Thursday, November 23, 2023
Fall classics
Scenes of fall from around the neighborhood over the past six weeks.. starting and ending in Tompkins Square Park...
Thursday's opening shot
Photo by Stacie Joy
Happy Thanksgiving from Key Food... where Green Pigeon Peas are aplenty... (BTW: Should you need anything, the grocer on Avenue A and Fourth is open 24/7 per usual)...
Wednesday, November 22, 2023
EVG Etc.: Veselka continues its support of Ukraine; CBGB memories 50 years later
Reader-submitted EV skyline pic
• Veselka has raised more than $400,000 to support humanitarian relief efforts in Ukraine ... and has employed former Ukraine residents who came to the U.S. (NY1)
• Teen arrested in fatal stabbing of an unhoused man in Sara D. Roosevelt Park on the Lower East Side (Daily News ... ABC-7)
• A look at the Fair Housing Framework, the affordable housing legislation passed earlier this month by City Council (City Limits)
• Support for Mayor Adams is sinking amid federal investigation, poll shows (Gothamist)
• If you want to speak out against having a 32-foot 5G tower on Seventh Street and Avenue B (Village Preservation)
• Kushner Companies sold a multifamily property at 504-508 E. 12th St. for $19.5 million. An entity controlled by Sabet Group bought the 50-unit property (The Real Deal)
• This Broadway building owner takes retail landlord to court ... 1 Great Jones Alley located on Broadway near Fourth Street (Habitat)
• A look at the slate of films featured in the month-long World Cinema Project courtesy of Martin Scorsese and others! (Anthology Film Archives)
• A new exhibit at Brooklyn Museum, Copy Machine Manifestos: Artists Who Make Zines, includes REBEL FUX by longtime East Village resident Kate Huh (Official site)
• A quick review of Kolachi on 1st Avenue (The Infatuation... previously on EVG)
• Rice to Riches is opening on Ludlow and Rivington (Eater)
• Ex-Rolling Stone Press director Jonathan Wells recalls his first visit to CBGB (Reader's Digest)
• Street closures and info about the Thanksgiving Day Parade (NY1)
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Full sidewalk returns to Cooper Union's Foundation Building
Photo by Jacob Ford
Workers this afternoon have removed the barricades from outside the NW corner of the Foundation Building on Cooper Square after three months of sidewalk/concrete repairs ... looks pretty smooth for skating!
[Updated] Steeple watch
Multiple readers shared this dramatic view this morning from atop the steeple at Middle Collegiate Church on Second Avenue at Seventh Street...
... the top three were from an anonymous reader... the next two are via Cecil Scheib...
... and by Jason Trucco...
Yesterday marked the first day of demolition at the fire-damage façade.
Updated:
As Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis, senior minister at Middle Collegiate Church, previously told us, this is a combination demolition-salvage operation. Workers will be sifting through the remains of the building, initially completed in 1892, to save any of the limestone and ironwork for use in the new sanctuary that will eventually rise on the property.
The façade’s arch will reportedly remain untouched.
The six-alarm fire that started in the empty apartment building next door early on Dec. 5, 2020, destroyed many of the church's historic elements, such as the Tiffany-stained glass windows. (The church's Liberty Bell was preserved and is temporarily at the New York Historical Society.)
Demolition work is expected to last two-to-three months.
Openings: Potenza Centrale on Avenue B
Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy
Luigi Iasilli debuted Potenza Centrale, his pizza-focaccia takeout spot, last Tuesday at 38 Avenue B near Third Street (arrival first reported here).
This is despite the fact Con Ed had to shut off gas to the building earlier this fall. Luigi says it will probably be months (lousy news for neighbor Asian Taste) before it's restored.
He explains that he's waiting on Con Ed and the fire department to sign off on the work so gas can be restored. In the interim, he's using electricity to cook.
Menu items include the unusual purple potato focaccia...
Coming soon: an eggplant parm dish and fresh pasta to make at home.
Also, I have it on good authority that if you ask Luigi, he will sell you some of his famed, highly hydrated, and fermented dough so you can try your hand at pizza at home.
Fresh mozzarella made in-house and housemade sauce are also available.
Luigi was the owner of the well-liked Max restaurant, which closed 10 years ago at 51 Avenue B,
Hours: 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, with a 1 a.m. close Friday and Saturday.
Sharaku Japanese Restaurant emerges from plywood frozen in 2020 time
We continue to be curious about what's next for the empty storefronts at 8-14 Stuyvesant St. Workers have been renovating the spaces on this strip between Ninth Street and Third Avenue.
Now, the plywood is off the space at 14 Stuyvesant, and it almost looks as if the previous tenant, Sharaku Japanese Restaurant, was still here...as they were from 1984 to the early days of the pandemic in 2020...
As previously reported, Village Yokocho, Angel's Share and Panya closed in the other spaces in April 2022. Sunrise Mart also shut down in a separate building next door on the second floor.
This post has more background.
Monday, November 20, 2023
Demolition underway on the fire-damaged Middle Church façade
The top 3 photos by Jacob Ford; the rest via Derek Berg
Workers today began to remove the remains of Middle Collegiate Church's fire-damaged façade at 112 Second Ave. between Sixth Street and Seventh Street... the first day of what is expected to be a two-to-three-month job...
This afternoon, around 3:30, church leaders and members of the Middle community gathered to mourn the sanctuary that they called home.
"This is a really important day," said the Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis (above and below in the red hat), the church's senior minister. "The beginning of something new but the end of something old."
As previously reported, church leaders said they must remove what remains on the property within the East Village/Lower East Side Historic District. According to a report commissioned by the church, the culmination of an 18-month review, there was too much damage to the existing structure to integrate it into Middle Collegiate's new home, that it wouldn't withstand a full-scale rebuild on the property.
The church structure was destroyed during a six-alarm fire early morning on Dec. 5, 2020. The fire reportedly started inside 48 E. Seventh St., the five-story residential building that once stood on this corner. FDNY officials blamed faulty wiring at the under-renovation No. 48 and said the fire had been deemed "non-suspicious."
By December 2024, officials hope to create a new worshiping space for up to 225 people in a two-story structure adjacent to the church and their property at 50 E. Seventh St.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Help for the family of Ommatt Cruz, who died Friday in the East Village
On Friday morning, 19-year-old Ommatt Cruz died in a construction accident at First Avenue and Seventh Street. He was struck by a mobile hydraulic lift operated by his father while attempting to guide him onto a flatbed truck in the busy intersection.
Cruz, from the West Brighton neighborhood of Staten Island, attended Susan E. Wagner High School. The school's Football Parents Club is now collecting funds to help the devastated family pay for funeral expenses.
Ommatt was also a dedicated and loving brother to his 14-year-old brother and 9-year-old sister. To our boys on the Wagner Falcons Football Team, he was a brother. To the parents and coaches, his family is our family. He was always there to help others; he was selfless. He was in his first year of college, and would still find time to come out on the field and help out with his younger brother on the JV team. We would like to help his family with unexpected expenses due to this horrific tragedy.
You can find the GoFundMe at this link.
Image via GoFundMe
At the grand opening of El Rinconcito on Avenue C
Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy
El Rinconcito opened Friday in its new home at 73-75 Avenue C between Fifth Street and Sixth Street.
The reasonably priced Latin American restaurant closed in the summer of 2021 at its home of 27 years at 408 E. 10th St. between Avenue C and Avenue D. (The building on 10th Street was undergoing a gut renovation.)
And after some Con Ed-related delays, the new space was finally able to open.
Owner Pedro Rodriguez and his family said that they were thrilled with the support from the community while waiting to open ...
The staff was happy to be up and running...
... as well as patrons who filled the space for dining in or taking out...
So far, the best-sellers are the (new) fettuccine a la vodka con camarones (shrimp) and Irma's mofongo ...
Hours of operation for now: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. Closed on Sundays.
If you're on Instagram, you can follow them there. Or the old-fashioned way: (212) 254-1381.
Apartment fire temporarily shutters Scarr's Pizza on the Lower East Side
A fire on Friday in an apartment directly above Scarr's Pizza has temporarily closed the popular pizzeria on Orchard Street.
Paper-plate signage on the front door breaks the news to patrons...
There weren't any reports of injuries (or the cause, for that matter) ... only one window in the building just below Hester is currently boarded up. There also weren't any posted vacant notices on the front door to the residences. So hopefully the damage isn't too extensive.
You can keep tabs on the Scarr's Instagram account for updates.
This past summer, Scarr Pimentel moved to this larger space from across Orchard.
Scarr's is usually in the conversation for NYC's best pizza accolades (here and here)... in April, Pete Wells at the Times included Scarr's in his list of NYC's 100 best places to eat.
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