Tuesday, December 25, 2018
This Christmas Day, time to think about mulching the tree in your living room
The city is not wasting any time spreading the word on its annual MulchFest... Steven spotted signs up today at the Ninth Street/Avenue A entrance to Tompkins Square Park.
People can start bidding their trees fir-well* and dropping them off on Jan. 4 for the two-day MulchFest that will take place in Tompkins Square Park on Jan. 12-13.
Of course some people can't wait to discard their trees... this one was spotted this morning... inconspicuously hanging out by the benches in the Park...
Anyway, don't feel compelled to get rid of your tree at the city's urging. There's another 11 months or so left to enjoy their company.
* the fir-well line is courtesy of the Parks Dept.
Monday, December 24, 2018
Holidays on 5th Street
Here's the festive-looking 327 E. Fifth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue done up as always for the holiday season ...
Thanks to EastVillage Siren for the video clip!
Engineering the return of CBGB in this model train set at Grand Central Terminal
[Image via New York Transit Museum]
The New York Transit Museum is hosting its 17th Annual Holiday Train Show at the Museum's Grand Central Gallery Annex & Store (it started on Nov. 15 and runs through Feb. 24).
An EVG reader shared this photo below ... showing a replica CBGB outpost — next to a Santa's Corner Workshop — in this “O” gauge model train layout... not sure if this is an annual part of the show, or if the CBGB is new to this train town...
No sign, however, of a TRGT outpost.
H/T Mary!
The unknown future of the Sidewalk
As I first reported on Dec. 10, the 33-year-old Sidewalk Bar & Restaurant on Avenue A and Sixth Street has new ownership
The new owners will be hospitality vets Laura Saniuk-Heinig and Alyssa Sartor. (Saniuk-Heinig is the general manager at the Bar Room on East 60th Street; Sartor co-owned August Laura in Carroll Gardens.)
There are a lot of unknowns about what's next. In an email exchange earlier this month, Saniuk-Heinig told me that they will keep the Sidewalk's longstanding live-music tradition alive, though she was not sure yet what type of music they'll feature. She also said that no decision had been made yet on the name of the establishment (perhaps Sidewalk will continue).
In a piece posted last night at The Daily Beast, Anthony Haden-Guest writes that it was "a shock but no surprise to learn" about the change in owners.
So why no surprise? Because in our Wealth Gap period, gentrification has become a seemingly unstoppable force.
Saniuk-Heinig told the Daily Beast that they'd know more details on what's to come next month.
The DB article also looks at the history of the venue's open-mic nights — the most active one in NYC.
Andrew Kirell, a Daily Beast senior editor and accomplished musician, has played there. “What makes Sidewalk so charming is that it has the feel of the type of DIY venue that Manhattan now sorely lacks,” he said. “There’s a sense of community in just being there, because it feels like a haven for underdogs, rabble-rousers, and anyone who just wants to express themselves.”
Previously on EV Grieve:
New owners set to take over the 33-year-old Sidewalk Bar & Restaurant on Avenue A
Report of a fire at 647 E. 11th St.
There was a report of a fire last night at 647 E. 11th St. at Avenue C.
The FDNY Twitter feed ID'd the fire in the ground-floor restaurant, which is Fiaschetteria Pistoia.
MAN ALL HANDS 647 E 11 ST, MIXED OCCUPANCY FIRE ON 1ST FLR RESTAURANT,
— FDNYalerts (@FDNYAlerts) December 24, 2018
EVG regular Jose Garcia shared the photos in this post at 10:30 p.m.
The FDNY declared the situation under control at 11:30...
MAN ALL HANDS 647 E 11 ST, MIXED OCCUPANCY FIRE ON 1ST FLR RESTAURANT, UNDER CONTROL
— FDNYalerts (@FDNYAlerts) December 24, 2018
Jose reported a heavy FDNY response to the scene, which you can see in this aerial view...
Something is happening on Avenue C.@evgrieve #EastVillage pic.twitter.com/MVXWEvmz3m
— Evan Kapitansky (@evan_kapitansky) December 24, 2018
There isn't any word at the moment regarding injuries or the extent of the damage or the cause of the fire.
Updated 12/24
A sign on the door notes a January return...
[Photo by Stacie Joy]
Sunday, December 23, 2018
Christmas Eve Eve, ruined
The lights remain off on the Tompkins Square Park holiday tree...
In a search for answers, Lola Sāenz points to this mysterious hole near the tree...
There's no immediate explanation for the hole, and whether it is natural — or supernatural.
Week in Grieview
[Photo on Avenue B by Derek Berg]
Stories posted on EVG this past week included...
Affordable housing planned for city-owned buildings at 204 Avenue A and 535 E. 12th St. (Wednesday)
The makeshift memorials at the 2nd Avenue gas explosion site have been removed (Thursday)
Nicoletta Pizzeria closes 2nd Avenue dining room, plans move to a new delivery-only location (Friday)
You'll be back: Look at the renovated Hamilton-Holly House on St. Mark's Place (Monday)
City continues 14th Street prep work ahead of the L-train closure (Thursday)
More about Treetops, the name of the condoplex coming to 14 2nd Ave. (Monday)
Hardware store-replacing hardware store now open on 4th Avenue (Thursday)
Korean food coming to the former Dinah Hookah Lounge space on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday)
Christmas miracle on the Bowery (Saturday)
Signs of new businesses on 3rd Avenue, and an H Mart update (Wednesday)
New signage arrives for Paquito's on 1st Avenue (Friday)
Scrooged: Tompkins Square Park holiday tree remains dark (Saturday)
A sushi counter for 4th Street (Thursday)
JR's neglected 'Gun Chronicles' on the Bowery Mural Wall (Friday)
Ravagh Persian Grill currently closed for renovations (Monday)
The 6th Annual Wendigo Holiday Group Art Show opens (Wednesday)
Fashion Pickle has closed (Friday)
Full FULL reveal at 287 E. Houston St. (Monday)
Report: Thirteen East + West on the auction block (Thursday)
1 more post about this corner of Avenue B and 3rd Street (Monday)
For these 14th Street buildings, there's now renovations inside to match the noise outside (Tuesday)
Hanoi Soup Shop's on for 115 St. Mark's Place (Friday)
... and EVG reader OrangeHOWELL shared this from yesterday... Darryl "D.M.C." McDaniels was doing a photo opp on 12th Street at Avenue A ... under the Run DMC mural...
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The future of the Etna Tool & Die Corporation building on Bond Street
[EVG file photo]
The Post reports today that James Galuppo, the owner of the now-closed Etna Tool & Die Corporation at 42 Bond St., recently passed away. He was 100.
So will the 7-floor No. 42 hit the sales market for a luxury condo conversion?
According to the Post, Mr. Galuppo left the building here between the Bowery and Lafayette to his daughter Flavia Galuppo as part of a $12.5 million estate. And she has no plans to unload the property, valued at $6.3 million.
"My parents’ real concern was that their tenants who have invested their livelihoods in our building would have to vacate, and that really bothered them. My father asked me if it was feasible to try and stick it out . . . I intend to honor his wishes."
After 70 years, Etna Tool & Die Corporation closed last year. (See this August 2017 feature at Gothamist for more on what was one of the last tool and die shops in the city.)
And who's in the building now?
A modeling agency, public relations firm and tech company rent space in the building now, along with three residential tenants.
Flavia, an art director in the film industry, said she will likely seek a new tenant for the ground level to replace the factory.
Mr. Galuppo, who was born on the LES in 1918, opened the shop in 1946. He bought the building in the 1970s.
"He would say, ‘I never thought I would see the neighborhood go in this direction,’ ” Flavia said of her dad. “People were warning him, ‘What, are you crazy to buy here?’ But he really believed in the beauty of the neighborhood."
Big Belly ache
Two of the rat-proof Big Belly trash receptacles on Avenue A remain out of commission...like this one on the southeast corner at Seventh Street...
... and the northwest corner at 10th Street...
The solar-powered trash cans arrived in July 2017 as part of the mayor's $32-million plan to combat vermin in rat-popular neighborhoods, like this one. The Daily News reported at the time that each can costs $7,000.
Previously on EV Grieve:
8 more solar-powered, rat-proof trash cans arrive in Tompkins Square Park
Looking at the Big Belly 1.0 and 2.0 in and around Tompkins Square Park
City ready to attack rats in Tompkins Square Park (and elsewhere) (again)
Saturday, December 22, 2018
Dec. 22
Today marked the 16th anniversary of Joe Strummer's death ... no flowers or candles as of 10 p.m. at the mural outside Niagara, on Seventh Street and Avenue A, like in previous years (here ... and here, as an example). However, #JoeStrummer was trending on Twitter for awhile as many users paid tribute to the leader singer of the Clash.
... and a threesome of the Clash ...
Scrooged: Tompkins Square Park holiday tree remains dark
The lights on the holiday tree in Tompkins Square Park have been off the last few nights.
Other lights are on, so they must have paid the electric bill.
A mosaic destroyed on 3rd Avenue and St. Mark's Place
A reader shares these photos from the northeast corner of Third Avenue and St. Mark's Place... where one of Jim Power's mosaics was destroyed.
Per the reader: "The way the bits are laying on the ground it looks like it was intentional — or maybe a truck backed into it or something. Who knows. Anyway, it’s really upsetting."
Christmas miracle on the Bowery
On Wednesday morning, an EVG reader shared these two photos... showing workers outlining lane lines, crosswalks and other traffic markings on the Bowery at Houston...
The reader [sarcastically] thought that the contractors were marking the location for more roadwork.
Checking back in on the intersection... can it be that the never-ending East Houston Reconstruction Project has maybe actually ended???
As noted off and on through the years
The work was initially scheduled to wrap up in 2013 (!!!), but was delayed again and again as the city reportedly ran into problems with existing underground wiring and pipes and unhinged bureaucracy.
The interactive map accessible via the DDC's website now shows a completion date of 12-25-2018!
Free tree times
If you were waiting to the last minute to pick up a Christmas tree ... then you're in luck. There are many trees for the taking curbside... as more people seem to be tossing their trees early this season before heading out for the holidays elsewhere...
Friday, December 21, 2018
A fine swine
Some hazy shoegaze from Ireland in the form of Just Mustard. The video is for a song called "Pigs" from the band's debut album (made Graham Duff's best-of 2018 list) out earlier this year.
JR's neglected 'Gun Chronicles' on the Bowery Mural Wall
JR's powerful "Gun Chronicles" mural at the Bowery Mural Wall is looking neglected, as these photos by Lola Sāenz show...
The panels are peeling ... and it has been tagged multiple times of late (not including the addition of the 11 and Xll)...
JR's mural features images of 245 Americans who represent various viewpoints on the gun debate. The artist collaborated with Time magazine back in late October for this interactive special report on gun violence in America.
EVG Etc.: Tossing a SantaCon coma suit; playing at the 11th Street Bar
[Photo on 7th Street by Derek Berg]
Mayor's office releases report on legalized pot in NYC (Curbed)
Questions over the future of Mitchell–Lama residential buildings in NYC (City Realty)
Lost Clause! "A SantaCon reveler who landed in a coma after falling down a flight of stairs at a Manhattan bar only has himself to blame for the drunken tumble, a judge ruled." (New York Post)
The city's worst landlord? The NYCHA, says Letitia James's office (amNewYork)
Michael Che, Michelle Wolf and other entertainers coming together on Jan. 11 at the Irving Plaza to raise money for NYCHA (Daily News)
Why musicians love playing at the 11th Street bar (The Villager ... previously)
A Tompkins Square Park landmarks quiz (Off the Grid)
Pier 35 is (partially) open! (The Lo-Down)
Small fire at the Con Ed substation on Avenue C (Town & Village)
Space Invader's tiled mosaic of the Ramones is being chipped away in Soho (Flaming Pablum)
Two chances to see "A Clockwork Orange" in 35mm on Christmas Day (Quad Cinema)
Brooklyn’s 315 Gallery relocating to the LES — Henry Street to be exact (ARTnews)
EVG turns 11 today (First post)
And a fond farewell to Slum Goddess, who's retiring her blog after nine fun, action-packed years! (Final post here) Thanks for chronicling those good times at the Mars Bar... and the the World Famous Pee Phone™...
Nicoletta Pizzeria closes 2nd Avenue dining room, plans move to a new delivery-only location
Nicoletta, the Altamarea Group's homage to Chef Michael White's favorite childhood dish (hint: pizza), has closed its dining room on Second Avenue at 10th Street.
Signage points to a new spot somewhere else in the East Village, where they'll continue on, though only via delivery... and no word just yet where the new Nicoletta will live...
For now, though, Nicoletta fans can still order their pizzas for delivery.
The new EV space will also feature new menu items, per their Instagram, and an expanded delivery zone. (Do you remember when they first started, and their delivery zone was: First Avenue to Third Avenue, and Ninth Street to 11th Street?)
Nicoletta opened to SO Much Hoopla in June 2012, including 90-minute waits for tables.
I don't recall anyone saying that the pizza was all that good. Pete Wells was Real Meh on it in an August 2012 review at the Times in which he bestowed the pizzeria 0 stars.
Per Pete:
Nicoletta’s pizzas are not quite deep dish, but they are heading in that direction. The crust is as strong as epoxy, and Mr. White piles it up with an abundance of toppings that would buckle an ordinary pie. In thickness and heft, a Nicoletta pizza resembles the September issue of Vogue.
There was another reason my table never finished an entire pizza: we lost interest. The style of pizza Mr. White is pursuing emphasizes gut-stretching abundance over flavor. The pies are overburdened conglomerations of cheese, flour and fistfuls of other stuff; in the end, the elements cancel one another out.
And the salads?
The salad recipes might have been nabbed from that corner trattoria you stopped going to a few years ago. There is the Nicoletta, with lettuce, red endive and a sliver of focaccia smeared with goat cheese. Or the insalata mare with clams, mussels, squid and octopus, all as tender as an extension cord, all bathed in a dressing that had no effect on any of it.
A look at the EVG archives and our 4568799000223323 posts about the place shows that some readers were tuned off by Nicoletta's T.G.I. Fridaysish interior and corporate vibe and the clipboard-toting host staff standing guard by the door while keeping tabs on those early line waiters.
By August 2013, Eater put Nicoletta on its Deathwatch.
Anyway, Nicoletta has been able to move past all this, enough to relocate to a smaller spot for delivery at least amid more and more competition. How many high-profile pizzerias have opened since Nicoletta arrived? In the last 12 months alone we've had Joe & Pat's, Emmy Squared, Sauce and Sorbillo Pizzeria, to name a few.
Thanks to Steven for the photos!
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