Sunday, December 24, 2023

When it was time to light up the clocks on the bell tower at Most Holy Redeemer

Photos and video by Stacie Joy

Last evening, Timothy Cardinal Dolan, archbishop of New York, presided over a mass and ceremony to dedicate the newly restored bell tower at Most Holy Redeemer/Nativity Parish on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B. 

The four clocks on the tower that reaches 232 feet have been in disrepair for the past two-plus decades.

Outside, parishioners and residents gathered as Cardinal Dolan blessed the bell tower ... and the clocks were to be illuminated for the first time.
There was a countdown to the big moment... then an awkward pause and some chuckles as it took a moment for the lights to come on...

   

The four clock faces on the circa-1851 church will now be illuminated...
You can read more about the church's history and the restoration project in the links below...

Saturday, December 23, 2023

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Lola Sáenz 

Happy holidays from Pompeyo at the great Zaragoza Mexican Deli & Grocery, 215 Avenue A between 13th Street and 14th Street...

Something to strive for this holiday season

Photo by Stacie Joy 

Seen at the Union Square Greenmarket today...

Reports: State directs Mount Sinai to stop its closure of Beth Israel

ICYMI: The New York State Department of Health has ordered Mount Sinai to "immediately stop" the closure of its Beth Israel campus on First Avenue at 16th Street. 

"Continuing to close beds without approval is unlawful and may result in civil penalties of $2,000 per day for each day that the beds or services are closed without approval," wrote Stephanie Shulman, director of the Division of Hospitals and Diagnostic and Treatment Centers at the health department, to Elizabeth Sellman, Beth Israel’s president and CEO. 

The letter also said the department would pursue other remedies, such as a court order, if the closures don't stop.
Background: 
Mount Sinai submitted a proposal to the state health department in October to close Beth Israel by July 2024. The health system then submitted an addendum last month saying it would be necessary to close some services before the end of the year because of an exodus of doctors and decreased patient volume, which it said put patient safety at risk. 
Reaction: There is also a survey for community members to let the New York State Department of Health know how important the community hospital is... and why Beth Israel needs to be be saved. Find the survey here.

Reminders: A ceremony for the restored bell and clock tower at Most Holy Redeemer

ICYMI ... 

There's a dedication ceremony this evening for the recently restored bell and clock tower at Most Holy Redeemer/Nativity Parish on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.

Timothy Cardinal Dolan, archbishop of New York, will preside over a 5:30 p.m. mass and ceremony featuring a procession on Third Street (the block will be closed to traffic during this time).

Cardinal Dolan will bless the bell tower, which will be illuminated for the first time. The new electronic carillon system will also play a rendition of "Silent Night." Then, the bells will play Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music in its entirety. 
Previously on EV Grieve:

Saturday's opening shot

You're in luck if you need a last minute 50-foot (or so!) tree... outside St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery this morning... where the Tree Riders are wrapping up another holiday season (no. 13!) on Second Avenue between 10th Street and 11th Street.

Friday, December 22, 2023

Friday's parting shot

Always a solid holiday window display, the Sock Man, 99 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue...

Have yourself an etc., etc.

 

A version of a holiday song that maybe you aren't tired of yet (and isn't by, say, Wham, the Waitresses, Paul McCartney & Wings ... all fine classics, but.)

This is a cover of "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas" by the Beths... (The Cat Power cover is great too.)

Hold your horses, we're posting these photos!

Top photo yesterday by Cecil Scheib; pic below by Steph 

We received LOTSA photos of these horse sculptures ... first arriving on Sixth Street at Second Avenue... and now overnight on Sixth Street between Avenue A and First Avenue...
One reader said these are the work of Deborah Butterfield ... updated: Franco Cuttica

... and hopefully, we didn't just spoil someone's Christmas surprise!

Spiritualized: End of days for High Vibe on 3rd Street; 'I would like to stay open!'

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

The end is near for High Vibe after 30 years at 138 E. Third St. Street between Avenue A and First Avenue.

Robert "Bobby" Dagger, owner of the health/natural foods and goods store, plans to close on Dec. 31 after a rent hike courtesy of the landlord, the NYCHA, and an underwhelming response to a crowdfunding campaign

Everything is marked to go inside the small, comfortable shop...
Dagger said that he owns $40,000 in rent to NYCHA. The lease was up in October, and the business has been running month-to-month. 

He tried local City Councilmember Carlina Rivera's office, though that didn't lead to anything. "They were nice but didn’t provide any help," he said. 

So now what? 

"If I got $40,000, I can stay open. I would like to stay open! NYCHA raised my rent during COVID and only gave me three months of concession," Dagger said. "NYCHA doesn't care about small businesses. For 30 years, I paid taxes here. We're a link in the chain here, keeping America alive. I'm all for immigrants, but what about us? We're paying taxes for these people."
The shop is open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. for now... and they may shut down before Dec. 31. 

Previously on EV Grieve: 

Thursday, December 21, 2023

Thursday's parting shot

Photo by Lola Sáenz 

A favorite moment on Thursday evenings outside Village East by Angelika on Second Avenue and 12th Street — the changing of the letters on the marquee...

(Sweet??) 16

Above: A joke from Sophie's a few years back

The first post arrived on this platform on Dec. 21, 2007, at 5:48 p.m., which research later showed is one of the worst times of the day to post items on platforms like this. 

ICYMI (and 99.999999999% of people did), the item was a cut-n-paste from Page Six about the possible sale of Sophie's (Fifth Street!) and Mona's (Avenue B) ... and before Josie's (Sixth Street) was part of the family. 

I'd spent some time at Sophie's and couldn't imagine an EV world without it. So, like any once-a-week bar regular would do, I created a Blogger site called Sophie's Bar Blog blog (honest, that's what the name was)... as a way to chronicle the sale of Sophie's (sorry, Mona's) and the possible end of its several-decades existence. 

After a few weeks of under-the-radar chronicling on a site that no one was reading, we learned that Bob, the owner of the bars, was selling them to his brother Richard and another friend (hi, Kirk!). 

That was that, or so I thought. Now I've told this story a few times, so if you've already read it, I'll make some shit up to make it seem more interesting than it actually was. 

I announced the end of Sophie's Bar Blog blog. [Crickets] Vanishing New York author/blogger Jeremiah Moss somehow had seen the site (thanks, Google!), and he encouraged me, just because Sophie's and Mona's were going to be OK, to keep the site going, covering other comings and goings. 

So Sophie's Bar Blog blog was rebranded to EVG (I give this site six months!). And here we are 16 years after the first post. 

Two people recently told me they started reading the site in high school and were in their late 20s/early 30s. Which is really cool and obviously terrifying.

A sincere thank you to everyone who has read the site and continues to read it, sharing comments and tips and creating a sense of community. 

A BIG thank you to everyone who contributes to the site, particularly Derek Berg and Steven, for their ongoing daily dispatches... and to Stacie Joy for her intrepid reporting from bell towers, abandoned schools or former motorcycle clubs

May your holidays be filled with warmth, peace, and joy ... and had we created an Etsy account 16 years ago, Sophie's Bar Blog blog T-shirts, hoodies, and customizable tabletop beer pong games.

Home for the holidays: The East Village Community Cookbook is ready for pre-order

Need a last-minute gift idea? The East Village Community Cookbook is now available for pre-order.

As EVG's Stacie Joy first reported in August, the cookbook was the idea of three East Villagers who bonded during the pandemic — Will Kroeze, pastor at Trinity Lower East Side, Dan Hyatt, a middle school teacher, and Will Horowitz, a chef and author who co-founded Ducks Eatery and Harry & Ida's Meat and Supply Co. 

The final product includes more than 100 recipes from an array of local restaurants (C&B Café, Katz's, Nom Wah Tea Parlor, Russ & Daughters, SMØR, Superiority Burger, and Veselka, among many others) and residents (Alan Cumming and Richard Hell, to name two). 

Donations for the East Village Community Cookbook start at $30. Proceeds will benefit Trinity Lower East Side Services and Food for the Homeless (SAFH) and community fridge on Ninth Street and Avenue B. 

Per the organizers: "Each pre-order comes with a certificate of purchase to send as a quick holiday gift to a loved one!"

You can pre-order a copy here.

A mass and inauguration for the new bell tower at Most Holy Redeemer

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

There's a dedication ceremony this Saturday evening for the recently restored bell and clock tower at Most Holy Redeemer/Nativity Parish on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.

Timothy Cardinal Dolan, archbishop of New York, will preside over a 5:30 p.m. mass and ceremony that will feature a procession on Third Street (the block will be closed to traffic during this time).

Cardinal Dolan will bless the bell tower, which will be illuminated for the first time. The new electronic carillon system will also play a rendition of "Silent Night."
Previously on EV Grieve:

No more love for Cinnamon Girl on 2nd Avenue

Photo by Lola Sáenz 

We're closing the book on Cinnamon Girl at 73 Second Ave. between Fourth Street and Fifth Street. 

The cafe-bakery has been closed since late summer... (we were keeping an eye on the gradually rotting apples in a refrigerated unit inside the front door) ... and most recently someone finally began to remove the contents of the interior. Google now lists them as Permanently Closed.

Opening in November 2021, this was the first Manhattan outpost for the Brooklyn-based business with several shops in that borough.

Openings: Chick-N-Smash on 1st Avenue

Photo by Pinch 

The Chick-N-Smash outpost is open at 231 First Ave. between 13th Street and 14th Street. 

The quick-serve establishment is currently offering a spicy chicken sandwich, a smash cheeseburger, or chicken tenders plus fries, and a can of soda for $8.99. Posted hours: 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 

Not sure who's behind Chick-N-Smash (it seems like a one-off place and not part of a chain) at the moment.

As previously noted, this is the latest business for the storefront in the past 12-plus months. Tony's Famous Pizza closed late last year ... then came signage for Deli Convenience in the spring... which turned into Dispensary ... before the same signage for Deli Convenience returned by late May. Their grand opening lasted a few months.

Vinny Vincenz had a solid run here for 18 years until the spring of 2021.

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Wednesday's parting shot

Holidays on Fifth Street (between First Avenue and Second Avenue)... always good for the lights.

New Yorkers Foodmarket is closing soon on 2nd Avenue

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Updated 12/30: The grocery now appears to be closed.

New Yorkers Foodmarket will shut down in early January on Dec 31 now at 107 Second Ave., owner Michael Schumacher confirmed. 

Schumacher, 63, who lives in the neighborhood, said that the grocery store's lease was up in August, and he has been operating without one since then. Although landlord NYU provided a six-month rent concession, he's not in any financial position to negotiate a new lease for the 38,000-square-foot space between Sixth Street and Seventh Street.
Business has dwindled recently, and new competition like the Wegmans nearby on Astor Place hasn't helped. 

Schumacher, who teared up several times during our conversation, cited some ongoing health issues that have prevented him from putting in the hours necessary to make the business more profitable. He also doesn't have any money to hire staff. His cashier, Rosa, is the sole employee.
When a crowdfunding campaign is mentioned, Schumacher flatly refuses the idea. 

He is vocal about the space staying as a supermarket, where one has been since 1974. He and his brother Steven bought the business in 1987 when it was an Associated before changing it to Met Food. (There were some tense moments in 2008 when Met Food's future was in jeopardy.) In 2014, it became New Yorkers Foodmarket following the bankruptcy of the previous food coop (White Rose) the Schumachers were part of. 

"I'm here to give it back to the community. I have no personal guarantors, I have no more money," he said. "NYU has a commitment to the community to leave a supermarket on site. A younger person could come in and set up. It needs to be less transactional and more about the community."

For now, he's looking at a Jan. 4 closing date. Schumacher would like people to buy up whatever stock is left, and he believes he'll put merchandise at 50% off soon.
He also points out that all the machinery, refrigerators, and cases are in working order and well-maintained. (Schumacher renovated the grocery in 2011.)

As we started our conversation at the store yesterday, an unhoused man approached Schumacher at the deli counter and asked him for some food, specifically milk or yogurt. Schumacher gave the man his change bags of coins — between $20 and $30 — and told him to buy whatever he needed. 

"I put my life into this store," Schumacher said. "The community here has been my family."

A new name and expanded space for Downtown Threads on Avenue A

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

The recently opened Downtown Threads is ready to expand at 66 Avenue A between Fourth Street and Fifth Street. 

Owner Angel Ramirez has changed the name to Angels on A... and will move part of the operation to the space that was, most recently, the Halloween pop-up shop at 70 Avenue A.

No. 70 will be a buy, sell, and trade shop ... where you can bring your vintage, high-end luxury, one-of-a-kind thrift and designer stuff to be sold for cash or traded for store credit. (There isn't any consignment.) The new space is slated to open next week.
Meanwhile, Angel plans to create more room at 66 Avenue A by removing some walls. 

He says he'll continue "to keep prices reasonable." New merchandise will be added daily.
You can also enter a free raffle at the store for a Chanel jacket, a Dior or Louis Vuitton suitcase or $500 in store credit...
Downtown Threads opened in the fall. Angel also runs Cafe Social 68 on the block.

Petopia close to reopening on Avenue A

Photos by Stacie Joy 

After nearly four months of repairs, Petopia is expected to reopen at 29 Avenue A at Second Street next week. (Updated: Opening date is Dec. 26 at 11 a.m.)

Workers have been restocking the shelves here...
Signage on the storefront noted the closure was so "the landlord can perform emergency repairs to the ceiling in our store."

Workers have been doing roofing and façade-repair work in the city-owned First Houses on Avenue A between Second Street and Third Street.

The Petopia outposts on 14th Street between Avenue A and First Avenue and Third Avenue at 29th Street have remained open.