Monday, July 13, 2020
Oscar watch on 2nd Street
Over the weekend, artist Early Riser (aka Lauren Elzbi) completed a mural alongside the 1st Ave. Laundry Center on Second Street at First Avenue, as EVG contributor Stacie Joy reported.
The subject: local pup Oscar Madison, a special needs rescue...
[Photo via @earlyrisernyc]
The 12-foot-tall work is titled "I am strong, I am equal." She completed the mural using freehand, brush and a couple stencils, all in acrylic.
And here's the artist and Oscar with his human companion, Rick Van Benschoten ...
And this is the latest mural along this stretch of Second Street that's curated by East Village Walls...
Report: Man expected to survive after being shot multiple times on 4th Street
In recap of shootings around the city this past weekend, the Post reported that a 41-year-old man was shot multiple times late Saturday night on Fourth Street west of Avenue C.
According to the paper, the man, identified by neighbors as Thomas Gonzalez, was shot in the chest "as at least three people rode up on bicycles — firing a barrage of at least nine shots" just after 2:30 a.m.
Gonzalez was reportedly visiting family members at the Bracetti Plaza. At the time of the shooting, he was talking to friends in seats near a kids' play area, per the Post.
His injuries were not thought to be life-threatening, police said.
According to the paper, the man, identified by neighbors as Thomas Gonzalez, was shot in the chest "as at least three people rode up on bicycles — firing a barrage of at least nine shots" just after 2:30 a.m.
Gonzalez was reportedly visiting family members at the Bracetti Plaza. At the time of the shooting, he was talking to friends in seats near a kids' play area, per the Post.
His injuries were not thought to be life-threatening, police said.
The Russian & Turkish Baths have NOT permanently closed on 10th Street
[Photos Thursday by Stacie Joy]
Rumors spread on Facebook last week that the 128-year-old Russian & Turkish Baths on 10th Street had closed.
According to one post, shared more than 300 times, workers were spotted carting out contents from the interior here between First Avenue and Second Avenue. One of the construction workers also allegedly told a 10th Street resident that the NYC institution was permanently shuttered. Meanwhile, the Baths' website still carried the "temporarily closed for COVID-19" message.
Several people reached out to us about the news after seeing the various Facebook posts.
In response to the rumors, management posted an updated message to their website and Facebook late last week...
As for the gutting, management shared this statement about that:
"We’re making superficial changes to the locker room, restaurant and greeting area so that when we open we are compliant with CDC guidelines for the coronavirus and we will definitely reopen as soon as we are allowed to."
There hasn't been any updated information from the city or state about when gyms and spas can reopen in NYC.
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David Shapiro, who along with Boris Tuberman owned the Baths since the early 1980s, died in May. His son Dmitry has served as the general manager in recent years.
View this post on InstagramA post shared by Russian and Turkish Baths (@russianbaths) on
You can read more about the history here in this Times feature from 2016.
[Updated] This is the last week for Odessa on Avenue A
Updated 7/17
Gothamist now reports that the owners will just be closing for renovations. Longtime manager Dennis Vassilatos told Stacie Joy last Sunday that they were closing for good, not remodeling. Gothamist also got confirmation of the closure on Sunday.
This is the last week for Odessa Restaurant, 119 Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place.
EVG correspondent Stacie Joy spoke yesterday with longtime manager Dennis Vassilatos, who started at the diner in 1990 when it was next door. He confirmed that Odessa was closing after service on Sunday, July 19.
He says that Odessa is shutting down solely due to the significant loss of business during the COVID-19 crisis. (Odessa reopened for takeout and delivery in early April.)
Mike Skulikidis has been an Odessa co-owner since 1980 (along with Steve Helios). Skulikidis is also the landlord of the building, so there isn't an issue with a rent increase. And about the rumors that Odessa would be closed for remodeling: The place is shutting down for good, not reopening.
Vassilatos had been planning to retire to his native Greece in the months ahead... now he says he'll be doing it sooner than anticipated. While he's not a fan of long goodbyes, he knows that regulars are going to be understandably upset by the closing news.
As one reader said to us yesterday: "Odessa was supposed to be there forever."
Here are a few scenes from yesterday...
Odessa Restaurant opened in this space in April 1995. The original Odessa, which dated to the mid-1960s, closed next door in August 2013
Previously on EV Grieve:
• A Visit to Odessa Restaurant
• Last call for the Odessa Cafe and Bar tonight
Labels:
closings 2020,
Odessa,
Odessa Cafe and Bar,
the Odessa
New community coalition helping keep Avenue B safe for cyclists and pedestrians
[Via @loisaida_oscc]
You may have noticed a few changes along the Open Street of Avenue B... this is courtesy of the newly formed Loisaida Open Streets Community Coalition, described as "a community-led program providing safe, socially distanced recreation for our neighborhood."
For starters, volunteers have painted and repaired some of the barriers that are up along the Avenue from Sixth Street to 14th Street daily from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. ...
[Top 2 photos by Stacie Joy]
The group has launched a Twitter and Instagram account...
As the newly formed Loisaida Open Streets Community Coalition, we believe this should be a community-led program providing safe, socially distanced recreation for our neighborhood. pic.twitter.com/RiCfc7yzG3
— Loisaida Open Streets Community Coalition (@Loisaida_OSCC) July 9, 2020
... where you can learn about upcoming events... and receive news alerts...
🚨Barrier protection alert!🚨 Strong winds today—please dismantle and set any barriers you see out today on Avenue B to the side, not blocking building entrances, with legs stacked behind crossbars to keep them from getting blown around. Safety first!
— Loisaida Open Streets Community Coalition (@Loisaida_OSCC) July 10, 2020
If you're interested in volunteering to be an Avenue B Open Streets Ambassador, you can find a sign-up sheet here.
The city announced the Open Street plan in late May to help residents safely get some fresh air while social distancing. As we've noted, people have hidden or vandalized the barricades or they've been clipped by motorists or the FDNY...
A related item of interest... tomorrow (Tuesday night!), CB3's Transportation, Public Safety, & Environment Committee will hear the following item — FDNY: Fire safety concerns regarding Avenue B Open Street.
Here's the meeting info:
Tuesday, July 14 at 6:30 p.m.
Online: https://zoom.us/j/97511826911
By Phone: +1 646 518 9805, +1 929 205 6099
Meeting ID: 975 1182 6911
Updated: Streetsblog has a post on this story here.
Formerly interesting new business closes on 1st Avenue and 14th Street
From the EVG tipline: The AT&T store on the southwest corner of First Avenue and 14th Street has closed (confirmed by the location's website). Workers have emptied out the space ...
The AT&T outpost opened last November ... taking over the retail spot from a Vitamin Shoppe that shuttered in November 2018.
Previously on EV Grieve:
• Signage for interesting new business arrives on 1st Avenue and 14th Street
The Standard East Village sets reopening date
The Standard East Village has set a July 24 reopening date here on Cooper Square at Fifth Street.
This is the first of the Standard properties to reopen for guests. (The Standard London is back on Aug. 7, for instance; the Standard High Line on Sept. 7.) You can find their health and safety standards at this link.
The hotel went dark when NYC went on PAUSE in mid-March. A few other luxury hotels have already reopened in the city.
Meanwhile, the Standard's cafe returned to service this past Friday...
Sunday, July 12, 2020
Week in Grieview
[Photo in Tompkins Square Park by Derek Berg]
Posts this last week included...
• Let's stroll through Tompkins Square Park on this June 1, 1967 (Wednesday)
• John's of 12th Street remains closed due to mechanical issues (Monday)
• C&B foregoes curbside cafe space after city can't seem to decide on outdoor dining guidelines (Thursday)
• 6 E. 2nd St., home of Ramones history, is for sale (Monday)
• Winter Flowers looking radiant this summer (Friday)
• Checking in on Foxface Al Fresco on St. Mark's Place (Thursday)
• Out on a walk with Touchy Blinky (Wednesday)
• Openings: Green Garden Buffet (Thursday)
• Checking in on the Parkside Lounge (Friday)
• The new-look storefronts at 99 Avenue B (Thursday)
• Punjabi Grocery & Deli is reopening (Tuesday)
• Enter Phase 3 (Monday)
• This week's NY See panel (Thursday)
• Hoops return to the Tompkins Square Park basketball courts (Tuesday)
• A first: Katz's unveils some sidewalk seating (Friday)
• Tac N Roll awaits an insurance assessment (Thursday)
• 12th Street ghost signage (Wednesday)
• On 2nd Street: Life, liberty and the pursuit of Happiness (Monday)
• Construction watch: 15 Avenue A (Tuesday)
• Illumina East closes on Avenue B (Monday)
• 2 years in, Suki relocates to larger space on 1st Avenue (Tuesday)
• Professor Thom's doesn't look to be reopening (Wednesday)
• Rumors: A new tenant for the long-empty bank branch on Avenue A and 4th Street (Tuesday)
... and new in Tompkins Square Park this week... at the St. Mark's Place/Avenue A entrance...
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Follow EVG on Instragram or Twitter for more frequent updates and pics.
Reader report: The alarms at the Avenue A NYSC have been ringing since Thursday night
Via the EVG inbox...
The burglar alarms at the New York Sports Clubs outpost at 28-30 Avenue A between Second Street and Third Street has been going off CONTINUOUSLY since Thursday night. It's going off on both the front interior of the building (flashing florescent lights inside the front entrance along with sounds), irritating the merchants nearby, and VERY definitely at the rear of the building. Those of us whose apartments back up to rear of their building are being driven crazy!
According to the reader and nearby resident, calls to 311 get transferred to 911, where nothing has come from the complaints. Queries to NYSC have not been returned.
The gym has been closed since March 16. In early April, the New York state Attorney General's office ordered NYSC to stop charging membership dues during the COVID-19 closure.
Saturday, July 11, 2020
Reminders: It's Book Swap Saturday!
Book Swap Saturday enters its fourth week outside the Tompkins Square Library branch on 10th Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.
Per the organizers: "Let's share our used books to help us get through this pandemic together. Leave some and take others."
The free book swap is from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. But get there early if you want the "naughty" ones...
And EVG Book Swap Correspondent Stacie Joy did check the bag — it was empty!
Friday, July 10, 2020
Vision quest
Montreal's Freak Heat Waves have a new record out in September... this is a single from that release called "Dripping Visions."
A report of a package thief on 3rd Street
An EVG reader shares this from a building on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B...
Somebody in my building buzzed in this package thief, who took my stuff. In addition to his backpack, he's got a giant suitcase, so I'm betting my building isn't the only one he hit.
Also:
I can't decide if I'm glad his mask is below the chin, so we can see his face, or if I'm annoyed that he's breathing all over the narrow hallway.
EVG Etc.: Concerns about an increasing homeless population; realities facing live-music venues
[Morning at 9th Street Espresso via Vinny & O]
• Explaining the increase in the homeless population in the East Village and Lower East Side (B&B) LES residents complain about growing number of homeless encampments (NY1)
• Report: NYCHA residents say their living conditions have continued to worsen and many oppose the de Blasio administration’s plan for resolving the fiscal crisis confronting the city’s largest affordable-housing program (CityLimits)
• "Claims from the NYPD's top cops that an uptick in gun violence has been caused by bail reform efforts and emergency releases from Rikers Island due to COVID-19 continue to prove baseless, without any data surfacing to back them up." (Gothamist)
• Manhattan rental vacancy hits another all-time high (The Real Deal)
• East Village bar owner Jesse Malin on the crisis facing live-music facilities: "Very few venues are going to be able to survive being closed this long" (Rolling Stone)
• Delivery apps still taking a big bite out of NYC restaurant profits (The Indypendent)
• The National Community Reinvestment Coalition used data from the American Community Survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau to rank the cities on gentrification during a five-year period ending in 2017. San Francisco-Oakland was No. 1, followed by Denver, Boston, Miami-Fort Lauderdale and New Orleans. NYC was No. 7 (USA Today)
• Martin Scorsese to direct David Johansen documentary (Pitchfork)
• Funhouse by the Stooges turned 50 years old this week (Flaming Pablum)
Checking in on the Parkside Lounge
Text and photos by Stacie Joy
When we last checked in on the Parkside Lounge in April, owner Christopher Lee shared his story of recovering from COVID-19.
The corner bar on Houston and Attorney opened for take-home drinks on July 3, and debuted a small area for curbside seating on the Fourth of July.
[Christopher Lee]
On the July 4 holiday, Lee created the day’s special (the Thirsty Patriot, a vodka and soda drink) and taped up signs on the newly built outdoor seating. The local artist who built it, Joe Kay of Six Quarter Studio, stopped by for a beer and some last-minute adjustments. Soon, the first customers begin to arrive...
[Lucille the bartender]
Parkside’s hours are flexible right now. You can keep an eye on the bar's Instagram for updates.
Previously on EV Grieve:
• Parkside Lounge owner Christopher Lee talks about his recovery from COVID-19
Winter Flowers looking radiant this summer
More Winter Flowers have arrived along the fence at La Plaza Cultural on Avenue C at Ninth Street...
Rolando Politi created these unique sculptures from discarded materials in 2000, and displayed them at the community garden. The Winter Flowers, numbering nearly 250, had to be removed when La Plaza received a new fence last year.
He started hanging them back here in May.
Previously on EV Grieve:
• Winter Flowers return this spring at La Plaza Cultural
A first: Katz's unveils some sidewalk seating
Katz's, which has remained open this spring with takeout and delivery, debuted its first-ever (in 132 years!) outdoor seating this week... there are six socially distant tables set up on the Ludlow Street side of the deli here at Houston...
And as I understand it, you buy the food inside and bring it out... there isn't any table service.
Thursday, July 9, 2020
Because we haven't had a tropical storm yet this year
[Photo on Avenue A yesterday by Derek Berg]
Via the EVG inbox...
The New York City Emergency Management Department today urged New Yorkers to prepare for potential impacts of Tropical Storm Fay. The National Weather Service has issued a Tropical Storm Warning for New York City in effect from 6 a.m. Friday through 2 a.m. Saturday. A Flash Flood Watch is also in effect for the City from 6 a.m. Friday, July 10 through late Friday night.
With Fay’s track expected to impact NYC, NWS is forecasting moderate to heavy rain to move into the area early Friday morning, continuing throughout the afternoon before tapering off around midnight Saturday. A total of 1 to 2 inches of rain is forecast with this system, with locally higher amounts of 2 to 4 inches possible. Severe thunderstorms cannot be ruled out with this system.
High winds are also in the forecast on Friday, with sustained winds 35 mph to 45 mph and gusts up to 50 mph. Winds are expected to taper off overnight Friday into early Saturday morning.
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 and NYC.
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