee members didn't hear either item at the meeting, as the applicants agreed to stipulations in advance ... and because both applicants will be operating actual restaurants and not places disguised as bars. Here's a quick look ...

A French restaurant called Papilles is in the works for 117 E. Seventh St. between Avenue A and First Avenue...



This is at the former Le Village, which quietly closed back in November.



The 10-table restaurant will be open daily from 11 a.m. to midnight. The proprietor has management experience at Mominette in Bushwick, among other places. You can find a PDF of the application (sample menu included) here.

Meanwhile, an Italian restaurant called Daniela Mia is set for 58 Second Ave. between Third Street and Fourth Street...



The 17-table restaurant will have serve breakfast, lunch and dinner, with daily hours of 9 a.m. to midnight. You can find a sample of their extensive menu of pasta, pizza and grilled fish here. There's also a variety of egg dishes served for breakfast and brunch.

Previously, N'eat, which offered "new Nordic fare," had a nearly 8-month-run at the address... they posted a sign on the front door last July stating "Due to unforeseen building issues, we have to close temporarily for maintenance work." And they never returned.

Before N'eat, Cellar 58 served Italian fare here.

Construction (and gold-dusted brick) watch: 196 Orchard St.



An EVG reader who had been away for a little while wrote in to discuss Ben Shaoul's in-progress condoplex on East Hosuton between Ludlow and Orchard.

Per the reader: "Jesus — that is a monstrosity over Katz's."

Anyway, here are a few photos from Sunday showing the progress at the 11-story 196 Orchard St., which will include an Equinox in the retail space... it's nearly bricked all the way up — with windows too...



As for those bricks (as noted before), the developers allegedly went a long way for them...



Back in late January, Architectural Digest took a look-see at the project and heard from Adam Rolston, creative and managing director at INC. Architecture & Design.

“We felt that a traditional glass structure didn’t mesh with the surroundings,” says Rolston, who looked for a material humble enough to belong in the neighborhood that had been home to waves of immigrants over decades, but luxurious enough to attract a contemporary resident.

He found such a candidate in artisanal Spanish bricks infused with gold dust that will gradually oxidize and become darker over time. Produced by the 130-year-old manufacturer Cerámica La Covadonga, the bricks form the instantly recognizable lower exterior building façade and were flown in from the Spanish village of Cadaqués (also known for its anchovies, and a source of inspiration to the painter Salvador Dalí). They symbolize the eclectic and transformational nature of the neighborhood.

And...

Sixty-thousand bricks were used for the building, each infused with 24K-gold dust.



The homes here range from studios ($965,000) to four-bedroomers ($6.5 million).

Previously on EV Grieve:
Making way for Ben Shaoul's new retail-residential complex on East Houston

Katz's is now the last business on East Houston between Ludlow and Orchard

Send a salami to your boy next door in the condo

Tonight at La Plaza Cultural: Jump over fire


[Photo from last year by Ryan John Lee]

Here are details via the EVG inbox...

9th Annual Zoroastrian Fire Jumping Event
Tuesday, March 13 (Rain/Snow date: Wednesday, March 14), 6:30 p.m.
La Plaza Cultural Community Garden, SW corner of Avenue C and Ninth Street

Jumping over fire is a symbolic gesture to start a fresh new year. This tradition is celebrated for ringing in the Persian New Year and has been celebrated since at least 1700 BCE of the early Zoroastrian era.

There will be music, dancing and snacks; wear your best fireproof pants. The Rude Mechanical Orchestra will also be playing. Invite your friends to this winter to spring fire extravaganza.