Friday, July 12, 2019
Beat happening: the 7th annual Nuyorican Poets Café block party is tomorrow (Saturday!)
Nuyorican Poets Café is hosting its seventh annual block party tomorrow (July 13) on Third Street between Avenue B and Avenue C from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Per their invite: "The Block Party will feature exciting activities including a DJ, bouncy houses, sumo wrestling, inflatable boxing, open mic, poetry, as well as free food and refreshments! Come join us as we come together as a community for a day of summer fun!"
You can check out the 2018 edition of the block party via these photos by EVG contributor Stacie Joy.
Recent openings: Tsukimi on 10th Street
[Photo by Steven]
Tsukimi opened in late June at 228 E. 10th St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue.
This Kaiseki-inspired restaurant's menu, via executive chef Takanori Akiyama, offers an 11-course tasting menu. Here's more via a preview at Eater:
The meal can start with nori and fluke, progress to a dish with bluefin tuna, goldeneye snapper, and bigfin reef squid, and end with olive oil yogurt, according to a sample menu (see it below). Of the 11 dishes, three will be sweet. They’ll all be served within a 14-seat space that’s divided in half by an aisle, with two seven-seat counters facing each other, a space designed by Brooklyn-based Studio Tack.
The outside doesn't look like much... but! The restaurant's interior merited a write-up at ArchPaper earlier this week...
Akiyama's NYC credits include Dieci, which was the previous tenant in this space.
The restaurant is open Wednesday-Sunday for a 7 p.m. seating. After Labor Day, seating times will be 6 and 9 p.m.
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Taking the last slice
Thanks to Jess Ruliffson for sharing this photo from earlier today on Chrystie Street near East Houston...
File under Spirit Animal
Grant Shaffer's NY See
Here's the latest NY See panel, East Village-based illustrator Grant Shaffer's observational sketch diary of things that he sees and hears around the neighborhood.
Through the years of the 4th Street Photo Gallery with Alex Harsley's 'Entanglements'
[Photo from 2014 by James Maher]
Alex Harsley, the proprietor of the 4th Street Photo Gallery and a neighborhood resident since 1965, is the subject of a new exhibit at the Sheen Center.
Here's more what you can expect starting tonight through Aug. 4:
"Entanglements" is an ode to a community inextricably linked. For nearly 50 years, Alex Harsley has remained fixed; bearing witness to the symbiosis of life outside his 4th Street Photo Gallery. Through his classic, award-winning photography and conceptualized mixed-media pieces, time becomes textured, non-linear as the images bob between a romanticized 1970s East Village and an aged, yet still vibrant and diverse, ecosystem of present day.
Scenes revolve around the doorway and community of The 4th Street Photo Gallery, the non-profit started by Harsley in the 1970s as a refuge for underrepresented artists, and, as Holland Cotter wrote, “he has made the city a primary subject of his classical brand of ‘street photography.’”
And...
The experience of "Entanglements" becomes a portal to the hidden connections and patterns that exist in all of our lives. It serves not just as nostalgia in remembering the past, but also as a reminder that these stories are still alive in the people, each who passed through this one East Village block, and continue to tangle themselves in love, change and community.
"Entanglements" opens tonight (July 11) at 6 in the Gallery at the Sheen Center, 18 Bleecker St. just west of the Bowery. Harsley will also be giving a "talkback" tonight at 7:30.
Meanwhile, you can read our two-part interview with Harsley, who turns 81 this year, from 2014 right here and here. And go visit his shop at 67 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery.
P.S.
And even if you don't know Alex, you will recognize his Dodge GTS Dart with traveling companions...
[James Maher]
Irving Plaza is now closed for renovations
[Photo by @thegrrlmorgan via @IrvingPlaza]
Irving Plaza is now officially closed for an eight-month rehab. The 1,200-capacity music venue on Irving Place and 15th Street closed after a show Sunday night featuring headliner Anberlin.
As for the renovations, here's Billboard with the story from this past April:
[T]he renovations at Irving Plaza will be overseen by Live Nation clubs and theaters division and include revamps of the lobby area and the music hall, new bars on all levels, the addition of a downstairs VIP lounge and remodeling of the mezzanine including a new box-seating section configuration.
Live Nation officials have said the venue will reopen in the first quarter of 2020.
There was an Irving Place Appreciation Night on July 1, a free show featuring Robert Gordon as well as local bands ElectraJets, The Trash Bags, Beechwood and The Advertisers.
[The Trash Bags]
[Beechwood]
[The Advertisers — the first band on the bill]
The venue has been in use for concerts the past 41 years. The Polish Army Veterans of America have owned the building since 1948. Here's more history via the Irving Plaza website:
Originally, the building was four separate brownstones, which were eventually combined into a hotel in the 1870s. In 1927, the building was gutted and turned into a ballroom-style theater and christened Irving Plaza.
Over the next few decades Irving Plaza would serve as a union meeting house, a performance space for folk dance troupes, and a Polish Army Veteran community center, as well as a venue for the Peoples Songs Hootenannies with Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie.
In 1978, Irving Plaza was converted into a rock music venue ...
As for more recent history, here are some bands that I've seen at the Irving Plaza in recent years... courtesy of the framed posters at the venue...
Closings: Pie by the Pound wraps up 17 years on 4th Avenue
[Image via Facebook]
After 17 years of selling pizza by its weight, the appropriately named Pie by the Pound has closed on Fourth Avenue between 12th Street and 13th Street.
June 30 was the shop's last day.
Here's part of the message from owner Jeffrey Reiss on Facebook:
It is time to say goodbye😭🙁😢. I want to thank the local community and beyond for supporting us and who have been our fans until the end. I will deeply miss the vegetarian, vegan and especially the Gluten Free Communities. Such beautiful memories of all the families and kids and my staff....that will last a lifetime. I will miss this place. From the bottom of my heart, THANK YOU.
Love,
Jeffrey
A regular told us that the lease was up, and Reiss wanted to pursue other opportunities.
H/T Kat!
Kikoo Sushi's second 1st Avenue outpost is now open
As noted back in the spring, Kikoo Sushi, the all-you-can-eat specialist currently at 141 First Ave. between St. Mark's Place and Ninth Street, was opening a second outpost at No. 210 between 12th Street and 13th Street.
Anyway, that second location is up and running now.
The new restaurant also marks the Great First Avenue Sushi Merger of 2019 as Kumo Sushi is also part of this operation... which means the former Kumo space on the southeast corner of First Avenue at 13th Street is now vacant...
A reliable source told us that Kumo's lease was up ... and that for now, Kikoo will continue on at 141 First Ave.
As for No. 210, that retail space was home to a Papa John's (2010-2018) before the sushi rolled in.
H/T Steven!
Yi Fang Taiwan Fruit Tea coming to former CoCo Fresh Tea & Juice space on St. Mark's Place
Yi Fang Taiwan Fruit Tea is the next tenant for 33 St. Mark's Place. Signage is up now at the storefront between Second Avenue and Third Avenue.
The chainlet, with an outpost in Flushing, takes over the space from CoCo Fresh Tea & Juice, the Taiwan-based chain that closed in late May after nearly five and a half years.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Rockit Scientist Records to become a bubble tea shop on St. Mark's Place
The chainlet, with an outpost in Flushing, takes over the space from CoCo Fresh Tea & Juice, the Taiwan-based chain that closed in late May after nearly five and a half years.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Rockit Scientist Records to become a bubble tea shop on St. Mark's Place
Wednesday, July 10, 2019
Wednesday's parting shot
Noted, You Pigs Edition
EVG Etc.: Cyclists rally for safer streets; Martin Rev talks about his life and work
[The U.S. Women's Soccer team mural created last month in First Park by Lexi Bella]
Cyclists stage Die-In in Washington Square Park to advocate for safer streets (Gothamist ... Curbed ... amNY)
After Avenue A Citi Bike collision, top cop says officers can use deadly force against cyclists (Streetsblog ... first on EVG)
MTA says halting car ban on 14th Street is causing "public confusion" (The Post)
GOLES is hosting a free workshop tomorrow night (July 11) on the new NY Rent Laws (Official site)
Suicide's Martin Rev — an EV resident — discusses his life and work and the making of one of music's greatest albums (Dangerous Minds)
More on the Gem Spa's fight for survival (Off the Grid ... previously on EVG)
Speaking of Gem Spa, they now serve a vegan egg cream...
View this post on InstagramA post shared by Gem Spa (@besteggcream) on
This morning in photos of a Lamborghini parked in front of a fire hydrant on 7th Street
Thanks to EVG reader Jill for this photo on Seventh Street between Avenue B and Avenue C.
Perhaps the tradition will continue...
RUMOR: The Boys' Club building on 10th and A has a new owner; will remain in use as a nonprofit
[EVG photo from last fall]
In recent weeks, several residents — and credible sources — have shared tips about the Boys' Club of New York's East Village clubhouse on 10th Street and Avenue A.
As I first reported in June 2018, Executive Director Stephen Tosh told alumni about the BCNY's plan to sell its Harriman Clubhouse, which opened in 1901. The BCNY would continue to use the space through June 2019. A listing for the 7-story building arrived on the Cushman & Wakefield website last October with a $32 million asking price.
According to several tipsters who have provided reliable information in the past, sources at the Boys' Club have said that the building was sold to a "nonprofit arts organization and will be a theater and house various arts-related entities." In addition, the Boys' Club would rent part of the space for one more year while searching for a new space in the area.
Neighbors have also noted a surprising lack of activity at the building this summer — at odds with an organization supposedly on the move.
However, to date, there isn't any public record about a sale of the Harriman Clubhouse at 287 E. 10th St.
In addition, Boys' Club officials squashed the sales rumor.
"The building has not been sold. The process is continuing," Shonda Smith, the BCNY's director of communications, said in an email. "When we have something to share, we will let you know."
The listing for the building last fall pitched the property as either "an ideal conversion opportunity or continued educational/recreational use by an end user." The 50,000-square foot building includes classrooms, a gymnasium, an auditorium, music studios, recreational and pool space.
The accompanying sales materials highlighted the recent luxury condo developments that have cropped up nearby, including Steiner East Village and Ben Shaoul's 100 Avenue A.
Last fall, local elected officials — including Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, State Sen. Brad Hoylman, Assemblymember Harvey Epstein, and City Councilmember Carlina Rivera — urged the BCNY board to postpone the sale until they consult with the community in "good faith." However, the BCNY declined to meet with the elected leaders.
Tosh said last year that the sale of the East Village building would allow BCNY the opportunity to start new programs in a neighborhood such as Brownsville or East New York.
For their part, community activists and parents have said that a compelling need remains in the East Village and Lower East Side for the kind of activities that the Boys' Club offers.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Local elected officials urge Boys' Club officials to postpone sale of the Harriman Clubhouse
Boys' Club of New York selling East Village building; will remain open through June 2019
During noon rally today, local elected officials will seek postponement of Boys' Club building sale
[Updated] Exclusive: The Boys' Club of New York puts the Harriman Clubhouse on the sales market for $32 million
Boys' Club fast tracks sale of East Village clubhouse as final bids are due Oct. 30
A visit to East River Park
Photos by Stacie Joy
This past July 4, EVG contributor Stacie Joy visited East River Park, documenting the visitors who were out enjoying the holiday and ideal summer weather.
If all goes according to the city's updated plans, then this marked the last July 4 along this stretch of the Park for the next four years. As previously reported, city officials, starting next spring, will close East River Park, burying it with 8- to 10-feet of soil to help protect the east side from future storms as part of the East Side Coastal Resiliency project.
The controversial plan is currently winding through the Uniform Land Use Review Procedure. Community Board 3 recently signed off on the project, though with a list of conditions. (On Monday, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer asked city officials for a 60-day delay for the City Planning Commission hearing to address unanswered questions about the project.)
Stacie noted there was some misinformation about the city's plan from a few of the people she talked with in East River Park, including the length of the closure (one person said 10 to 15 years, which, well...). Another person thought that East River Park was closing for good. Overall, though, Stacie reported that there was a positive, low-key vibe along the waterfront on this July 4 holiday.
Prepping 183 Avenue B for demolition
Prepwork is underway to demolish 183 Avenue B, the four-story building between 11th Street and 12th Street.
The sidewalk bridge recently arrived ... as well as the warning notices about baiting for rats...
As we reported on June 13, reps for the owner of No. 183 have filed plans for a new 8-floor residential building here.
According to the permit filed with the city, the building will have 12 residential units with ground-floor retail. (The demo permits were filed with the city in April.)
In January 2017, Corcoran listed the property with a $4.75 million ask. The building — with air rights intact — sold for that exact amount in April 2017, per public records. The DOB permit lists Richard Pino via the Tompkins 183 LLC as the owner.
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