2 — Avenue B at Ninth Street
3 — 10th Street between Second Avenue and Third Avenue
4 — 11th Street near Second Avenue
5 — Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue
The buildings at 19-23 St. Mark’s Place are an excellent example of how the East Village has changed over time from a wealthy merchants neighborhood to a landing spot for immigrants, to the launch pad for numerous counterculture and artistic movements. Where else would one find a building which had been townhouses for wealthy families, a ballroom, a gangster hangout, a Polish wedding chapel, and a performance venue with the Velvet Underground as the house band?
The competitions tend to be hastily organized, pay out almost nothing to the winner and probably will no longer be a thing in a month. But the boisterous gatherings are big parties that double as a way to find a date who looks like your celebrity crush. And unlike going to see an Elvis impersonator, there's always a chance the real guy shows up.The best look-alike subjects, organizers and attendees said, are internet darlings with somewhat achievable physical appearances and the influence to pull a large crowd. Being an A-lister is not a must. Thanks to social media, even niche or relatively new stars can command a fervent following.
Looks like an adult, but I'm not sure who it is. Definitely not Christo (not his coloring), but it could be one of the Washington Square hawks who have become mysterious. They did not nest in WSP last year, but no one knows if they nested somewhere else or not. Union Square was always part of their territory and they'd often perch on the Con Ed building lantern on 14th Street. That pair is different now than the ones Roger Paw blogged about, so their habits are not really known.
Businesses enrolled in the program had to either conform their set-ups to city's new designs to get the extension to Nov. 29 or take down their old-set-ups on Nov. 1. Many opted to simply give up their street seating sooner rather than set up new streeteries for just a few weeks.The city required restaurants to either apply for the permanent program or take down their sheds by early August, which caused the first wave of restaurant demolitions. Those that did sign up for the new program had to bring their roadway set-ups in line with the new design guidelines by Nov. 1; all street seats must come down by Nov. 30, even if they've been updated.