Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Openings: Yokox Omakase on Avenue B

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Yokox Omakase debuted at 41 Avenue B between Third Street and Fourth Street this week.
They offer a 15-course omakase dinner for $89. (Additional rolls/pieces may be possible if the chef isn't too busy.) 

The owners are waiting for the liquor license to arrive. At that time, they plan to offer a sake menu. 

Hours: 
Monday through Thursday, 5-10 p.m. 
Friday, 5-11 p.m. 
Saturday, 3-11 p.m. 
Sunday, 3-10 p.m. 

Reservations and more info are on the Yokox Omakase website here.

On the April CB3-SLA docket: The Onion Tree Pizza Co. on 1st Avenue

A Long Island-based restaurant known for serving some unique pizzas is opening an East Village outpost.

Jay and Raquel Jadeja, a husband-wife team, plan to debut an outpost of The Onion Tree Pizza Co. at 214 First Ave., on the SE corner of 13th Street, this spring. 

The owners are on this month's CB3-SLA docket for a beer-wine license but will not be appearing before the committee. (They have received administrative approval based on the method of operation, a beer-wine license for a previously licensed space that will primarily be a restaurant and not a bar.)
The restaurant out in Sea Cliff on the North Shore serves traditional (and not-so-traditional) pizzas, including a chicken tikka masala. (The menu is available here.)

The questionnaire on file at the CB3 website shows that The Onion Tree Pizza Co. plans to have daily hours of 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. ... with 16 tables accommodating 36 guests.

Koko Sushi was the most recent tenant in this corner space.

Thanks to Pinch for the second photo!

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Noting

The porta-potty triplex that arrived in Tompkins Square Park yesterday is unlocked and ready for action. 

Despite not receiving hazard pay, EVG correspondent Steven opened one of the unoccupied portaloos and noted it was already a little messy and not a breath mint, comb or mint toothpick in sight. 

More background on the port-potty situation here.

Lower East Side legend Sammy's Roumanian Steak House announces its reopening dates

Get ready to break out the schmaltz: Sammy's Roumanian Steak House has announced its return to the Lower East Side. 

For two nights this month (April 22-23), Sammy's will be at its new home, 112 Stanton St., between Essex and Ludlow ... before service on every Friday and Saturday in May. From June on, Sammy's will be open daily.

Per their return notice:
Exciting announcement! Sammy’s is making a comeback and we couldn’t be happier to return to the Lower East Side. Huge thanks to our loyal customers and fans for keeping the Sammy's spirit alive over the years.

We're kicking things off with a two-night Passover special, followed by weekends in May leading up to our grand reopening in June. Enjoy entertainment featuring the one and only Dani Lev, along with our original menu and staff.
Sammy's closed in early January 2021 after 47 years of serving up ice-encased vodka, smeared pitchers of schmaltz and enormous platters of meat from the lower level at 151 Chrystie St.

The restaurant had been shuttered since the PAUSE of March 2020, and this wasn't a business ready-made for delivery or outdoor dining.

In an Instagram post at the time, owner David Zimmerman left the door open for a return.
We may be closed now, but when all this is over and we feel safe enough to hold hands during the hora, we will be back stronger, louder, and tastier than ever before. We are New York. We will survive this. We will always cherish the memories we shared with all of you.
Last May, as we first reported, Community Board 3 approved an application for 191 Orchard St. between Houston and Stanton. 

We're not sure what happened with the Orchard Street space ... as previously mentioned, it had been vacant for nine years and needed a lot of work to bring it into service. Apparently, the Sammy's team needed to move on from the location.

You can make reservations at the new location by calling (646) 410-2427.


Welcome back, Sammy's!

Vacated 9th Street parking garage fetches $14 million for likely residential conversion

The Little Man Parking garage (also known as LaSalle Parking) on Ninth Street between Second Avenue and Third Avenue has sold for $14 million.

According to public records and the TradedNY accountArcus Development, operating through Astor Nine LLC,  is the new owner of the vacant property. 

While Arcus hasn't revealed its intentions, Crain's noted that the property "seems poised to become luxury housing."
The garage has been closed since late April 2023 after the Department of Buildings issued a vacate order on the property following the deadly collapse on April 18 at the Little Man garage on Ann Street in the Financial District.

Per the DOB vacate order: "The occupied parking structure with concrete framing observed to be in a state of disrepair at several locations in cellar level... crushed column base observed at several locations in cellar level ... vertical cracks observed inside elevator shaft and on masonry walls."

The address was offered as a "redevelopment project" last August

So far, no demoliton permits are on file with the DOB for the 22,000-square-foot structure. (No new building permits either.)

Budget Car Rental and Tori-Bien, a restaurant that specialized in Japanese fried chicken, were also forced to leave their retail spaces at this address due to the vacate order.

Why the International Bar has been closed

Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy 

You may have noticed that the International Bar at 102 First Ave. near Sixth Street has been closed recently.

The iBar folks tell us that they have an active liquor license and an A rating from the NYC Health Department (public records confirm this). However, they are waiting for the city to process some unrelated paperwork before they can reopen. 

The bar hopes and plans to be back soon. "The International Bar family cannot wait to get back to serving the East Village community. We miss you!" 

Keep an eye on the iBar Instagram page for updates.

Monday, April 1, 2024

Monday's parting shots

A look at the recently completed mural on the NE corner of Avenue A and Sixth Street (alongside Offside)... the work is by LeCrue Eyebrows...

What a relief: Portable toilets return to Tompkins Square Park

Updated April 2: The toilets have been unlocked!

Hopefully, this isn't an April Fool's Day joke! 

This morning, workers brought in a truck full of porta-potties for Tompkins Square Park. (Thanks to EVG reader Lauren G. for the photo!)

The busy 10.5-acre park had been without toilets since Jan. 9, when city workers carted off the three porta-potties from their temporary home near Ninth Street and Avenue A.

At the time, sources told us that the previous porta-potties were constantly trashed and not really the most fun things to use. So, the thinking was, Why replace them with more only to meet the same fate?

So, in the past three months, anyone who needed to answer nature's call did so in nature, including in, on and around the playgrounds, causing a stink among residents. (Photo below from this morning via our friends at the De Colores Community Yard.)
As previously reported, the restrooms in the Tompkins Square Park field house are closed due to an 18-month (or so) renovation that began last May. The porta potties arrived around the same time ... before an August 2023 relocation.

In February 2023, a Parks official explained that temporary toilets were not part of the contract "and cannot be supplied during construction." The alternative for public use during this period: The restrooms at the McKinley Playground on Fourth Street between Avenue A and First Avenue adjacent to P.S. 63/the Neighborhood School — roughly a seven-minute walk.

By March 2023, though, Community Board 3 noted that porta potties would be on-site after all. 

According to the Parks Department website, work at the field house is 34% complete, with an anticipated wrap-up date of September 2024.

Updated 5 p.m. 

There are three port-potties... located near the ping-pong table by the field house... the two line green models are actually called Key Lime Restroom...
Per the Callahead website
The KEY LIME RESTROOM is designed with bright key lime coloring specially for waterfront and seaside locations. The KEY LIME is another design by Charles W. Howard, CALLAHEAD's President & CEO, to add to the long list of specialty designed restrooms to look amazing and add value to any location. The Rockaways, City Island, Long Beach, Manhattan Beach, Coney Island, Jones Beach, Brighton Beach, the Hamptons, Fire Island and Montauk are just a sample of where the KEY LIME RESTROOM is a popular rental.
And Steven notes the grand opening must be at a later date — all three latrines are padlocked...

Turn it up: East Village Radio returns this spring

ICYMI: There won't be any more radio silence at 19 First Ave.

This spring, East Village Radio will return to its former storefront studio on First Avenue between First Street and Second Street.

According to an EVR Instagram post, the space has been cleaned, and the new equipment and wiring are expected to be installed this week.
East Village Radio had several iterations, the first ending in May 2014 after an 11-year run. At the time, EVR CEO Frank Prisinzano, the restaurateur who owns Frank, Supper and Lil' Frankie's, said licensing fees and Internet costs were too onerous, especially with a surging listener base. 

EVR returned for another year-plus-long go-around, this time on a new platform, in June 2015. 

Prisinzano will use a different business model this time and will rely on sponsors. As he told the Post, operational costs for broadcasting music have decreased in the streaming age. 

"It was such an amazing thing, and I really hated having to close it down, but I was bleeding money like crazy," he said. 

EVR 2024 (and beyond!) will have veteran program director Brian Turner, formerly of WFMU, as station manager. 

In an Instagram post from March 8, Turner wrote: 
Needless to say the challenge of jumpstarting this legendary storefront studio and building its programming is a dream experience for me, and I think it's going to be a boon for independent radio, the neighborhood too. This place is legendary; so much cool stuff has happened in that 1st Avenue window. Some beloved hosts will return from its past history, some new exciting shows, right now we're reconstructing the space, working on backend, making plans. I'm stoked...
During its heyday, EVR, with DJs such as Mark Ronson and Andy Rourke of the Smiths, counted more than 1 million listeners worldwide a month (this after starting as a short-lived 10-watt FM radio station in April 2003). However, under the Congressional Digital Music Copyright Act of 1998, Internet broadcasters had to pay a digital performance royalty for every listener.

Still, EVR was integral to the success of breaking new acts and giving airplay to musicians you might not have ever heard. The tiny street-level studio was also a popular draw, bringing in celebrated artists such as Richard Hell (below from 2014), among many others, through the years.
In-studio guests also included Amy Winehouse and Duran Duran (EVG photo below from 2010) ...
ICYMI 2: In 2016, EVG hosted several talk shows on EVR with great guests like Ada Calhoun, John Holmstrom, Godlis, Marcia Resnick, Marc H. Miller,  East Village-based illustrator Peter Arkle, and writer-editor Amy Goldwasser. 

You can sign up for email updates from EVR here.

Richard Hell photo for EVG by James Maher

On the April CB3-SLA docket: a Rice Thief outpost for the East Village

According to documents on the Community Board 3 website, Rice Thief, a celebrated delivery service specializing in Korean crab dishes, is opening a restaurant at 95 Second Ave. between Fifth Street and Sixth Street.

The CB3-SLA committee meeting is scheduled for April 8, though Rice Thief reps will not appear before the group. (They have received administrative approval based on the method of operation, a beer-wine license for a previously licensed space that will primarily be a restaurant and not a bar.) 

Some background on the business from a January post by Eater: 
Richard Jang, alongside his mother, Jong Sook Jang, and girlfriend, Haiqi Yu, started the business in the fall of 2022, specializing in soy-marinated crab that's hard to find in New York, known as ganjang gejang, as well as seafood stews, and rice. The service — which has drawn a waitlist — started at his home, before relocating to a Sunnyside, Queens ghost kitchen. 
On Dec. 26, Rice Thief announced that it would be opening a restaurant in Long Island City. Meanwhile, in an Instagram post from Dec. 26, TradedNY reported that Rice Thief had signed a lease for 95 Second Ave. (Rice Thief hasn't mentioned the EV location as of yet.)

In an Instagram message last evening, Rice Thief confirmed they'd be opening in the East Village and Long Island City.

According to the CB3 questionnaire, the EV Rice Thief will be open daily from 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. ... with seating featuring 16 tables for 32 guests. 

No. 95 was most recently Thailand Cafe, which did not reopen following the pandemic PAUSE of March 2020.

Weekday lunch service begins today at Superiority Burger on Avenue A

Superiority Burger will now be open for lunch Monday through Friday, noon to 3:30 p.m. 

With the extended hours comes new menu items for the all-vegetarian diner-restaurant-hang, including grilled cheese and house fries.

Since debuting one year ago (April 1!) at 119 Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place, SB slowly started extended hours... with weekend breakfast-lunch service beginning in November

New lunch hours aside: 
• Dinner seven days a week: 5-11 p.m. 
• Lunch-breakfast Saturday and Sunday: 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. 
• Night shift Thursday-Sunday back at the bar: 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. 

And some Superiority Burger history... the quick-serve spot opened — primarily a to-go operation — in the East Village on Ninth Street in June 2015. News of their move to a larger space — the former Odessa — on Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place arrived in the summer of 2021

Previously on EV Grieve

A new pizzeria for the former pizzeria at 36 St. Mark's Place

As the pizzerias turn at 36 St. Mark's Place.

Cellos has been added to the existing Pizzeria signage here between Second Avenue and Third Avenue. This development comes as an applicant is on this month's CB3-SLA docket for a beer-wine license for the address. (The applicants have already received administrative approval.) 

The questionnaire isn't online, so we don't know more about the new owners.

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Updated: The questionnaire lists the operator as Larry Kramer, who owns Whitman's on Ninth Street (and Hudson Yards).

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A little pizzeria history here... Funzi's opened late last June and aspired to be an East Village throwback with a 1970s-80s decor modeled after owner Kevin Cox's grandmother's house. 

Cox left the business in November ... taking the Funzi's name with him for a new version of the pizzeria in another EV location. (Funzi's was named after the youngest of Cox's three sons.) We never heard anything more about a new spot for Cox.

After Cox departed, the business pivoted to St. Marks Pizzeria... with a message on its website noting, "Same Pizza. Same Chef's. Same Location. New Name." This post-Funzi's concept went dark in December, and paper went up on the front windows several weeks ago.

You can see where the new operators simply put Cellos over where Funzi's was on the sign... and the post-Funzi's version below (both pics last year by Stacie Joy)...
Cellos marks the ninth food establishment at No. 36 — St. Marks Pizzeria, Funzi's, Oh K-Dog & Egg Toast, Joe's Steam Rice Roll, Cheers Cut, Friterie Belgian Fries, Fasta and the $1.50 branch of 2 Bros. Pizza — since 2015

Signage alert: Lilly's Shakes & Crepes on 1st Avenue

Photo by Steven 

An outpost of Lilly's Shakes & Crepes is opening this spring at 186 First Ave. between 11th Street and 12th Street. 

As the name implies, the shop sells a variety of crepes, smoothies, coffee drinks and fresh-squeezed juices. 

The outpost on Avenue C opened in early 2021... Google also lists locations on Eighth Avenue and 10th Avenue. (The 494 on this sign likely relates to the Lilly's on 494 Eighth Ave. address.)

H/T Lola Sáenz

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Sunday's parting shot

The early afternoon sky as seen today from Fourth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B...

6 posts from March

A mini month in review (with a photo from 7th Street by Derek Berg) ...

• Greenpoint hit Taqueria Ramírez is opening an East Village outpost (March 28

• 1st sign this spring of the wisteria on Stuyvesant Street (and that townhouse is for sale!) (March 26)

• Bella McFadden bringing her iGirl brand to the East Village (March 21

• 2 East Village residents 'shaken and scared' after assault inside their building (March 18

• The NYPL's archive of the legendary East Village Eye now available to the public (March 12

• Veselka looks to ease back into a 24/7 schedule starting with weekends first (March 4)

Happy Easter!

It's a nice day today to clean the house and discard the Christmas wreath... photo from 7th and B today by Robert Miner.

Updated 7 p.m.

And someone discarded two trees on Seventh Street alongside Tompkins Square Park (thanks to Steven for the photo) ...

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a photo from 3rd between B and C)... 

• NYPD: Suspect arrested in connection with the 2 recent shootings in Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday)

• Greenpoint hit Taqueria Ramírez is opening an East Village outpost (Thursday

• 1st sign this spring of the wisteria on Stuyvesant Street (and that townhouse is for sale!) (Tuesday) ... Walking on Stuyvesant Street in the rain (Sunday)

• Marking the 113th anniversary of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire (Monday

• This non-fiction reading series in the East Village turns 10 on Monday (Wednesday

• A look inside Trader Joe's Pronto, now open on 14th Street in Union Square (Wednesday

• A journey into the COZMOS on 10th Street (Friday

• Good Friday on Avenue B (Saturday

• Remembering Tim Lomas (Saturday

• Checking in on the former mucky tree well on Avenue A (Tuesday

• 'Orson’s Shadow' at Theater for the New City (Wednesday

• Tribes of Morocco relocates to a larger storefront on 9th Street (Tuesday

• Coming soon to the East Village: No More Cafe, 'a haven for alcohol-free celebration' (Monday)

• Openings: The Commodore on Avenue C (Friday) ... Yummy Hive on 2nd Avenue (Monday

• Kolkata Chai Co. closed for renovations until April 1 on 3rd Street (Monday

• Spa treatment (Thursday)

• About a sustainable Salon No. 17 (Wednesday

• Signage alert: Utshob Restaurant on 1st Avenue (Thursday

• Art Gotham is the new tenant for the landmarked 4 St. Mark's Place (Monday

... annnnnnnnnnnnnd! (Background!)
... and a reader shares the tiniest tree that we may have ever seen discarded... on 14th Street this past week ...
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Follow EVG on Instagram or X for more frequent updates and pics.

Sunday's opening shot

The magnolia tree in the New York City Marble Cemetery on Second Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue is close to full bloom...

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Stacie Joy 

A happy second birthday to Remedios (center in rainbow hat) celebrating today in Tompkins Square Park! 

P.S. 

To the Parks Department, local elected officials, et al. Please do something to bring back portable toilets to Tompkins. Gone since Jan. 8.

Good Friday on Avenue B

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Once again on this Good Friday (yesterday!), parishioners from St. Brigid-St. Emeric on Avenue B took part in a Stations of the Cross processional that started outside the church on the SE corner of Eighth Street ...
The solemn walking pilgrimage — symbolizing the path Jesus walked to Mount Calvary — continued to 12th Street... east to Avenue C... south to Seventh Street. 

This year's journey to the cross seemed a little more intense. (For instance, one of the Roman guards had a 6-foot-long bullwhip.)
... and eventually back to the church...
Sunday services are at 10 a.m. in English and noon in Spanish.