Monday, May 2, 2022
May 1 on Avenue B
There seemed to be a lot going on along Avenue B on Sunday... religious processions... May Day celebrations... Maypole dances... EVG contributor Stacie Joy shared these photos from along the Open Street...
An evening of chamber music at the Church of the Most Holy Redeemer
Readers have told us they've enjoyed the free concerts at the Most Holy Redeemer/Nativity Parish on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.
So here's another one to mention: This Wednesday at 7, the church is hosting an evening of chamber music featuring a Juilliard faculty husband-and-wife duo performing lute songs from the Renaissance. The show starts at 7 p.m. Find the event link here.
[Updated] Drunken driver arrested after crash on Houston and 1st Avenue; pedestrian dies
Photos via @Bentsen23
Raife Milligan, the pedestrian struck by the drunken driver, has died from his injuries. He was 21. Milligan, a native of Jasper, Ind., was a junior studying BioChemistry at NYU. There's a GoFundMe to help his family pay for expenses.
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Police are investigating a collision involving two cars and a pedestrian on Houston Street at First Avenue that reportedly sent three people to the hospital this morning just before 3.
NBC 4 reports this:
A man in his 20s was seriously hurt when a driver hit him as he crossed a Lower East Side street early Monday, authorities said. The man was crossing East Houston at First Avenue around 2:45 a.m. when cops say a driver, possibly behind the wheel of a Camaro, swerved in an effort to avoid him. The driver hit the pedestrian anyway, then careened into a Honda.
Police have the intersection blocked off this morning... the mangled Camaro remains at the scene in the westbound lanes...
An EVG reader emailed us the following: "The sound of the car speeding down Houston — rapidly upshifting through the gears — was so loud it woke me up." The reader then went to the intersection. "There were witnesses who were extremely upset — it was awful." NBC 4 reports that two people in the vehicles were taken to a hospital "for complaints of pain, but they weren't believed to have suffered serious injuries."
There wasn't an update on the condition of the pedestrian, who EMTs transported to Bellevue.
The Post reports that the driver of the Camaro was suspected of being drunk.
The paper lists the victim in critical condition.
Updated 6:30 p.m.
The Daily News reports that the driver, Michael de Guzman, 49, of Astoria, was taken into custody by police and charged with drunken driving.
Although the license plate is mangled in these photos, there was a visible shot in another media outlet. As a reader noted, the driver has received four camera-issued speeding tickets since December.
The crash involving a reckless driver occurred hours before Mayor Adams unveiled a new safety campaign titled "Speeding Ruins Lives, Slow Down."
Headline updated
Italian favorite Via Della Pace opens in new East Village home on 4th Street
Photos by Stacie Joy
A new era begins for Giovanni Bartocci (above and below, left) and Marco Ventura at Via Della Pace. (The two also recently opened the small grocery Via Della Scrofa at 60 E. Fourth St.)Last night, the restaurant had a soft opening in its new home at 87 E. Fourth St. between Second Avenue and the Bowery... after months of delays while waiting for approvals on various permits and licenses.
As Bartocci told us at the start of the year: "We are close — very, very close to opening. Close to opening sounds funny, but we have been almost ready since the end of July, but nothing is playing on our side. We are stubborn, and we don’t give up!"
EVG contributor Stacie Joy stopped by Via Della Pace for the opening last night...
Via Della Pace, which first opened in 2002, lost its home during the devastating fire on the southeast corner of Second Avenue and Seventh Street in December 2020.
VDP had been closed since a previous fire on Feb. 10, 2020.
At the time, the owners were unsure if they would ever reopen on Seventh Street. The Dec. 5 disaster took care of that, as workers had to demolish the five-floor building.
You can follow Via Della Pace on Instagram for updates.
No. 87 had been vacant since Cucina di Pesce closed in September 2018.
Previously on EV Grieve:
PlantShed debuts on 2nd Avenue
The PlantShed outpost has opened at 193 Second Ave. on the NW corner of 12th Street. (Thanks to Steven for the top two photos.)
As previously reported, this location of the family-owned business that dates to the 1950s will sell plants and flowers and offer café service (tea, coffee and pastries). There are a few sidewalk tables available.
EVG regular Lola Sáenz shared these photos from Friday...
The first PlantShed retail space opened on the Upper West Side in 1981... the café service arrived later.
There are now four PlantShed storefronts — two on the UWS, one on Prince Street at the Bowery and one that debuted in 2020 in Englewood, N.J.
No. 193, a high-profile storefront, has been vacant since Pastel Spa & Nails closed in March 2018.
2 tenants for the renovated storefronts at 21-23 Avenue B
Photos by Stacie Joy
Yoon Lee (below) is behind the recreational marijuana dispensary and accessories shop ...
Along with a partner, he has plans for an omakase restaurant for the space next door. This month he's on the CB3-SLA docket for a beer-wine license for the establishment, doing business as Domakase.
As previously reported, workers added two new floors and combined the two four-story structures here between Second Street and Third Street.
H/T Salim!
P.F. Chang's makes it signage official on University Place
EVG reader Mark Cox shares this photo from the SE corner of 13th Street at University Place (113 University Place) ... where signage recently arrived for the new tenant — P.F. Chang's.
As previously noted, this will reportedly be the chain's first sit-down restaurant in NYC ... and a big one at 4,777 square feet of space across three floors.
The company opened several P.F. Chang's To Go outposts during the pandemic.
Italian restaurant brand Vapiano was previously in this University Place space.
Sunday, May 1, 2022
Sunday's parting shot
A moment today in Tompkins Square Park with Tilted Axes (an orchestra of guitarists and percussionists led by post-rock composer/performer Patrick Grant) ... photo by Derek Berg...
At the March Against Gun Violence
Photos by Stacie Joy
"We're here for them, the community — and the community is here as you can see," 7th Precinct Commanding Officer Luis Barcia told ABC 7. "They're also doing their part and working with us to stop the violence."
The march started at Delancey and Columbia on the Lower East Side ... and ended at P.S. 34 on 12th St. between Avenue C and Avenue D. EVG contributor Stacie Joy shared these photos...
According to ABC 7, there have been nearly 450 shootings this year — a 9% increase over the same period last year.
"This is how serious this is to everyone, including the mayor," said NYPD Deputy Inspector Ralph Clement.
Mayor Adams met with top NYPD leadership yesterday to discuss crime strategies in the wake of citywide violence, per NBC 4.
On Friday morning at 9, a 42-year-old man was shot dead on Fourth Street between Avenue B and Avenue C. Police have a person of interest in custody.
Week in Grieview
Posts this past week included (with a photo outside FDNY Engine 28/Ladder 11 on 2nd Street by Stacie Joy)...
• Man dead in shooting outside Mariana Bracetti Plaza on 4th Street (Friday)
• RIP Paul Adrian Davies (Thursday)
• The Charlie Parker Jazz Festival returns to Tompkins Square Park for the 1st time since 2019 (Wednesday)
• Proletariat and Cadence on the move to larger East Village spaces (Monday)
• Luzzo's bringing the Neapolitan pizza to this corner of Avenue B (Tuesday)
• Police release surveillance video of suspect in connection to stabbing on Avenue A (Monday)
• City shrinks the size of the passive lawn in East River Park (Monday)
• A break-in at Lucky on Avenue B (Thursday)
• Coming soon: Rake Wine Bar on 3rd Street (Monday)
• FULL reveal at 141 E. Houston St.; Yonah Schimmel can breathe again (Friday)
• Openings: Little Myanmar brings Burmese cuisine to 2nd Street (Thursday)
• About the "explosion" in Tompkins Square Park this morning (Wednesday)
• Workers removing the former Root & Bone curbside dining structure (Monday)
• Old-timer Rakka Cafe doesn't appear to be coming back on St. Mark's Place (Tuesday)
• Your season 2 "Russian Doll" reader (Wednesday)
• What you knead to know about Librae Bakery (Monday)
• Good Heavens! A rebrand for 169 Avenue A (Tuesday)
• Pouring Ribbons replacement 11 Tigers announces itself on Avenue B (Wednesday)
• Openings: Lot Stop on 1st Avenue (Monday)
• Strings Ramen shutters on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday)
• Thai Direct looks closed now on Avenue A (Wednesday)
• Captain Cookie & the Milk Man will be taking orders soon on Astor Place (Thursday)
Cleaning out the former businesses along Stuyvesant Street
Photos by Steven
Village Yokocho, Angel's Share, Sunrise Mart and Panya shuttered in recent weeks. Cooper Union, which leases the buildings from their owners and had subleased them to the Yoshida Restaurant Group for more than 25 years, said it was the tenants' decision to move on. (This post has more background.)
Workers removed half of the sidewalk dining structure here on April 21 (H/T MP!) and removed the rest of it in recent days... (not sure who used the outside space — Village Yokocho? Panya?)
This is the second recently closed business that had someone remove the outdoor dining structure, joining Root & Bone on Third Street.
Labels:
Angel's Share,
curbside dining,
Panya,
Stuyvesant Street,
Sunrise Mart
Report: Workers at the Starbucks on Astor Place vote to unionize
The Starbucks on Astor Place became the second NYC outpost to unionize, according to press reports and several media advisories.
The workers voted Friday in favor of a union by an 11-2 count. The Reserve Roastery in Chelsea voted to unionize in early April.
According to Nation's Restaurant News:So not only a blowout win in NYC, but another downstate store filed today as well!! Welcome Farmingville!
— SBWorkersUnited (@SBWorkersUnited) April 29, 2022
Working at an understaffed SB next to a CityMD during a pandemic...uhhh, workers deserve better. #UnionStrong pic.twitter.com/zSc4XnEFSg
In just four and a half months, Starbucks went from having zero union presence to employees voting to unionize at 32 stores around the country, with dozens of unionization elections occurring weekly.
And...
Throughout this process, there has been growing tensions between the Starbucks corporation — which has made it clear that direct representation is preferable and that the unions have been disruptive — and union group SBWorkers United, which has accused its parent company of union-busting.
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