Sunday, October 24, 2021
Week in Grieview
• Barnyard Cheese Shop has closed (Thursday)
• Rue-B closes on Avenue B (Thursday)
• Office building for 3 St. Mark's Place appears stalled for now (Tuesday)
• Cheap-eats fave Papaya Dog is done on 14th Street (Thursday)
• Report: Police shoot at man threatening people with a knife on Houston and the Bowery (Friday)
• Via Della Pace owners opening an Italian deli on 4th Street (Monday)
• Signs of new development along the retail strip of 250 E. Houston St. (Monday)
• FA debuts on 9th Street; the green bench arrives in Tompkins Square Park (Wednesday)
• Stromboli Pizza reopens (Friday)
• Blank Street coffee looks to be opening an outpost on 3rd Avenue (Wednesday)
• A campaign to landmark the building that housed A Gathering of Tribes on 3rd Street (Monday)
• Openings: Chichen Itzá on 10th Street (Tuesday)
• Sun meets the sidewalk again along this stretch of 2nd Avenue (Wednesday)
• Omakase sushi bar coming to former upholstery shop on 7th Street (Tuesday)
• A wrap at the Bowery Mural Wall (Tuesday)
• When life gives you a bulky sidewalk bridge, play tetherball (Tuesday)
• Reader report: new laundromat washed up before it opens? (Wednesday)
• A speakeasy and restaurant concept slated for 221 2nd Ave. (Monday)
A farewell to Barnyard Cheese Shop
This week in milling & paving with your host...
Saturday, October 23, 2021
EVG Etc.: Early voting begins; SoHo/NoHo rezoning pushes ahead
Friday, October 22, 2021
Carve your enthusiasm
Like a 'Dream'
HONK NYC! returns to the streets and community gardens
And tomorrow afternoon (Saturday!), HONK bands will be in the East Village ... along the Open Street of Avenue B and in various community gardens. This link provides the details.
Report: Police shoot at man threatening people with a knife on Houston and the Bowery
Starting around 8:40 a.m., the unhinged man cut a bizarre path from outside the Butcher's Daughter, a cafe on Kenmare St., to the Bowery and then to the corner of Elizabeth and Grand Sts., cops said. He allegedly threatened to stab people along the way.
Cops found the man at the corner of Houston St. and Bowery. Officers first shot the man with a Taser, but it didn't work, police said. A cop from the 9th Precinct fired off one shot as officers tried to subdue the man, but no one was hit.The suspect was taken into custody without further incident.
Stromboli is back open
Thursday, October 21, 2021
Thursday's parting shots
Barnyard Cheese Shop is closing for good tomorrow
Dark jazz: Rue-B closes, leaving Avenue B
Reader report: Cheap-eats fave Papaya Dog looks done on 14th Street
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
2nd annual Mask-Querade taking place Halloween afternoon on 7th Street
Children accompanied by a parent or guardian are invited to trick or treat safely. Adults will be able to observe in designated viewing stations to watch children with complimentary mulled wine and spiced cider. Safety will be enforced by volunteer community members.Candy will be safely distributed and candy bags will be issued by us!
FA debuts on 9th Street; the green bench arrives in Tompkins Square Park
The green bench is in Tompkins Square Park right now.
If you're a skateboarder — or a former skateboarder, or at least somewhat skateboarding-adjacent — and live in New York City, that sentence cannot be read without an exclamation point. The green bench! That's because this particular 300-pound piece of steel street furniture has become one of the most storied objects to skate around and on, and its arrival on the East Coast adds a coda to a two-decade saga of discovery, theft, loss, reconstruction, and a particularly hard-won switch backside noseblunt slide across its 13-foot arc.
Blank Street coffee looks to be opening an outpost on 3rd Avenue
Blank Street has managed to underprice the competition. A cappuccino costs $5 at Blue Bottle, $4.15 at Starbucks, and $3.90 at Dunkin' Donuts. At Blank Street, it's $3.50. To achieve this, [founders Vinay Menda and Issam Freiha] have had to fundamentally rethink what customers like them really want from a coffee experience today, and what that might mean for the future of the beverage in New York City.
Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of Blank Street is not just the way that the founders have fastidiously optimized their own operation but also the vision that Menda and Freiha have to update the thousands of coffee carts already doing business on city streets.