Sunday, January 12, 2025

Week in Grieview

Posts this last week include (with a photo by Derek Berg on 2nd Avenue) 

• Why School for the Dogs abruptly closed in the East Village (Tuesday

• Tompkins Square Park upgrades: When will the field house and restrooms reopen? (Monday

• Reader report: Car crashes into Blink Fitness on Avenue A; driver flees (Monday

• Reflections on owning and closing The March Hare on 9th Street (Friday

• These 3 East Village venues are hosting concerts to benefit L.A. wildfire relief efforts (Saturday) ... Both Emma locations accepting clothing donations (Sunday

• Barn fire temporarily KOs a Tompkins Square Park Greenmarket favorite (Sunday

• Signs of construction life at former East Village parking garage that will yield to condos (Wednesday

• What are they now? The fate of several unlicensed cannabis shops in the East Village (Monday

• About the free activities for people 60+ at the John Paul II Friendship Center on 7th Street (Wednesday)

• Sunday Morning will sell cinnamon rolls every day of the week on Avenue B (Tuesday)

• 2025 development watch: 360 Bowery, future home of Chobani House (Friday

• Openings Fomo Momo on First Avenue (Friday) ... Sinsa on 2nd Avenue (Friday)

• Signage alert: Alison on St. Mark's Place (Monday

• Core workout: New building prep on 1st Avenue and 2nd Street (Wednesday)

•  Some history of a now-vanished 3rd Avenue block (Sunday)

• Coffee at the Holiday Cocktail Lounge (Wednesday

• Where to still find a curbside dining structure on the Lower East Side (Friday)

• Arnold Schwarzenegger filming Amazon MGM's holiday movie 'The Man With the Bag' in the East Village (Sunday

Barn fire temporarily KOs a Tompkins Square Park Greenmarket favorite

Photo by Steven 

Samascott Orchards, a regular presence at the Tompkins Square Park Greenmarket on Sundays, suffered a barn fire this past week (Jan. 7) on their Columbia County farm.

While everyone is OK, their property suffered extensive damage, and the sellers of apples, strawberries, potatoes, ciders, and more will not attend any greenmarkets until further notice.

[SEE UPDATE]You can donate clothes to victims of the L.A. wildfires at the 2 LES locations of Rogue

1/13 update: Due to an overwhelming response, Rogue will no longer accept donations...

---

The two outposts of Rogue are accepting gently used clothing donations through Friday to help Los Angeles residents affected by the wildfires. 

You can make donations (shirts, pants and hoodies of all sizes are ideal) at either location of the vintage clothing store from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.: 

 • 154 Allen St. between Stanton and Rivington 
 • 313 E. Houston St. between Clinton and Attorney

Arnold Schwarzenegger filming Amazon MGM's holiday movie 'The Man With the Bag' in the East Village tomorrow

Photos by Steven 

Crews for Amazon MGM's holiday movie, "The Man With the Bag," will film in parts of the East Village tomorrow.

We've spotted filming notices along Avenue A from Seventh Street to 10th Street... and St. Mark's Place, Ninth Street, and 10th Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue...
The plot for the action comedy, per IMDB: "When Santa's magic bag is stolen, he turns to his naughty list to find Vance, a former thief, to help him get it back." 

Arnold Schwarzenegger plays Santa and "Reacher"'s Alan Ritchson is Vance. (The production has been filming around NYC in recent weeks.) 

And thinking about other large-scale shoots in the neighborhood in the last 30+ years... Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson filming on Avenue A and Tompkins Square Park for 1995's "Die Hard With a Vengeance."

   

Also, Keanu Reeves and Al Pacino at Most Holy Redeemer on Third Street for 1997's "The Devil's Advocate" ... and Sean Penn and Nicole Kidman on 10th Street/Stuyvesant Street for 2005's "The Interpreter." What else?

Saturday, January 11, 2025

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Stacie Joy 

Meet Bash, the new puppy that belongs to Will Kroeze, pastor at Trinity Lower East Side...

These 3 East Village venues are hosting concerts to benefit L.A. wildfire relief efforts

Three East Village music venues are hosting benefit concerts on Jan. 27-29. Proceeds will benefit L.A. wildfire relief. 

Details via Instagram
The New York music scene is coming together to raise funds for the fallout caused by the devastating Los Angeles wildfires. Taking place January 27th through 29th, this event promises to be an unmissable convergence of music and community action.

Each night's ticket proceeds will go directly to mutual aid efforts providing resources, support, and relief to those affected by the fires. In addition to live music, there will be DJ sets, tattoos, raffles, and more. Full lineup TBA. Any ticket purchased will be honored at all venues day of show, capacity allowing. 
The venues:
• Berlin, 25 Avenue A 
• The Bowery Electric, 327 Bowery 
• Heaven Can Wait, 169 Avenue A 

Ticket info here.

Reminders: It's Chipping Weekend

Tree escapee caught on 14th Street

In case you missed our previous posts on the topic, Chipping Weekend (aka MulchFest) is happening in Tompkins Square Park. 


The Parks Department will mulch up the assembled Christmas trees from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today and tomorrow. 

You may take a bag of mulch home "to use in your backyard or make a winter bed for a street tree."

Danny & Coop's Cheesesteaks is open today (Saturday)

Danny & Coop's is back this weekend for another pop-up, opening today at noon. (They opened yesterday at 5 p.m., in case you were wondering about the line around the block.) 

As previously reported, actor-filmmaker Bradley Cooper teamed up with Danny DiGiampietro, the owner of Angelo's Pizzeria in South Philadelphia, for the venture at 151 Avenue A between Ninth Street and 10th Street. 

And Philly cheesesteaks are the only thing on the menu (aside from maybe sodas and bottled water). 

Now with signage, the shop is expected to open full-time in the weeks ahead. 

Previously on EV Grieve

Friday, January 10, 2025

'Sunset' now

 

Local band Rebounder is working on a new album... and heading out on a short tour with JW Francis.

Rebound plays at Public Records out in Gowanus (tickets here) this coming Thursday (Jan. 16). They'll be on around 9 p.m.

The above video is for the band's most recent single, "Sunset Vision."

Reflections on owning and closing The March Hare on 9th Street

Photo by Ilana Wiles 

In April 2022, writer Ilana Wiles bought The March Hare at 321 E. Ninth St. between First Avenue and Second Avenue... taking over the whimsical toy store from the founders, who had to step aside for health reasons

The shop was around the corner from where Wiles, the founder of the blog Mommy Shorts, and her family lived. 

Wiles has announced that The March Hare is closing on Jan. 31.

"There will be a new shop taking over," she told EVG in a message. "We did not want to leave until we knew something was taking its place."

In her newsletter, Apparently, Wiles, who now lives in Tribeca, wrote about what brought her to this point.

Here are some excerpts: 
I knew this day would come eventually (I was anticipating some time in the spring), but as it turns out, our last day in this location will be January 31st. That’s because we decided to go month to month until the landlord found new tenants and he happened to find them rather quickly, which is a testament to how much different this block feels than when we first took over The March Hare a little over two and half years ago, in an effort to keep our neighborhood from having another small business with a closing sign on the door and cardboard covering the windows. The eagerness of the new tenants symbolizes to me that the March Hare has served its purpose, we fulfilled our promise to keep it going for the good of the community, and it has all come to its natural end. 

When we bought the shop in April of 2022, we did it for three reasons. The first, and most pressing, was to help out the previous owners who were a young married couple [Jason McGroarty and Karen McDermott] facing a health scare. They needed consistent capital to pay for their medical bills, which the toy shop did not provide. Selling the shop to us did just that. 

Plus, we let them phase out their inventory while still collecting income, helped fundraise for them through my online platform, and were happy to have them stay involved through part-time work for a paycheck. Since then, Karen's health has vastly improved and she is doing great. Jason now has a full-time job and has moved on. Everyone is happy and healthy.

The third reason [for buying The March Hare], which was probably the biggest ... was our desire to do something good for our community ... It was post-pandemic, and it felt like our city was falling apart. Families we knew were leaving left and right, mom-and-pop shops were closing at an alarming rate with nothing taking their place, and personally, we were feeling pretty isolated, as a lot of people were at that time. It was a time when we were rethinking our priorities and eager to make positive changes. 

Everyone said that buying the March Hare was a bad business decision, but we countered that it wasn’t about the money. It was about the community. And that’s how I elicited support from you all— buying something from the shop was not just a way to support me, it was a way to help keep small businesses alive in Manhattan. 

But then, something pretty wonderful happened over the course of these last few years— new shops started to open all around us on East 9th Street ... East 9th Street between 1st and 2nd Avenue is now a thriving block full of unique independent small businesses, so asking for support to help the March Hare stay open “for the good of the community” started to feel a bit disingenuous. The March Hare was just like any other business — it needed sales for our bottom line, which never did more than break even. 

I have always said that buying the shop was for the community. I meant NYC. But you showed me that my real community is so much broader than my neighborhood. We come from all over the world. I love you all. Thank you for supporting me through this chapter. 
The March Hare opened in November 2020. It carried on the tradition of Dinosaur Hill, the 37-year-old toy store on the block where Karen McDermott had worked. Dinosaur Hill closed in 2020 after owner Pamela Pier retired. 

As for a possible next iteration of The March Hare, Wiles is keeping her options open — perhaps continuing to exist online or as a pop-up.

2025 development watch: 360 Bowery, future home of Chobani House

As noted this past October, the new 22-story office building on the SW corner of Bowery and Fourth Street will house one tenant: the NYC-based Chobani, LLC, a food and beverage company initially known for its Greek yogurt. 

The company is expected to occupy the building — aka Chobani House — by the end of this year. 

Previously disclosed details from a company rep: 
Chobani House will be home to its global business headquarters with employees working in office four days a week, a community kitchen preparing nutritious meals for those in need, an innovation center supporting Chobani's business and also bringing together global food scientists to advance solutions to help eradicate hunger, and an incubator lab for emerging NGOs and non-profits who are focused on social impact. 

The over 120,000-square-foot building will include an "experiential retail space" and other organizations connected to Hamdi Ulukaya, Chobani's founder and CEO.
Someone also recently tagged the building on the Fourth Street side — the first tag that we recall seeing here.
Foundation work started on the new building in the summer of 2022. The lot was previously home for 26 years to B Bar & Grill.

Openings Fomo Momo on First Avenue

Photo of (from left) Ankita Nagpal and Impreet Sodhi by Michael Tulipan 

Fomo Momo opened several weeks ago at 85 First Ave. between Fifth Street and Sixth Street. (First reported here.)

Owners Ankita Nagpal and Impreet Sodhi, who grew up in Northern India, started selling momos (a type of steamed or fried dumplings) at a pop-up at Smorgasburg after developing and testing their own recipes. Encouraged by the response to their Indian-style street food, they launched a food truck in Jersey City in 2023.

The East Village is home to the pair's first restaurant (there's a location for pick-up and delivery in Jersey City). 

The EV menu includes sandwiches, bowls, and snacks in addition to various momos. Because someone will ask, a restaurant rep told us they offer vegan and vegetarian options, including plant-based chaap nuggets (the soy-based chaap is a popular South Asian meat substitute).

Hours:
Tuesday-Thursday and Sunday: 4-11 p.m.
Friday-Saturday:  4 p.m.-1 a.m.

If you're on Instagram, you can find the Fomo Momo account here.

Openings: Sinsa on 2nd Avenue

Image via @sinsanyc 

After a soft opening on Dec. 3, Sinsa officially opens this evening at 95 Second Ave. between Fifth Street and Sixth Street. 

This Korean American wine bar is a sister restaurant to Rice Thief.

Per Instagram, Sinsa "honors traditional meals our mothers once prepared. At Sinsa, we continue this tradition by crafting a culinary experience that combines flavors from our childhood with the diverse influences of American culture through Anju — a Korean tradition of sharing small & big plates and drinks with good company."'

Find the menu here.

We first mentioned this pending arrival in April when the business received administrative approval from CB3 for a beer-wine license for the space. 

Rice Thief started as a delivery service specializing in Korean crab dishes. 

Some background on Rice Thief 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. 

Their first restaurant debuted in Long Island City earlier this year. 

Hours: Tuesday - Saturday from 5-11 p.m.

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

Where to still find a curbside dining structure on the Lower East Side

An abandoned curbside dining structure remains on Ludlow at Rivington on the Lower East Side. 

It sits outside Bel-Fries, though we haven't seen anyone use it in... years. 

Restaurants were to remove all the streeteries by Nov. 30 as part of the new Dining Out NYC program. The DOT oversees the outdoor dining program and will fine a business $500 on the first offense and $1,000 for each violation until structures are removed. 

It's not immediately clear why this abandoned small structure remains in place. This is the only one we’ve seen left in this area. Has anyone seen others around NYC? 

Under the city's new guidelines, enclosed, year-round roadway dining structures are no longer permitted. The revised regulations stipulate that roadway cafes must now be open-air, easily portable, and simple to assemble and dismantle. Additionally, these establishments are restricted to operating only from April through November. (Sidewalk cafes are permitted year-round.)

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Signs of construction life at former East Village parking garage that will yield to condos

On our 2025 development watch list: The former Little Man Parking garage (aka LaSalle Parking) on Ninth Street between Second Avenue and Third Avenue. 

The property changed hands last spring for a residential conversion. We haven't seen any activity here in the past year. 

On Monday, however, an EVG tipster shared these photos, noting some construction activity on the site...
The power is back on, too, as the parking sign is blinking once more...
There are partial demolition permits on file. Part of the existing structure will be used (for residential parting, natch) in the conversion and vertical enlargement of five to six floors for residential use. 

The 74-foot-tall building will include 31,231 square feet of residential space — 18 units and likely condos, as NYY previously pointed out. Colberg Architecture is the architect of record, per public notices. 

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

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 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" in August 2023.

Core workout: New building prep on 1st Avenue and 2nd Street

Photo by Steven 

A Davey Drill is now in the house on the lot, taking core samples ahead of construction on the NW corner of First Avenue and Second Street. 

There are now approved (as of early December) work permits for a 7-story residential building with ground-floor retail. According to DOB paperwork, the building will be 19,278 square feet, with 2,994 square feet designated for commercial space. Plans call for 22 residential units, likely rentals based on the square footage. 

This EVG post provides more background on the former 33-37 First Ave assemblage. This post has a schematic showing the new building.

The new building uses the address 88 E. Second St., a development to watch in 2025.

About the free activities for people 60+ at the John Paul II Friendship Center on 7th Street

The John Paul II Friendship Center offers recreational and educational programs for residents 60 and over.

The Center is hosting a free fitness class starting Thursday at 11 a.m. You don't need to sign up in advance; just show up at the Center, 103 E. Seventh St., between Avenue A and First Avenue. (It is adjacent to St. Stanislaus.) 

There is also a Healthy Drumming class starting on Jan. 17 at 11 a.m.
There are also free hot lunches weekdays at noon...
JP II is part of the Polish and Slavic Center. You can find more info here.

Coffee at the Holiday Cocktail Lounge

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

Back in November, The Holiday Cocktail Lounge announced that it was opening at 8 a.m. for coffee and breakfast items in a new venture titled Holiday Coffee Lounge

We're always looking for a stress-free coffee option. As you undoubtedly noticed, the rise of hybrid and remote work has turned coffee shops into impromptu offices during the week. People camped out for hours, laptops open, and long coffee cups empty. Our favorite: the people taking part in Zoom/Teams meetings in a crowded space. (This is above my pay grade, so let's put a pin in this until we can get our ducks in a row and get buy-in from upstairs!)

Balancing a café's role as a workplace and a welcoming space for all has become a pressing challenge. (Maybe have no laptop hours?) 

Given that some of our favorite places can be overrun during the week, we decided to check out the morning service here at 75 St. Mark's Place between First Avenue and Second Avenue. 

During two recent visits, there were plenty of open tables...
The daytime service features espresso from local Superlost Coffee, tea and juice, pastries, croissants, mini beignets, breakfast items, and sandwiches. There's also free Wi-Fi. 

We also tried the grilled cheese for lunch (solid!).
The Holiday serves coffee from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. when the liquor service starts. 

For now, the place remains a safe haven for those seeking a quiet retreat during the day... (and sorry if we blew up your spot with this post!).

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Why School for the Dogs abruptly closed in the East Village

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Last Thursday, Annie Grossman had no choice but to shutter School for the Dogs, the business she started in her East Village living room in 2011, with little to no warning to her longtime patrons and staff. 

She said a potential sale to another local pet services operation fell through at the last minute, leaving her and the business in financial ruin. 

As she wrote in an Instagram post, "The reality is that there is the business owner you want to be, and then the business owner you sometimes end up having to be." 

How did a beloved local business run by a lauded female entrepreneur reach this point? 

I talked with Grossman over the past few days, and she discussed what led up to the painful decision.
She launched the dog-walking and training service from her living room on Third Avenue and immediately faced adversity when her home was destroyed in a fire. 

After a successful fundraiser, Grossman opened a shop at 155 E. Second St., just east of Avenue A. As her business flourished, she moved to a larger space at 92 E. Seventh St. near First Avenue in 2018. This space was double the size of the Second Street studio and included a yard, room for merchandise and a consultation room.
While the relocation increased her rent from $4,000 a month to $11,000, business was going well, and School for Dogs could handle the boost in rent and expenses. 

"Even with the onset of COVID, we still did well," she said. "We were doing important work for people and dogs, helping people get excited about dog training and helping people and dogs to learn together. It was a labor of love." 

There was "not a ton of margin, but [we were] still making it," Grossman said. 

However, by 2022, the thin margins became problematic with unexpected expenses.

"You can only lose so much money. I took out loans, used my credit cards, and had decent advisers," Grossman said. "Then the A/C blew, and it was $12,000 to replace both the units in the space, and I had no more cushion." 

Other expenses piled up, such as $20,000 in roof repairs that the landlord had her responsible for and money she didn't have. 

Now carrying debt, Grossman discussed the situation with a fellow business owner in the pet services community. Grossman said the woman would take on most of the debt and negotiate the lease. 

They agreed on a Nov. 30 closing date and that the new owner would still honor the previously purchased group classes, packages, and bookings. 

According to Grossman, the potential new owner never showed up at the attorney meetings and ghosted her before she finally received a "typo-riddled email" that said, "In essence, we're no longer interested in the opportunity." 

Grossman had no other backup plan. "I feel like I've been had; I feel like I've been left at the altar." 

Problems online 

Grossman was also battling on a second front. Her online business was sued for not conforming to ADA standards. She said she was the victim of an "ADA shakedown" via a frivolous lawsuit that she needed to heed. 

"Because this was pending litigation involved in the online shop," she could pay them to settle or shut down the site. She chose the latter and announced just before Christmas that the online store was closing to focus on School for the Dog's core business and "consolidate to create a tighter ship for the new owner." 

By Jan. 2, without the new ownership in place, the Seventh Street storefront was dark as well.
In conversations over the weekend, Grossman said she has no assets and is completely out of money. She paid her staff through the current pay period but had nothing for severance. 

She said she feels awful about the abrupt closure and how it affected her employees, trainers, and customers. 

Grossman said she would love to have someone take over the business and is "completely open to any situation" that involves keeping School for the Dogs going. 

"Start out doing something you love, end up doing something that doesn't speak to the skills that brought you there," she said. 

Below is the Instagram message about the closure from Sunday...

Sunday Morning will sell cinnamon rolls every day of the week on Avenue B

Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy

Chef-restaurateur Armando Litiatco (above) is opening a cinnamon roll shop called Sunday Morning at 29 Avenue B between Second Street and Third Street. 

Litiatco owns Rana Fifteen in Park Slope and was the chef at FOB Filipino, which recently closed in Cobble Hill. 

He'll offer different flavors of cinnamon rolls here. He's targeting Jan. 19 as a soft-opening date. Updated: No word on an opening date just yet.

The previous tenant at No. 29, Tea Dealers & Ceramics, moved to a larger space last May.