Thursday, November 1, 2018
Halloween night on Avenue B
Here's a look at some of the Halloween costumes that EVG contributor Stacie Joy spotted last evening along Avenue B...
Tompkins Square Park playground reconstruction 1 month in
There's progress to note with the Tompkins Square Park playground reconstruction on Seventh Street at Avenue B. (Renovation work started on Oct. 1 on the Avenue B children’s playgrounds.)
For starters, there's now a Work in Progress sign up on that corner to let people know what's happening.
The two playgrounds in the Park's southeast quadrant have been scrapped up (along with the walkways) ...
Steven shared these next two shots ... the top photo, from Oct. 10, looks toward Seventh Street and Avenue B...
... and the same angle from Tuesday...
According to the Parks Department website: "This project will reconstruct two playgrounds with new play equipment, safety surfacing, spray showers, seating and fencing.
And a schematic from the website...
The project has a 12-month timeline for completion.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Playground renovations underway in Tompkins Square Park
Heavy-duty fencing arrives as playground renovations continue in Tompkins Square Park
Revisiting A & C Kitchen on Avenue C
Here's an interesting tidbit that came out of the recent Dojo closure news... On Twitter, Dave Pentecost shared that one of the original Dojo chefs (from the days on St. Mark's Place) works at A & C Kitchen, 136 Avenue C between Eighth Street and Ninth Street...
One original chef is at A&C Kitchen, Ave C and 9th. Just ordered my hijiki tofu dinner for lunch! Best deal and tastiest around.
— Dave Pentecost (@dpentecost) October 25, 2018
I wasn't aware of this... and I hadn't ordered from A & C in ages (A & C has been around now for 25 years). I had forgotten how good the place is — with large portions and reasonable prices ... been there twice now in the past week...
Of course I can't vouch for everything on the extensive menu...
Taberna 97 returns for service Thursday-Saturday on St. Mark's Place
Taberna 97 at 97 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue has returned to action... the Portuguese restaurant, which opened in December 2016, had been in use just for special events in recent months.
The owners here also ran St. Dymphna's across the street. That pub closed on Oct. 20 for undisclosed reasons.
Taberna's hours are Thursday through Saturday from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. (Find their menu here.) You might recognize some of the updated decor...
DOT puts down the green paint on the new 13th Street bike lane (except for one mysterious spot)
DOT crews yesterday painted the new westbound bike lane on 13th Street... starting at Avenue B (the crew was just west of Second Avenue when I saw them)...
There is a curious gap just east of First Avenue... at first glance, it appears the the paint crew simply stopped and continued past the parked car...
However, a reader of the block chimed in saying that there's a curb cut here (and the car parked here later, seeing as the back wheels are on the freshly marked lane)...
The DOT team also skipped the construction zone in front of the incoming Thirteen East + West condos west of Avenue A.
As previously reported, the city put in a bike lane on the north curb of 12th Street from Seventh Avenue to Avenue C, and the south curb of 13th Street from Greenwich Avenue to Avenue B separated from traffic with a painted buffer ahead of the April L-train closure.
The bike lanes are just one of the ways the city hopes to keep people/commuters moving during the 15 (or so) months that the Canarsie Tunnel under the East River gets repaired.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Prepping for the new protected bike lanes on 12th and 13th streets
Bike lane line work continues on 12th Street
Labels:
12th Street,
13th Street,
bike lanes,
L-train,
L-train shutdown
Wednesday, October 31, 2018
Halloween's parting shot
A spooky scene at the Green Oasis Community Garden on Eighth Street between Avenue C and Avenue D... courtesy of Ken Ecker ...
6 posts from October
[Ad Rock and Mike D revisit some EV haunts during an interview]
A mini month in review...
This is the story of how Geoffrey Weglarz died on 12th Street, and why it took a week to find him (Oct. 24)
Local elected officials continue to press city for alternatives to parking garbage trucks on 10th Street; muggings now a concern (Oct. 22)
NYPD installs light tower on 2nd Avenue and 7th Street (Oc. 18)
On 6th Street, the Ukrainian Museum debuting Andy Warhol exhibit (Oct. 5)
CB2 SLA committee OKs license for new ownership of Great Jones Cafe (Oct. 4)
Report of injuries during major fire at 188 1st Ave. (Oct. 3)
Halloween at the Theater for the New City
EVG regular Lola Sáenz shared a few of the new Halloween-themed murals up on the walls now at the Theater for the New City, 155 First Ave. at 10th Street... tonight is the Theater's annual Village Halloween Costume Ball...
Aside from Lola, the artists who took part are Adriano Moraes, Al Waks, Barnaby Ruhe & Gallatin, Elliot Berke, Fran McGee, J. Kathleen White, Judy Sky, Marcus Glitteris, Rochelle Pashkin, Scot Terban, Micha Lazare, Richard Miller, Miles Angerson, Shonda Johnson, Monica Worlds, Elijah Martinez and NYU Gallatin School...
Fall between A and B
From 10th Street (above) and Seventh Street along Tompkins Square Park...
Photos from this morning...
Only 178 shopping days left until the L-train shutdown
As you may have heard, read, seen, the MTA yesterday announced that the much-anticipated and long-dreaded (but necessary!) L-train shutdown will begin on Saturday, April 27, 2019.
If you missed this, then here are more details via the MTA news release, shared here...
MTA New York City Transit (MTA NYC Transit) and the New York City Department of Transportation (NYCDOT) announced new details about what customers can expect ahead of April 2019 when the L train tunnel between Manhattan and Brooklyn is closed for 15 months for extensive repairs from Superstorm Sandy...
• The L tunnel will close for its 15-month reconstruction on Saturday, April 27, 2019. This means that the last day for L service between 8th Av and Bedford Av in Brooklyn will be Friday, April 26, 2019. L train service will continue throughout Brooklyn, between the Bedford Av station, which will remain open during the tunnel closure, and the Canarsie-Rockaway Parkway station.
• The alternative service options for customers, which includes five additional bus routes, a new M14 Select Bus Service on 14th Street and a ferry service, will begin on Sunday, April 21, 2019, to allow for customers to sample and become acclimated to new travel options. The additional subway service on other lines – more than 1,000 additional roundtrips – will begin on April 28, 2019, following the L tunnel closure. Read the full plan for temporary service options in support of the L tunnel reconstruction project.
• Customers will be able to meet in person with MTA NYC Transit and NYCDOT team members to plan their routes, through a series of open houses, pop-up events or one of the three mobile information centers – two vans and a bus – which will make stops to meet with customers. Official dates and times for open houses and schedules for events and the mobile information center locations will be posted on the L tunnel reconstruction website once announced.
• Numerous stations have received or are receiving capacity expansions, with newly reopened or expanded entrances, stairs and corridors. NYCDOT and MTA NYC Transit are coordinating with key City agencies – such as the NYPD, Department of Buildings and Citywide Events Coordination and Management – on aligning City operations with the needs of L train alternate transit services, including working to minimize disruption from construction projects and events.
• The construction for the project is on schedule. In Manhattan, the construction site footprint and hours of work both reduce between 1st Avenue and Avenue A in January 2019. In Brooklyn, most barricades will be removed along with permanent street and sidewalk restoration on Bedford Avenue by early November 2018, and throughout early 2019, work will continue to open and do permanent finishes on the additional stairs, three of four which have already opened for increased capacity.
• Officials are committing to monitor the air for particulates typically caused by diesel emissions, known as PM2.5, and making results publicly available. This is in addition to the air quality monitoring already in place for the project’s construction sites.
• Outreach continues with customers, local residents, local businesses, and elected officials.
“We’re continuing unprecedented efforts at public outreach, responding to local communities and giving as much notice as possible on key dates in this project,” said NYC Transit President Andy Byford. “With the l running as a Brooklyn-only service for 15 months starting after the weekend of April 27, we’ve been hard at work with our partners at NYCDOT and other City agencies to make sure that the alternate train, bus, ferry and bicycle networks work together to get people around successfully.”
“With DOT crews now putting down new street markings for bus lanes and bike lanes, we are deeply committed to having our streets ready for the l tunnel closure next April,” said DOT Commissioner Polly Trottenberg. “From a ‘bus bridge’ over the Williamsburg Bridge to the 14th Street Busway, from more Citi Bikes to expanded pedestrian space for displaced l train commuters, we and our MTA partners are up for this enormous challenge.”
For a reminder about remaining L service changes in 2018, visit the L 2018 service notice page. To help customers plan ahead in 2019, new service information details about the L in 2019 include:
Overnight service closures and weekend closures during February, March and April 2019, from 8th Av in Manhattan to Broadway Junction in Brooklyn to prepare the tunnel ahead of the closure and to expedite maintenance on the l tracks remaining in service when the tunnel is closed. Weekend dates scheduled are:
- Feb 2-3
- Feb 9-10
- Feb 16-17
- Feb 23-24
- Mar 2-3
- Mar 9-10
- Mar 16-17
- April 27-28
Previously on EV Grieve:
Nightmare scenario for residents who learn that 14th Street and Avenue A will be the main staging area for the L-train reconstruction
Prepping for the new protected bike lanes on 12th and 13th streets
Bike lane line work continues on 12th Street
A look at the new L-train renderings along 14th Street
The MTA recently plastered both sides of 14th Street between Avenue A and First Avenue — the main construction zone for the L-train rehab — with banners touting the new ADA-compliant entrances on the way at Avenue A and other scenes from the incoming stations ... many of these renderings were similar to the ones unveiled in the summer of 2017.
However, there are several new scenes, which EVG reader Hank's Pound of Spaghetti shared... Hank had a sensible question: Why are the scalies arguing?
Does this indicate that life with the all-new L train still mean signal and switch problems and track fires, leading to possibly tense exchanges between commuters? Or are these roomies at EVGB upset over that drunken bocce match that got out of hand on the roof?
Hank also spotted the same female scalie with different male straphangers...
... and do these two know the men arguing behind them? ...
Anyway, a little diversion from the nonstop work already taking place here that's making life for nearby residents fairly miserable.
This work started in July 2017 ahead of the L-train closure between Bedford Avenue and Eighth Avenue that starts on April 27, 2019.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Town Hall provides a few more details on the 24/7 construction at 14th and A
Renderings reveal the MTA's plans for the Avenue A L station; why does everyone look so happy?
Nightmare scenario for residents who learn that 14th Street and Avenue A will be the main staging area for the L-train reconstruction
SSHH — 'a multi-purpose mutant space' — debuts tonight on 6th Street
[Image via Instagram]
SSHH opens its doors tonight at 516 East Sixth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B.
The venue, operated by Nick Schiarizzi and Bráulio Amado, describes itself as a "multi-purpose mutant space where you can come and learn, make, buy or share something."
Every day from 2 to 7 p.m., SSHH will operate as a store, selling art, T-shirts, random undeveloped film rolls. Monday through Thursday after 7 p.m., the space will host events, classes, talks, art happenings, etc.
The November calendar is on the SSHH Instagram account...
View this post on InstagramCalendar for November. The website will be live soonnnn
A post shared by SSHH (@sshhnyc) on
Many of the events are free, others have a $10 fee... (and the introduction to French classes are $150 for six, 2-hour sessions).
The SSHH literature states the owners are not some trust-funders trying to create an exclusive art gallery. "This is a storefront space that we are still defining, and we want people to be part of it. We think that people want to learn and create past age 30 or 40 or 50 or 60 and this space is for you to do that," per an SSHH pamphlet. (They note that the monthly rent is $2,500.)
You can check it out for yourself tonight during the grand opening. Per the Facebook invite:
Please join us for the opening of SSHH (Sixth Street Haunted House) on Halloween, October 31, from 7 pm to 10 pm. It'll be like a gallery opening - open, casual, a celebratory situation.
This isn't a haunted house in the traditional sense, but it's a place that you can haunt, visit, and check out as regularly as you like.
This new space will host talks, classes, participatory events and art openings, as well as a store that will sell interesting things.
We are looking forward to meeting our neighbors, seeing our friends, and kicking off all of the creative stuff we're gonna do with you in the years to come.
The small storefront was previously home to the no-frills USA Body Work massage place.
Long-vacant 115 Avenue C getting some attention
A dispatch from Dave on 7th from 115 Avenue C, where workers have started gutting and renovating the long-vacant space between Seventh Street and Eighth Street.
There are several approved permits on file with the DOB for alterations at the three-story building. (None of the permits appear to be posted on site.)
The building changed hands for $3.7 million in the fall of 2016. An LLC with the address of 115 Avenue C was listed as the buyer.
In any event, this is an address to keep an eye on. The retail space has been vacant since Le Jardin Bistro closed in June 2015. Previous ventures here include Apartment 13 and The Porch.
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Tuesday's parting shot
Mid-afternoon red-bellied woodpecker break
La Plaza hosting Haunted Adventure Garden and Rat Race Maze
This is happening tomorrow (Halloween!) from 2-8 p.m. at La Plaza Cultural on the southwest corner of Ninth Street and Avenue C.
Via the EVG inbox...
For 365 days a year, rats are the stuff nightmares are made of for New Yorkers. The theme at this year's spooky Halloween adventure garden is Rats, because whether they rule or horrify, they're a part of living in NYC.
At this costume party, bring your whole family, as there'll be mystic fortune telling, face painting and thrilling coffin rides. At 5:30 pm there will be live music by the Rude Mechanical Orchestra.
Oh! And try not to get trapped in the Rat Race Maze, where we are trying to teach people to stay away from the corporate rat race.
... and I hope they leave this up year-round...
These two buildings are now wrapped and apparently prepped for demolition
Workers spent part of last week putting up sidewalk bridges and scaffolding at the adjacent properties — 24 First Ave. and 99-101 E. Second St. ...
Per our previous posts, demolition permits are on file to bring down both buildings. Developer Sergey Rybak was the high bidder ($12 million and change) during an auction earlier this year ... he has submitted plans for a 7-story, 22-unit residential building on the property of the current 24 First Ave. and 99-101 E. Second St.
The Rybak website list that the residences are condos (building name for now — 101E2). The ground-floor space is designated for retail use.
And the open-air dumpster marked "asbestos" that alarmed a few nearby neighbors was removed as of Friday.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Onetime home of Lucky Cheng's and adjacent property sell for $12 million
Demolition permits filed to bring down former Lucky Cheng's building on 1st Avenue
Demolition permits filed for 99-101 E. 2nd St.; first look at the condoplex to come
Preliminary demolition work at 99-101 E. 2nd St. is — surprise — in the asbestos-removal phase
Hitchcocktober's grand finale: 'Psycho' on Halloween night
It's nearly time to say goodbye for another year to Hitchcocktober at the City Cinemas Village East, Second Avenue and 12th Street ... but not before Halloween-evening screenings of "Psycho." (The one with Anthony Perkins and Janet Leigh from 1960, not the Gus Van Sant version from 1998 with Vince Vaughn and Anne Heche.)
Please note: The 8 and 9 p.m. screenings are SOLD OUT. The theater added one at 9:40 p.m. to accommodate the demand. Find advance ticket info here.
1st sign of First Lamb Shabu on 14th Street
The storefront at 218 E. 14th St. between Second Avenue and Third Avenue is starting to shape into the first Manhattan outpost of First Lamb Shabu, a Beijing-based hot pot chain with more than 300 locations in China.
As the Commercial Observer reported back in April, the company, which has a location in Flushing, signed a 10-year lease for the space with a $20,000-per-month rent.
The storefront has been empty for several years, ever since Dunkin' Donuts (DD!) decamped for a smaller space on the block in August 2015.
Previously on EV Grieve:
East 14th Street Dunkin' Donuts shuffle complete
The Dunkin' Donuts space on East 14th Street is for rent
Beijing-based hot pot chain taking over the former Dunkin' Donuts storefront on 14th Street
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