Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Pinks moves on from 10th Street

Top photo by Lola Sáenz; 2nd pic by Steven 

After nearly 10 years at 242 E. 10th St. west of First Avenue, Pinks has shut down following service this past Saturday night. (You can read their statement via Instagram below.)

Yesterday, workers were cleaning out the space... and in a classy touch, the owners of Pinks also removed their curbside dining structure before moving on ...
Pinks made headlines in the fall of 2018 after the city started parking garbage trucks right in front of their establishment. They responded by hosting a "Trash Bash" party. (Relive the memories here.)

Meanwhile, Pinks Cantina will continue at 203 Chrystie St. ... as well as their catering business. Ownership also has plans for a new LES outpost next year...

The Astor Place Greenmarket returns TODAY

The Astor Place Greenmarket is back in action starting today (June 6). 

Vendors expected include: 

• Francesca's Bakery Breads and baked goods from Passaic County, N.J.
• Halal Pastures Farm Vegetables, eggs and honey from Orange County, N.Y.
• Kernan Farms Vegetables, a variety of produce from Cumberland County, N.J. 
• Tucker Farms Cut Flowers from Burlington & Monmouth County, N.J.

The market is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Nov. 21. 

H/T Terry Howell!

This prime corner storefront remains tenant-free

Photo by Steven

In recent weeks workers have cleaned out the long-vacant (four years!) storefront on the SW corner of Second Avenue and 10th Street... prompting some speculation of a new retail tenant.

Turns out the landlord was sprucing up the space for a new suitor, as "for lease by owner" signs are now up in the windows. 

Capital One was the last tenant, closing this branch in May 2019

P.S.

Bring back Rectangles!

Monday, June 5, 2023

Monday's parting shot (aka June 5)

EVG reader roflo shared this photo today from Fourth Street between Avenue C and Avenue D... where there was a stash of Christmas trees discarded on the sidewalk. 

Per Roflo: "Maybe 10 in all, some still with stands. No idea what kind of Christmas time capsule this was… but it smells fantastic, like Christmas in June."

A call for volunteers and donations for asylum seekers this week

Text and photo by Stacie Joy 
Photo from yesterday as EVLovesNYC provided meals
to asylum seekers at the former St. Brigid School 

Thank you to all the EVG readers and community members who have offered to help with the distributions for asylum seekers at the former St. Brigid School this week. 

We're posting a volunteer call here. We're looking for people from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. tomorrow, Tuesday, June 6, and from 3-6 p.m. on Thursday. People can arrive at 107 Avenue B (near the corner of Seventh Street) any time in that range to assist for however long they can. 

We especially need folks who can arrive early to sort and fold clothing and personal items and people who have translation skills in Spanish and French (or Arabic, Mandarin, or Russian) who may be comfortable at the tables distributing goods. (No heavy lifting!) 

In-demand donations include backpacks, book bags, shoes (especially sneakers and chancletas), laundry detergent, jeans, sweats, T-shirts, shorts, underwear, jackets and sweaters. Also welcome: Blankets and bedding, washcloths and towels, and personal care kits. All for adults; there are no children or infants at this location. 

The only assistance the asylum seekers are receiving is from community members. The city continues to obstruct and object to the flow of goods, food, and services, yet the Mayor's office continues to request community support. It's confusing and frustrating, though watching the neighborhood turn out repeatedly to assist has been uplifting and heartening.
Previously on EV Grieve:


Decades-spanning ghost signage disappears from this East Village building

The neighborhood's most prominent ghost ad has vanished.  

In recent days, workers removed the scaffolding and construction netting at 108 Avenue B, the 5-story building on the SW corner of Seventh Street. (Thanks to Dave on 7th for the initial tip!)

According to work permits on file with the Department of Buildings, the landlord had approved plans to remove the "deteriorated metal cornice" and "build up and maintain existing brick parapet." 

Here is the result of that work...
Now gone: the faded ad for the Peter Jarema Funeral Home on the next block of Seventh Street with the allure of "Air Conditioned Chapels" and a smaller sign for "Vazac Hall Catering" (and "Fine Food")  a nod to the business before the current and longstanding tenant Vazac's/the Horseshoe Bar/7B... (photo below by Stacie Joy from 2019)...
So how old was this signage? As we understand it, the corner bar dates to the mid-1930s. The funeral home was established in 1906, per its website

Via the NYC Municipal Archives, we found this street view from the early 1940s...
As best as we can tell, the ad is for Treadway Shoes (at 67 Avenue B?). A 1980s photo from the Municipal Archives shows the funeral home ad in place, though it's obviously older than that given the presence of the OR 4-2568 telephone exchange.

There was also some thought — without much evidence — that the ad was created (or augmented) for filming 1974's "The Godfather Part II" (one of many movies and TV shows filmed at the bar). 

Here's the scene (RIP Frank Pentangelli!) shot inside and outside the bar. However, we don't see any ads on the building ...

   

Anyway, we'll continue to do some sleuthing ... maybe even from the bar, which has retained its timeless look ...

Reports: Woman in custody after menacing rampage in and around Tompkins Square Park

Screengrab via Freedom News TV 

Updated: Per multiple residents and readers, the woman was released and spotted back in the neighborhood. (See the comments.)

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Police arrested a woman yesterday afternoon after a reported "hair-pulling rampage" in Tompkins Square Park. 

According to ABC 7, "A woman was seen walking up to people and violently tugging on their hair." Witnesses said she approached between five and seven people in Tompkins. One report said she also attempted to grab a 7-month-old baby. 

After she left the Park, the woman was seen knocking over several tables and chairs outside restaurants on St. Park's Place and Avenue A. 

Police took her into custody on Ninth Street just west of Avenue A. ABC 7 reports that EMTs took her to Bellevue Hospital for an evaluation. 

Freedom News TV posted a 3-minute video of the incidents on YouTube.

According to the Post, the woman is only know to the NYPD as Pop Star.

Almost-opening report: Caffe Corretto on 12th Street

Caffe Corretto is getting closer to debuting at 511 E. 12th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. 

Per the sidewalk sandwich board: "Hi neighbors! We are not open yet... but we are training our team." 

You can sign up for updates via the cafe's website ... or follow them on Instagram

Two East Village residents are behind this all-day Italian cafe with morning coffee service and dinner/drinks in the evening. 

This space was most recently Raclette.

Little Uluh announces itself on 14th Street

Signage is now up for Little Uluh at 218 E. 14th St. between Second Avenue and Third Avenue. (Thanks for the photo, Pinch!)

This is a sibling to Uluh, the Chinese restaurant and tea shop at 152 Second Ave. between Ninth Street and 10th Street that opened in late 2018

Not sure what will distinguish Little Uluh from its sibling, which gets high marks... from Eater's "32 Glorious Chinese Restaurants to Try in NYC" post from March: 
With a tea service that treats the beverage like a sacrament, and a 100-item menu that offers seemingly endless permutations of familiar dishes, Uluh is every inch a modern Chinese restaurant. It caters to a crowd that's very sophisticated about its Chinese food. A large proportion of the menu highlights Sichuan, but there's also a good proportion of northern Chinese, along with dim sum and other Cantonese flourishes. 
This retail space at No. 218, a recently renovated building, has been vacant since First Lamb Shabu went dark in 2020 after a short stint.

City set once again to remove the curbside structure outside Pinky's Space on 1st Street

The Department of Transportation has issued a Termination notice for the "abandoned" curbside structure outside the now-closed Pinky's Space, 70 E. First St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue. 

The flyer, dated May 31, states that the owners have 24 hours to remove the abandoned structure, or the city will do it and charge the business ... 
... which never reopened after the city tore down its previous outdoor space last October. The removal of that 30-foot-long structure, which had morphed into an assemblage of paintings, furniture and plants, plus a chandelier and disco ball, exacerbated the cafe-art gallery's financial challenges. (More background here.) 

Pinky's closed after the incident to regroup with plans to reopen in early 2023. They also created a less-intricate outdoor space, which has mostly been dismantled in recent months.
In January, owners Mimi Blitz and Wesley Wobles sued the city for $615,000 for the removal "without any warning whatsoever" and "without cause, legal authority or due process," per the lawsuit. (The story was well-covered, including at the Post1010 WINS and PIX11.) The city told a different story, as Gothamist reported

A for-rent sign arrived on the storefront earlier in the spring. At the time, Wobles said in an email that the landlord would let them return if they made good on the back rent that dates to October.  

Sunday, June 4, 2023

Sunday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

Cruising by the 7-Eleven... on Avenue A and 11th Street...

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a new mural via Fumeroism at Avalon Chemists on Second Avenue)...

• Inside the East Village 'respite center' for asylum seekers (Tuesday) ... Missed meal deliveries and a need for basics: the developing situation at the East Village respite center for asylum seekers (Wednesday) ... At the former St. Brigid School, a generous outpouring of community support for asylum seekers (Friday

• Openings: Star Team on 9th Street (Friday

• La Plaza Cultural's new solar pavilion is enjoying its moment in the sun (Monday)

• Why 787 Coffee decided to close its 14th Street outpost (Friday

• Concern about the future of the 188 Allen Street Gallery (Thursday

• A few scenes from the annual Loisaida Festival (Monday

• Rebelmatic in Tompkins Square Park (Sunday

• On Avenue A, a golf-related shop fore people who might like golf (Thursday

• Avenue A deli news in review (Wednesday

• Bagel Market out of commission for now (Wednesday)

• Sprucing up the damaged American Elm in Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday

• Glizzy's bringing hot dogs to this block of St. Mark's Place (Tuesday

• Your Funzi's Pizzeria signage on St. Mark's Place (Friday

• Storefront can't decide if it wants to be Deli Convenience or Dispensary (Tuesday

• Coming soon to this block of 5th Street: Duo Cafe and For You Laundry (Thursday

• 2+ months after opening, 99¢ Pizza raises price of $1 slice to $1.50 (Friday)

• Kuppi Coffee Company setting up shop on 1st Avenue and St. Mark's Place this summer (Thursday)

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Follow EVG on Instagram or Twitter for more frequent updates and pics.

You have 3 chances to see the 'Kim's Video' doc at the Tribeca Festival this month

Here's your chance to see the new documentary on former East Village staple Kim's Video.

Award-winning filmmakers David Redmon and Ashley Sabin let us know about the three dates that "Kim's Video" will be playing locally during the Tribeca Film Festival:

• Tuesday, June 13 — 8:30 PM 
Village East by Angelika

• Wednesday, June 14 — 6:15 PM 
Village East by Angelika

• Friday, June 16 — 5:30 PM 
AMC 19th Street 

You can buy tickets at this link.

And the film's description via the Tribeca program:
If you were a New Yorker with a taste for unconventional movies, you likely perused the aisles of Kim's Video and Music. Its owner, Yongman Kim, became as much of a legend as the films he collected over the years. When the store meets an unexpected end, he strikes a deal with an Italian city's government to preserve his vast film collection. However, that is far from the end of the story for Kim's Video, as directors David Redmon and Ashley Sabin find out. 

This genre-bending documentary often feels too strange to be real, but it is (if you can believe it). From first-person confrontations with those in charge of preserving the collection to interviews with notable former employees, like director Alex Ross Perry, you'll become engrossed in this fascinating story whether you’re nostalgic for or new to the world of Kim's Video. If you’re looking for a true ode to the power of filmmaking, look no further: Redmon, Sabin, and Kim have what you need. — Jarod Neece
Coming out of Sundance, Deadline called it "a playful and intelligent film" ... while Variety said it's "a flaked-out, one-of-a-kind story of film obsession." On the other hand, RogerEbert.com opined: "One can appreciate the dedication that went into this saga, but being obsessed with movies does not make a great visual storyteller alone" and IndieWire graded it a C+.

The directors are seeking a distribution deal for a theatrical release ... as well as a fictional film based on the making of this movie, per Variety.

The Kim's empire had a modest start in Kim's dry-cleaning business at 99 Avenue A in 1986 ... the last Kim's Video & Music closed in 2014.   

And [SPOILER]... the massive collection of DVDs and videos from Kim's is now available to rent from the Alamo Drafthouse Lower Manhattan. (Background on all this here.)

Saturday, June 3, 2023

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

Saturday's parting shot AKA... today in wedding parties at Crif Dogs... 

P.S.

Congratulations! 

Check out 6 plays written and performed by local artists at the 6th and B Garden

The second annual LUNGS Theater Festival takes place this weekend at the 6th Street and Avenue B Garden.

The free performances are from 3-6 p.m. each day. Note: The program is the same today and tomorrow.

Saturday's opening shot

At the Second Avenue F stop, a new mural of Sasha Colby — winner of season 15 of "RuPaul's Drag Race" — by David Puck...

Friday, June 2, 2023

Friday's parting shot

An EVG reader shared this photo today from Veselka on Second Avenue and Ninth Street, where the cold summer borscht is back on the menu ...

Get the 'Message'


Every-Friday-at-5™ faves Osees (Thee Oh Sees!) have announced a new record, Intercepted Message, out this August. The video here is for the title track.

Annnd they are a great live band... you can see for yourself this coming Sept. 22-23 at the Warsaw.

P.S.

A hint of their live show... though without the video aura...

At the former St. Brigid School, a generous outpouring of community support for asylum seekers

Photos and text by Stacie Joy 

Yesterday was the first distribution day since we published the stories (here and here) about the asylum seekers at the former St. Brigid's School, which the city is using at a temporary "respite center" on Seventh Street and Avenue B. 

It's a big production, with many community members reaching out, eager to help. I hope all donated goods: clothes, bedding, towels, personal-care products, book bags and shoes will find good homes with the newly arrived refugees. 

I arrive a bit early at the drop-off location, and it's already filling up — so many people are bringing in so many items. As I frantically text some reinforcements — friends and neighbors — to help organize the growing donations, more and more people drop off bags for the hundreds of asylum seekers arriving here in the past week. 

The community support is more than I ever imagined, with residents bringing precisely what is most needed: shoes (chancletas are a highly requested footwear), jeans, sweats, T-shirts, blankets, sheets, towels, and backpacks. A local wine bar owner drops off hundreds of dollars worth of new shoes, socks and bedding. 

People carefully explain what they've brought, and several ask me about providing ongoing support. It's touching — and daunting. Hundreds of pounds of items are piling up...
As more volunteers arrive, we begin setting up tables at the Free Store outside the center. There is, predictably, initial pushback from the facility even though we're on a public sidewalk.

However, we reach an understanding and are soon working together to get the goods to the people who need them. And hundreds of asylum seekers are provided clothing, bedding and hygiene products. The donated backpacks —  a hotly sought-after item — move faster than I anticipated.
Staffers come out to help translate. Spanish and French are the two most spoken languages, but one woman speaks Mandarin, and no one can assist her. She wants to go to Flushing but needs to know how. 

Site workers also help me pair specific items with those who made a request, and we strategize how to get the most-requested item — Wi-Fi access — to the people. Since there is no coordination between the city and several agencies working within the site, getting anything accomplished through government channels is impossible. 

There are some heartwarming moments — two women are ecstatic over a donated box of new makeup, a gentleman spies some glittery shoes he admires, and the woman requesting extra-small or extra-extra-small yoga pants finally grabs two pair. Someone else spies the AeroBed that was dropped off, and we Google translate how to inflate it — often with amusing results and a much-needed moment of levity.  

As soon as items hit the table (and sometimes before), they are nabbed by the center's residents. And a new bus of immigrants arrives in the middle of the distribution, while another bus parks down the block to take people to Albany. Many take their newly acquired packs, clothes, and goods and head to the bus in preparation for heading north — all thanking us before they board. 

The scene is sometimes chaotic, with altercations between city and state employees, and the police are called to intercede. Additionally, a few Medrite employees — the subcontractors the city hired — are agitated, and some unkind words are uttered. Still, no one stops the Free Store, and even when security arrives via NYC Emergency Management, they are supportive.

This was a hugely successful community event, thanks mainly to East Village residents and EVG readers. Many of the asylum seekers expressed gratitude and thanks for the generous help.
Future drop-off dates at Assemblymember Harvey Epstein's office at 107 Avenue B at Seventh Street are:

• Tuesday, June 6, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 
• Thursday, June 8, 3-5:30 p.m. 
• Tuesday, June 13, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

Previously on EV Grieve:


Openings: Star Team on 9th Street

Image via @kyotaumeki

East Village native (and current resident) Kyota Umeki, a skateboarder and designer, debuted his skate shop, Star Team, Wednesday at 436 E. Ninth St. between Avenue A and First Avenue. 

He created the Star Team brand a few years back, and the shop features his clothing, boards and other accessories (check out his headphones). 

Quartersnacks posted a Q&A with him on Wednesday, where, among other topics, he talks about the vision he has for the storefront: 
I don't know what the shop will actually be like after it opens, but right now, I'm imagining a shop where the community will grow on its own. I want this store to be run like a real store. I want it to be proper. I want people to feel comfortable here. I'm looking forward to doing events and gatherings — not exactly "shows." The space is pretty small, so it's hard to think of bigger stuff to do, but it'd be sick to do drop events for homies and little gather-arounds every couple of weeks, like having other brands and clothing.
And how it started with the ribbon cutting ...
 

For now, Star Team will be open Monday-Friday from noon to 7 p.m. and weekends from 1-5 p.m. 

H/T William Klayer