Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Celebrating 30Palooza at The Children's Workshop School

The Children's Workshop School is celebrating 30 years at 610 E. 12th St. between Avenue B and Avenue C. 

And if you're looking for some last-minute plans... the school is celebrating with a 30Palooza tomorrow (Wednesday!) evening from 6-10. The invite promises a night of food, dancing and celebration with a very special performance by Lisa Lisa!" (Lisa Velez, the vocalist of the late '80s chart toppers, is the sister of principal and founder Maria Velez-Clarke.) 

Find ticket — and donation — info here.

D.A. Bragg announces indictment of suspect in 2 March shootings In Tompkins Square Park

Photos from March 21 by Stacie Joy 

Manhattan D.A. Bragg yesterday announced the indictment of a suspect for two shootings in Tompkins Square Park last month. 

According to the D.A.'s office, the accused, 38-year-old Waldemar Alverio, faces multiple charges, including three counts of An Attempt to Commit the Crime of Murder in the Second Degree and two counts of Assault in the First Degree. 

On March 16 at 12:45 p.m., two men allegedly chased, punched and kicked Alverio. As they ran off, Alverio unzipped his bag and pulled out a gun, firing at them five times, per court documents. 

Alverio struck one of the two men in the buttocks, fracturing his pelvis and lodging a bullet in his hip. Alverio also shot a bystander, a 53-year-old tourist, fracturing her right hip, which had to be surgically replaced. Per the D.A.'s office, "she will require months of physical therapy as she learns how to walk again." 

Five days later, on March 21, Alverio allegedly returned to Tompkins Square Park just after noon, approached a group in the park, and shot at them five times. 

While Alverio did not strike anyone on that day, one bullet smashed through a window into a bedroom in an apartment building across Seventh Street, and another bullet smashed through a window and lodged in a stairwell in a second building on Seventh Street. 
"Our parks should be a place where New Yorkers and tourists can relax without fearing for their safety," Bragg said in a statement. "Combatting gun violence remains my top priority, and my Office will hold those who commit these serious acts of violence accountable. I hope the victims continue to heal from their wounds." 

On March 26, officers from the 7th Precinct, who recognized Alverio from a wanted flyer, arrested him on Delancey Street. 

The charges against Alverio:
• An Attempt to Commit the Crime of Murder in the Second Degree, a class B felony, three counts 
• Assault in the First Degree, a class B felony, two counts 
• An Attempt to Commit the Crime of Assault in the First Degree, a class C felony, one count 
• Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree, a class C felony, two counts 

Yesterday, in the New York Supreme Criminal Court, Judge Laura A. Ward ordered Alverio, who pleaded not guilty, held without bail. According to public records, his next court date is June 24.

La La Laundry looking for some help after 3 weeks without gas

Multiple EVG readers have reported that La La Laundry — and the whole building on the NW corner of 11th Street and Avenue B — has been without gas for their dryers since March 26. 

Management explained what happened: 
[O]n March 26th, a routine maintenance task took a harrowing turn. An elderly mechanic, entrusted with welding duties in our boiler room, suddenly felt unwell, prompting a call to 911. Responders, fearing a gas leak, urged the shutdown of the boiler's gas supply. 

However, a fateful misstep by a Con Ed worker resulted in the cessation of gas to the entire building, despite NO leak being found within our premises. 

What ensued was a three-week ordeal, a labyrinth of bureaucratic red tape and financial strain. We, the stalwart team of La La Laundry, found ourselves thrust into a whirlwind of regulations and demands with NO support from our building management. Every resource was poured into compliance efforts, draining our coffers and leaving other bills in limbo. 
They hope a Department of Buildings inspection today will result in a Revised Gas Certificate (aka, Blue Card) for service restoration. 

Back to management: 
But even as we prepare to reopen, a new challenge looms large: the daunting specter of financial recovery.  
We had envisioned La La Laundromat not merely as a business but as a sanctuary — a place of solace and community spirit. Yet, the road ahead is fraught with uncertainty. It is with humility and gratitude that we turn to you, our cherished patrons, for support in our time of need.
La La Laundry, a business that includes a plant store and a cleaning service, launched a GoFundMe on Sunday. You can find the link here.

Monday, April 15, 2024

Something for Joey

This morning from the Bowery and Second Street — aka, Joey Ramone Place.
Ramone, an East Village resident, died on this day (April 15) of lymphoma in 2001. He was 49. 

And from 1996, Joey and Marky announce on the Howard Stern Show that the Ramones have retired...

 

At the march to Save Beth Israel

Photos by Daniel Efram 

On a windy and overcast Saturday afternoon, a united and determined group of some 75 people gathered to march, demonstrating their commitment to restore services at Mount Sinai Beth Israel. 

The hospital has reportedly been suspending services and moving staff out of the facility on 16th Street and First Avenue without proper approval from the New York State Department of Health.

According to Politico, hospital officials were "increasingly transferring seriously ill patients suffering potentially life-threatening emergencies to other hospitals in the city because they need procedures that are no longer being made available at Beth Israel." 

Earlier this month, the NY State DOH said the closing plans were "incomplete" — "sending hospital leaders back to the drawing board," per Gothamist

Friends and supporters of Beth Israel met at Abe Lebewohl Park on 10th Street and Second Avenue and marched to the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary on 14th Street and Second Avenue, where services have also reportedly been slashed.
The Community Coalition to Save Beth Israel and the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, which organized the march, are asking that Mount Sinai leadership meet with elected officials and other community leaders to craft a plan to preserve hospital care for the 300,000-plus residents who live and work in Lower Manhattan.
There's a petition to save Beth Israel at this link.

Mount Sinai Beth Israel executives have stated that the closure is an unfortunate necessity due to the system's staggering financial losses, which have exceeded $1 billion in recent years. 

As previously reported, the 799-bed teaching hospital was proposed to close on July 12, 2024. 

The Marshal has seized Atomic Wings on 1st Avenue

Photos by William Klayer 

The Marshal has taken possession of the retail space at 184 First Ave., home of Atomic Wings here between 11th Street and 12th Street. 

The legal notice, dated April 9, states that the landlord is now in possession of the storefront...
As always, this doesn't mean the end for the business.  

While the phone is no longer in service, the EV location is still accepting orders via its website (which prompted a few recent 1-star reviews from diners who never received their wings).

And as noted, there are plenty of wing options on First Avenue between St. Mark's Place and 14th Street (Dan and John's and Buffalo Wild Wings remain after Koko Wings closed ... plus, there's Wingstop around the corner on 14th Street between Avenue A and First Avenue.)

Openings: Gnocchi on 9th (on 9th)

Photos by Steven 

Gnocchi on 9th debuted on Saturday at 315 E. Ninth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue (the former Verameat boutique space). 

We haven't had a chance to check out the to-go (no dining in) goods and varieties of gnocchi just yet...
Daily hours: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.

You can follow the shop on Instagram here.

Cakes by Klein takes 102 St. Mark's Place

Photo by Steven

Window signage has arrived for Cakes by Klein, the new tenant for 102 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue. 

In 2021, Hanna Klein quit her job as director of packaging design at e.l.f. Cosmetics to launch her own custom cakes and cookies business (moving up from more of a side hustle). 

Klein relocated here from a previous space down on Cherry Street.

According to an Instagram post, the EV shop will open in early June — after Klein gets married. (Is she designing her own cake? Not sure!

You can follow the shop on Instagram here for updates. 

The Avenue Cafe closed at this address last month after a five-month run.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Today in awkwardly phrased crime alerts on the Citizen app

This aftenoon on Third and The Bowery, per Citizen.

Week In Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a photo on 2nd Street near the Bowery)...

• RIP Debby Lee Cohen (Wednesday) and Patti Astor (Friday

• Today's solar eclipse with the Second Avenue Star Watchers (Monday) ... Watching the eclipse from 6th and B (Monday) ... Eclipse in progress on St. Mark's Place (Monday

• East Village tenants speak out against rollbacks to potential rent-stabilization laws (Tuesday

• East Village native Anna Colombia on pursuing photography and growing up in the neighborhood (Thursday

• The Lazy Llama Coffee Bar is opening 2 new outposts, including on 1st Avenue (Tuesday

• First sign of Wonder on Stuyvesant Street (Monday
 
• The renovation and expansion of 188 1st Ave. (Thursday)

• Dead again: Peter Jarema Funeral Home ad replaced by the Marvel Universe on 7th and B (Wednesday

• Protection for a tree garden on St. Mark's Place (Tuesday

• Demolition watch: The NW corner of 1st Avenue and 2nd Street (Monday

• Openings: Crispy Burger on 1st Avenue (Friday

• Pasta for the former Koko Wings on 1st Avenue (Wednesday

• On 2nd Avenue, Sunday Dreamin' on such a spring day (Tuesday)

... and here's a look at that freshly paved roadway on Avenue A (so far, the work has just been between Houston and Fourth) ...
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Follow EVG on Instagram or X for more frequent updates and pics.

Comings and goings at 3rd & B'zaar

Today (Sunday!) is the last day to shop the current iteration of 3rd & B'zaar at 191 E. Third St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. 

The retail space has been highlighting an array of local vintage sellers, designers and other indie merchants for the last year-plus here

Hours today: noon to 7 p.m., with a "shop-n-sip" scheduled from 5-7 p.m.

Stay tuned for info on the next vendors here, Lui & Lui.

Noted

Photo by Derek Berg 

As seen on Second Avenue and Sixth Street this morning... a Cyclomedia car with camera equipment.

A moment on Google reveals that the company provides Road Surface Analysis (as of last March):
Created in collaboration with Arcadis, Cyclomedia combined their high-resolution street-level panorama images and dense LiDAR point clouds with Arcadis' artificial intelligence algorithm. The unique collaboration resulted in a revolutionary new technology that can assess road surface damage by leveraging AI to recognize and provide the severity, extent, and classification of each individual road defect as well as a rapid ASTM-based Pavement Condition Index (PCI) and Overall Condition Index (OCI) score — all automated from behind a workstation. 
Hopefully, our scores will be high enough to take us to the next level...

Flipped out in Stuy Town

A flipped vehicle was reported early this morning on the Stuyvesant Town service road at the top of Avenue B. 

The Citizen app reported a person trapped inside. No other information was available. 

Daniel Root, who took the photo above at 5 a.m., noted that it's pretty wild anyone could get that much speed on that narrow roadway to flip a car like that...

Saturday, April 13, 2024

EVG Etc.: 2nd Avenue subway sidetracked again; 'Flaco's Law' introduced

From this past week, a new Mr. Monopoly mural by Alec Monopoly Art on the Bowery and Rivington.

• Man who forced his way into woman’s East Village apartment indicted for attempted sexual abuse (1010 WINS ... DA's office

• Model recounts beating he suffered outside the Little Sister Lounge at the Moxy East Village on 11th Street between Third Avenue and Fourth Avenue (PIX 11

• Keep dreaming about the Second Avenue subway to Houston Street (Gothamist

• Catholic Workers on Third Street bring new growth with rooftop garden (Religion News Service

• The Albanian cuisine of Dua Kafe on 14th Street between A and B (Washington Square News

• Robert Sietsema praises the fries now served at lunch at Superiority Burger on Avenue A (Eater... previously on EVG

• City Council introduces "Flaco's Law" that would change how the NYC mitigates its rat population (The City

• Spaghetti Ramadan at La Plaza Cultural tomorrow (April 14) (Instagram ... Time Out

• The films of Amsterdam-based Bosnian filmmaker Ena Sendijarević (Metrograph

• Different eras of comedy classics coming to City Cinemas at Angelika on Second Avenue and 12th Street — "His Girl Friday" (Monday) and "Animal House" (Wednesday

And...

Friday, April 12, 2024

A new 'Frontier'

 

Ride returns with its seventh album, Interplay, a solid mix of 1960s psych-pop and 1990s shoegaze. 

The (visualizer) video here is for the track "Last Frontier."

And Ride is playing out at the Warsaw on Dec. 6. Tix here

RIP Patti Astor

A march for hospital care in Lower Manhattan

The drama continues around the pending closure of Mount Sinai Beth Israel on First Avenue at 16th Street.

Last week, the New York State Department of Health said the closing plans were "incomplete" — "sending hospital leaders back to the drawing board," as Gothamist reported

Local elected officials against the closure responded to the news on April 3... Meanwhile, tomorrow, members of the Community Coalition to Save Beth Israel and the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary will meet at noon on 10th Street and Second Avenue  ... for a march to the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary on 14th Street and Second Avenue and then on to Beth Israel.
Mount Sinai Beth Israel executives have stated that the closure is an unfortunate necessity due to the system's staggering financial losses, which have exceeded $1 billion in recent years. 

As previously reported, the 799-bed teaching hospital was proposed to close on July 12, 2024. 

However, there have been reports that Mount Sinai Beth Israel has been suspending services and moving staff out of the facility without proper approval from the Department of Health.

According to Politico, hospital officials were "increasingly transferring seriously ill patients suffering potentially life-threatening emergencies to other hospitals in the city because they need procedures that are no longer being made available at Beth Israel."

An e-xcellent way to recycle your e-waste this Sunday on Avenue A

Time for some spring cleaning. 

This Sunday, you may bring your working — and non-working! — electronics to Tompkins Square Park for a recycling event hosted by the Lower East Side Ecology Center. 

The recycling occurs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. (rain or shine!) on Avenue A between Ninth Street and 10th Street. 

Items you may drop off: 
• Computers (laptops & desktops, servers, mainframes) 
• Monitors (CRT and flatscreen) Network devices (routers, hubs, modems, etc.) 
• Peripherals (keyboards, mice, cables, cords, chargers, etc.) 
• Tablets and e-readers Components (hard drives, CD-ROMs, circuit boards, power supplies, etc.) 
• Printers under 100 pounds, scanners, fax machines, etc.
• TVs, VCRs, DVRs, DVD & Blu-ray Players 
• Digital Converter Boxes, Cable/Satellite Receivers 
• Portable music players 
• Audio-visual equipment 
• Video-games 
• Cell phones, pagers, PDAs
• Telecommunication (phones, answering machines, etc.)

You may NOT drop off items such as Citi Bike docking stations and LinkNYC kiosks. The LES Ecology Center has info on what you CAN'T drop off here.

Openings: Crispy Burger on 1st Avenue

Crispy Burger has been in soft-open mode at 137 First Ave. between St. Mark's Place and Ninth Street for the past week... ahead of the official grand opening today. (Friday!) 

Some grand-opening deals include 20% off items during the opening week. (Details on Instagram.) 

And EVG reader Danimal shared a quick recap after a visit yesterday...
Pretty good chicken, fried to order, and really good mozzarella sticks, too. Chicken nuggets were crispy and nice texture inside. What McNuggets wish they could be! Prices are very reasonable. The woman at the register was super friendly and even offered us free beverages ...
This is the latest outpost for the chainlet, which also has outposts in Staten Island, Queens, New Jersey, and Jacksonville, Fla.

Thursday, April 11, 2024

East Village native Anna Colombia on pursuing photography and growing up in the neighborhood

Anna Colombia is an interdisciplinary artist born and raised in the East Village, where she still lives. 

Her most recent publication is "Make Shift Youth," a zine featuring 24 Riso-printed images and letterpress-printed text from her days in the neighborhood's punk scene.

Here, she discusses discovering photography, growing up in the East Village and finding inspiration today.
 
What sparked your initial interest in photography in high school? 

My high school experience was horrible, so I kinda stopped going after a certain point. My mom really wanted me to graduate and to enjoy learning, so she started trying to get me to take high school art classes at SVA. One of the first ones I took was an introduction to photography. I was hooked instantly by the magic of it all and learning how to use the darkroom.

Obviously, being in high school, I didn’t really know what to photograph, so I started by taking pictures of a lot of the graffiti around the neighborhood, and then naturally my friends and the punk shows I was going to. 

Were you known in the punk community as someone who always took photos? What was your initial comfort level with photographing people? 

 I always had a camera with me, but I don’t think I was ever seen as that person always taking pictures. My style of documentation has always been somewhat on the sly, with friends saying they never really knew I had taken certain pictures because it was always so natural.

There was another girl who sometimes hung out and who was always taking photos. She was the one everyone thought of as the photographer. Her collection has got to be amazing, but it always bothered me that she didn’t respect people’s wishes not to be photographed. I have always been very comfortable photographing people, because I have always only photographed the people in my life. 

While I love catching moments of my life through those around me, I also respect when people do not want to be photographed. 

Why did you decide to revisit growing up in the East Village punk scene with "Make Shift Youth"? 

Before COVID shut everything down, I had spent about two years slowly working, scanning all my negatives from high school and the years after. I hadn't looked at my high school photos in so long, and I was surprised by what I had, especially that the majority of them highlighted all these ladies in the scene... something I personally feel you don't see a lot of (or enough of) when it comes to documentation of "alternative" scenes. 

Then, the lockdown happened, and I had a lot of time to sit and play on the computer with the images at home. I had been applying for grants to publish another, bigger collection of photographs from my travels and decided maybe I should start with this collection since it was smaller and really what started it all. 

So, I began slowly working, putting together images I wanted to use for this zine. I had just discovered Riso as a print process, and I really loved the idea that instead of just showing the original images, I could manipulate them to become abstracted and color-blocked prints, combining the two things I love: photography and printmaking.
On the opening page of the zine, you wrote the date and then scribbled it out. Why did you decide not to list the years?

I like the mystery. 

How do you balance documentation and abstraction in your visual storytelling? 

I began publishing zines in high school about being female in the punk scene, using my photographs and words to tell this story. I have been publishing zines and art books for many years now, combining stories about my life with photographs and printmaking. While I really wanted to show these photos, I didn't want to take away from them by visually adding any text or talking about them. 

As a printmaker, my work focuses on abstracting an image and allowing those who see the work to create their own narrative. When I started putting the photos I wanted to print together, I could already see how I wanted to abstract a few of them: extending aspects of the image or cutting out the parts I thought were important. I wanted the narrative to flow from page to page through composition, colors and shapes. 

You were born and raised and are still living in the East Village. Did you ever live elsewhere... or at least consider it? 

 I traveled a lot for a long time, riding trains and hitchhiking, but that's a different story and a whole other body of photo work I'm hoping to one day publish. The East Village has always been my home. 

Why have you decided to stay here? 

This neighborhood and city have changed so much, I honestly don't know anymore. 

How does your environment in the East Village continue to inspire or influence your creative process?

Growing up in the neighborhood was definitely one of the things that started me on the path of the work I make. As a kid and teenager growing up in the East Village, I experienced things a lot of people might not have. My mom is an artist too, so that also helped me see and interact with my surroundings in a unique way. 

I grew up playing in Tompkins and the 6th and B Garden, got in trouble for taking hypodermic needles to show and tell that my friend and I found in the concrete playground of P.S. 19... long before it became what it is now. I drank at Mars Bar when I shouldn't have, and got to go to shows at CBGB and Coney Island High.

All these experiences have shaped who I am today and fueled all my early work. The neighborhood has changed, gentrification and rising rents have priced out all the things I grew up with and loved. And while I do find some inspiration still walking down the streets, I find a lot of what inspires my new work comes from the time I spend traveling across the U.S. and other countries. 

I understand you have a treasure trove of photos. What else from the archives might you feature next? 

I would love to do maybe two or three more volumes or even have a show of the actual photographs. I’ve thought about doing one volume of only photos shot at punk shows...mosh pits, mohawks and a sea of hair dyed in all the colors of the rainbow. 

My real dream, however, has been to publish a photo book of the collection of images I have from after high school, traveling around and across this country for years. 

And did you ever replace your mom's Canon Rebel that you destroyed with beer while in high school? 

We had to get it fixed... she was not happy about that (it was kinda a loaner from her job). I think at the time, I also told her someone at the show spilled beer on it (not me, of course). 

My mom saw how much I loved photography and later bought me a smaller, more pocket-friendly (for my lifestyle) camera, which continues to be my favorite camera to shoot with.

You can find her Etsy shop here.