Urbanspace will be a unique amenity for Zero Irving's tenants, users of the building’s event space, and the surrounding neighborhood. Urbanspace plans an innovative mixed online/offline platform that stays true to its exceptional, immersive food hall experience while providing enhanced online ordering with delivery and pickup options for building tenants and the local community.Urbanspace also plans a catering option offered to both building tenants and users of Zero Irving's event and conference center...
Wednesday, August 11, 2021
Craft beer specialists Top Hops on tap for Zero Irving food hall
Tuesday, August 10, 2021
Celebrating Luna's 2nd birthday
Pete's Tavern reopens TODAY
RIP Patricia Kennealy-Morrison
Kennealy-Morrison became a rock music journalist as a young woman, bringing a new seriousness to rock criticism as one of the first women in the field. She interviewed Morrison in 1969 for Jazz & Pop, the magazine she edited and contributed to.
The two began a relationship, largely long-distance, and they participated in a handfasting ceremony in 1970. It wasn't a legal marriage, though Kennealy-Morrison considered herself Morrison's wife. It was a controversial claim, refuted by some who point out that Morrison was also in a serious relationship with Pamela Courson (1946–1974).
The handfasting ceremony was included in the 1991 Oliver Stone movie "The Doors." Kathleen Quinlan played Kennealy-Morrison, and Kennealy-Morrison herself appeared in the scene as the Wiccan priestess who performed the ceremony.
Kennealy-Morrison wrote the 1992 memoir, "Strange Days: My Life With and Without Jim Morrison." It was one of more than two dozen books written by Kennealy-Morrison, including several fantasy novels in "The Keltiad" series. In 2007, she founded the publishing house Lizard Queen Press, riffing on Morrison's "Lizard King" nickname.
She went on to write and publish a series of rock-themed mystery novels, including "Ungrateful Dead: Murder at the Fillmore," "A Hard Slay's Night: Murder at the Royal Albert Hall," and "Scareway to Heaven: Murder at the Fillmore East."She was also a longtime reader of EVG and left comments under her real name as well as, more recently, Peachy McPeachface.
Oh-K! Another Korean-style hot-dog chain to give the East Village a go
The FedEx Office Print & Ship Center is shipping off to a new storefront on East Houston
Two Perrys makes first appearance on Avenue C
Monday, August 9, 2021
At the Tompkins Square Park Riot Reunion shows
Large tree branch down in Tompkins Square Park
Former tenants of the fire-destroyed 48 E. 7th St. want to hear from landlord Faith Popcorn
Said Rivera: "I stand with Cooper Square Committee and the tenants of 48 E. Seventh St. to say enough is enough, and that their landlord Faith Plotkin must stop hiding and come to the table with real answers about the future of their homes. These tenants have been struggling for over a year ... They've been waiting, amidst COVID-19, in flux ... and even basic questions about the building itself remain unanswered. They don't deserve this, and we won't rest until they receive the housing justice they deserve."TY to @CooperSq for welcoming me to rally today with the displaced tenants of 48 E 7th Street in demanding accountability from their landlord.
— Carlina Rivera 利華娜 (@CarlinaRivera) July 28, 2021
We need Albany to pass stronger housing rights legislation for all NYers. I'll stand with tenants - my neighbors - until it's done. pic.twitter.com/jLagri1wuA
Advocacy group: Mayor 'overrules' comptroller on East River Park reconstruction contract
Opponents of the city's current plan — where workers will raze the 57.5-acre plot of land, bulldozing 1,000 mature trees and rebuilding the park atop eight feet of landfill — say there are better ways to preserve the park and provide flood protection, such as the one mapped out in the years after Sandy.
New 2nd Avenue sushi restaurant unveils attempt at humor
75 Degrees Cafe & Bakery slated for this 7th Street storefront
New boutique office building on East Houston shows off some glass
An August break for Baker's Pizza
Reader report: Pete's Tavern looking closer to reopening
Sunday, August 8, 2021
Broken stage rail derails show at Webster Hall
The plug was pulled during the first act of a late dubstep show last night at the venue on 11th Street between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue.WE ARE BACK! so stoked for this Saturday night with @maraudamusic, @calciumdubs and @guppisound 🔥🔥🔥 don’t miss this! >> https://t.co/0SW0LpjNTU pic.twitter.com/ph4NZbwkRM
— Webster Hall (@WebsterHall) August 3, 2021
Webster Hall officials then announced that the show would not continue, and scheduled acts Calcium and the headliner, Sydney, Australia-based Marauda, making his NYC debut, never got to play.Hey Webster Hall just shut down within the first 15 mins of my set. Yes I broke the rail. It’s broken
— Guppi (@guppisound) August 8, 2021
Here's the moment those in attendance learned that the show wasn't going on...what the fuck....
— MARAUDA (@maraudamusic) August 8, 2021
While videos from Citizen show emergency personnel at the scene, there weren't any reports of injuries. CBS 2 pieced together a report from the Citizen clips (and they incorrectly stated that the venue is in Midtown). The NYPD was on the scene to help with crowd control.@WebsterHall WHAT THE FUCK DUDE U REALLY GONNA CANCEL THE @maraudamusic SHOW pic.twitter.com/a80vYpsRy7
— Scvno (@Scvnoo) August 8, 2021
@maraudamusic @axs @WebsterHall so like are we getting refunds for last night's cancelled show? I didn't even get to go inside...
— тrιcια (@plurxwarrior) August 8, 2021
@WebsterHall any insight on what happened tonight for the @maraudamusic show tonight? feel like we all deserve a refund after this disaster
— lost lands hype man (@fastonfour) August 8, 2021
Hour and a half drive both ways, so much in tolls, paid more to park than what my ticket even cost. All that for Webster Hall to screw me and tell me to go home https://t.co/4e0KnFR4y3
— Mike Rosivack (@mikerosi97) August 8, 2021