Saturday, March 1, 2025

RIP David Johansen

Updating: Report of a fatal shooting at Tom & Jerry's on Elizabeth Street

Updated with reader photos from this morning 
The post has been updated as new information has become available

Updated 3/11: Tom & Jerry's has started a crowdfunding campaign for the victim, Anton Albert. Story here. Contrary to earlier reports, Albert was not a bar employee.

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A 39-year-old man was reportedly shot and killed early this morning inside Tom & Jerry's on Elizabeth Street near Houston. 

The Daily News reports that the victim was a bouncer inside the bar. SILive reports that the victim, Anton Albert, lived on Staten Island. 

An updated version of the story claims that "the shooter was drunk and had just been ejected from the bar when the bullets started flying."

Per an updated News article:
"They kicked him out and he went outside, and just pulled out a gun," said Kevin Ames, who was visiting a friend who lives upstairs from the bar when the shooting occurred. "[He] shot in the window and killed one of the bouncers."

The gunman was last seen on Houston. No arrests have been made, police said. 

Anyone with information that could help the investigation is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or submit tips online. All calls are confidential.

Report: Judge orders temporary stay on Beth Israel's March 26 closure

Late yesterday, an appellate judge issued a new temporary stay on Mount Sinai's plans to shut down Beth Israel. 

This ruling arrived five days after a state Supreme Court judge dismissed a lawsuit seeking to block the facility's closure. 

After Judge Jeffrey Pearlman tossed the lawsuit filed by a community coalition this past August, Mount Sinai announced Beth Israel's closing date of March 26. 

Mount Sinai reportedly moved quickly to empty the hospital on First Avenue and 16th Street. The coalition's pro-bono lawyer, Arthur Schwartz, claimed this week that "every one of the 80 or so admitted patients has either been discharged or transferred to other Mount Sinai facilities. The Intensive Care Unit has been closed. The Cardiac Catheterization Unit has been closed. Ambulances have been notified to not bring patients to Beth Israel because no one is being admitted," per Our Town

A Mount Sinai spokesperson confirmed to Gothamist that as of Thursday afternoon, "there were no in-patients at the hospital and all in-patient services had ended,” Riegelhaupt said. "As planned, our [emergency department] remains open and will remain open until closure." 

As Gothamist reported: "Justice John Higgit put the stay in place pending a determination on the case by a panel of judges." 

Mount Sinai officials have said Beth Israel lost $1 billion in the last decade due to dwindling cash reserves and reduced bed counts. 

Beth Israel was founded in 1890 on the Lower East Side and moved to its current location on 16th Street and First Avenue in 1929.

Saturday's opening shot

March getting underway today as seen from Seventh Street and First Avenue... the morning clouds will give way to mostly sunny skies with highs in the mid-to-upper 50s... enjoy, because its back to the 30s (temps) tomorrow.

Friday, February 28, 2025

Feb. 28

Ending the month with a Christmas tree discard on 14th Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue... thanks to Rob Frankel for the photo!

In the 'City'


We continue to highlight indie acts performing at this year's New Colossus Festival, which will take place in East Village and LES venues from March 4 to 9. 

Here is the darkwave-synth pop of Coatie Pop with "City Song." 

The NYC-based duo will perform on March 8 at 10 p.m. at the Bowery Electric on a bill featuring EVG favorites Genre Is Death.

Find Festival info here.

6 posts from February

A mini month in review (with a photo from the Tompkins Square mini pool — and yes, Tompkins has a mini pool)... 

• The Cinnabon/Carvel combo shop is now OPEN on 14th Street (Feb. 26

• Mount Sinai Beth Israel will close on March 26 after judge dismisses lawsuit (Feb. 25

• A longtime East Village bar and restaurant owner turns 100: 'Life is beautiful' (Feb. 20)

• A bar dedicated to women's sports is opening on the Bowery (Feb. 19

• Bella’s passing marks another sad chapter in East Village fire tragedy (Feb. 9

• Now Now NoHo set to debut its micro hotel rooms in April on the Bowery (Feb. 3)

Too pissed for punctuation

Photo by Stacie Joy 

Moving time in the EV (and elsewhere). 
Leave my packages alone 
and thanks to whoever took my
packing tape for my move its 
fucked up

Concern grows for Christo, Tompkins Square Park’s iconic red-tailed hawk, missing for 2 weeks

Photo of Christo from the EVG archives

Concern is growing over the whereabouts of Christo, the male resident red-tailed hawk of Tompkins Square Park. 

According to Goggla, the photographer who has documented the hawks and other wildlife for the past 11-plus years, he has been MIA for the past two weeks. Her last photo of Christo came on Feb. 14, and he has not been spotted since. 

We posted a photo of a hawk in Tompkins on Feb. 21, mistaking it for Christo. In fact, it was a new male red-tailed hawk who had taken up residence here. 

Here's more via a post from Goggla:
I wasn't around the park very much the week of the 17th, but what ever happened took place some time between February 14 and 21. By the 22nd, Amelia was documented mating with another hawk, who was also working on the nest. As this is expected behavior for this time of year, I didn't notice right away that something was wrong. It was only after I checked some of my photos that I saw the hawk mating with Amelia was not Christo. 
I consulted with another hawk watcher and photographer who also had photos of the new hawk. Christo has dark eyes, brown stripes on his legs, and a particular belly band pattern. This other hawks has bright yellowish eyes (young), no markings on the legs, and a different belly band pattern. I tried to tell myself that maybe the sun made the eyes look different, but the legs of these two hawks are very different. 
There is a possibility that Christo is out there somewhere, but the fact that another hawk is mating with Amelia and working on their nest makes this unlikely.
In February 2020, Christo got caught in an airshaft on Seventh Street after chasing a pigeon. Thanks to some residents and Ranger Rob, he was rescued. 

We’re hoping for Christo's return, but with each passing day, it seems less likely.

Thursday, February 27, 2025

Thursday's parting shot

Thanks to EVG reader Mark H. for this photo from 7th and B...

The New Museum, with a 60,000-square-foot expansion, will reopen this fall on the Bowery

Today, officials at The New Museum announced that its 60,000 square-foot building expansion on the Bowery at Prince Street will debut this fall. 

This will also mark the reopening of The New Museum, which has been closed during the construction of the building next door, designed by OMA/Shohei Shigematsu and Rem Koolhaas in collaboration with Cooper Robertson. 

Here's more about the expanded space via the EVG inbox: 
Complementing the New Museum's existing architecture, the OMA-designed expansion will appear distinct on the outside while being seamlessly integrated on the inside. The new seven-story building will double the Museum's gallery space, aligning ceiling heights on the second, third, and fourth floors for uninterrupted connectivity across both buildings. The OMA design will improve vertical circulation for visitors through the addition of an atrium stairway, which will offer views of the surrounding neighborhood and the opportunity for site-specific art installations, as well as three additional elevators, two of which will be dedicated to gallery access. 

On the ground level, the Museum's enlarged lobby will feature an expanded bookstore as well as a full-service restaurant, while just outside a new entrance plaza will create an open-air venue for public art installations at the terminus of Bowery and Prince Street. On the Museum's upper floors, the new building will include a dedicated studio for artists-in-residence [and] a 74-seat forum... 
And about the inaugural exhibition:
 Continuing the New Museum's long history of presenting provocative and timely thematic exhibitions, "New Humans: Memories of the Future" will inaugurate the expanded building with an exploration of artists’ enduring preoccupation with what it means to be human in the face of sweeping technological changes. 

Spanning the entire Museum, New Humans will trace a diagonal history of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries through the work of more than 150 international artists, writers, scientists, architects, and filmmakers, highlighting key moments when dramatic technological and societal changes spurred new conceptions of humanity and new visions for its possible futures. 
Here are some EVG photos from earlier this month showing the work in progress...
The Times today has more on all this here.

Previously on EV Grieve

This longtime convenience store has closed at 124 2nd Ave.

Top photo by 2ndAvenueSilverPanther
2nd photo by Steven 

Village Convenience closed its doors yesterday at 124 Second Ave. between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place. 

Workers cleared out the space, marking the end of an era for the longtime business. (One neighbor said the space has been a convenience store under various names since the mid-1970s.)
There have been signs of distress lately, starting with the store's closure during usual business hours and reopening with a 50%-off sign on the storefront. 

While there were unfounded reports that the store lost its license to sell cigarettes and lottery tickets (a lucrative piece of business) after selling to a minor, no official confirmation has surfaced.

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Wednesday's parting shot

Must be the season... thanks to EVG reader James Chambers for this photo from Tompkins Square Park today...

50 years gone

EVG reader MP shared this photo of rock-history hotspot 96-98 St. Mark's Place. 

This week marks the 50th anniversary of Led Zeppelin's double studio album Physical Graffiti

And as you may know... per Village Preservation
Led Zeppelin immortalized the twin tenements at 96 and 98 St. Mark’s Place between First Avenue and Avenue A on the Physical Graffiti album cover. The award-winning design featured the two buildings (with the fourth floors removed to make them fit the square shape of the album cover) with the windows cut out to reveal the letters of the album title printed on the inner sleeve, or, if the sleeve was reversed, a series of images of different characters seeming to occupy the building, including lead-singer Robert Plant in drag. 
The building's rock history also includes the stoop at No. 96 ... where Mick Jagger and Keith Richards met up at the start of the 1981 video by the Rolling Stones for "Waiting on a Friend." (And more recently by The Hard Quartet!) 

The building also houses the basement tea shop Physical GraffiTea. Owner Ilana Malka previously ran the vintage clothing boutique Physical Graffiti here until January 2011.

The Cinnabon/Carvel combo shop is now OPEN on 14th Street

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

The Cinnabon/Carvel combo shop is now open at 430 E. 14th St., between Avenue A and First Avenue. 

We stopped by the shop, which opened on Monday, and met Zahra, the franchise owner, and the rest of the staff on duty...
After two days, and to no surprise, the top seller has been the classic Cinnabon cinnamon roll...
There's also Carvel's soft serve...
... and cakes, though no sign of the Cookie Puss...
We spotted our old friend and best-seller Fudgie the Whale, who looks more predatory than we recall from our youth. (The sugar rush from the layers of fudge and soft serve washed down with a two-liter soda likely blurred our memories — thanks, Mom!)
There are seats for eating in...
And today (Wednesday!), there is a buy-1-sundae, get-1-free deal...
This outpost is open daily from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Find more info here. 

Tom Carvel started the business in New York from an ice cream truck in 1929 ... and he famously narrated the brand's commercials in the 1970s and 1980s. (Catch him on Letterman here.) 

Of the 347 Carvel outposts in the United States, 200 are in New York State, and several Cinnabon/Carvel combos are in the five boroughs. (Carvel and Cinnabon are owned by the same company, GoTo Foods.)

Previously on EV Grieve

Another local Duane Reade by Walgreens closes

The Duane Reade by Walgreens on the SW corner of Broadway and Fourth Street closed yesterday. (H/T to the EVG reader who shared this info.) 

 Prescription holders here are being sent to the CVS on Bleecker...
As USA Today reported last month: 
The thinning of Walgreens locations has been in the works. Walgreens said in October 2024 it planned to close about 1,200 underperforming stores across the U.S. as a strategy to offset declining profits resulting from low drug reimbursement rates and sluggish retail sales. 
This is the latest Walgreens or Duane Reade to shutter around here in the past 5-6 years. The oddly configured Walgreens on 14th Street and Fourth Avenue closed in January 2022, the Walgreens on Astor Place closed in August 2020, and three neighborhood Duane Reade by Walgreens locations shut down: The outpost on Avenue D at Houston and First Avenue between 14th Street and 15th Street shuttered in November 2019, while the storefront on 10th Street and Third Avenue shut down in early March 2019

Still, it seems like there are still a lot of Duane Reades around.

About the new food truck that arrived on 10th and A

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

In recent days, a new food truck called La Cocina arrived at the NW corner of Avenue A and 10th Street.

I talked with Mohamed, a partner in the business that's in its fourth day of operation here. 

They have a limited menu. You get your choice of a stewed chicken or steak or a hamburger plus two of these sides, ride, beans, fries or tostones (their specialty) for $10. (His rather biased take on the food: "It's delicious!")
Open daily from 12:30 until 9:00 p.m. 

And no social media presence just yet.

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Tuesday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

Mannequin in motion on Astor Place today...

More discussion on the future of the city-owned parking lot at 324 E. 5th St.

The city is hosting a public workshop on Thursday evening to discuss the future of the parking lot at 324 E. Fifth St., which has been designated to serve as "100% affordable housing." 

In December, the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) announced plans to redevelop the city-owned lot into inclusionary housing. The 9th Precinct uses the 11,540-square-foot site between First Avenue and Second Avenue for parking and various towed vehicles. 

Affordable housing on this parking lot was one of the points of agreement in the City Council's December 2021 vote to approve the controversial SoHo/NoHo rezoning. 

Here's more about the RFP process via the HPD: 
No one understands neighborhood conditions and needs better than those who live and work in the community. HPD values this expertise, which is why community engagement is central to the affordable housing development process. The goal of this outreach is to identify priorities for housing, services, and community amenities. 
You can sign up to receive email updates about the project here

The public workshop will be held on Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. at University Settlement's Speyer Hall, 184 Eldridge St., between Rivington and Delancey on the LES. 

Meanwhile, the 5th Street Park Coalition is advocating for a more expansive use of the space, including the adjacent playground at P.S. 751, in what would be "a comprehensive rezoning plan which accounts for affordable housing, greenspace, public community space and a new public school play area."
Per organizers: 
We are seeking a holistic combination of both lots, 324 and 310 (which used to be public to the community). No reduction to the size of the current planning for Affordable Housing nor the nearby school to lose any of its valuable resource. 

Our goals are to work with HPD, DOE and SCA on a mutually beneficial school redevelopment, affordable housing overlooking a small greenspace with a public component and potentially more with the police department. Our goal is organization. 
Find more information about the Coalition here

Previously on EV Grieve:

[UPDATED]: Mount Sinai Beth Israel will close on March 26 after judge dismisses lawsuit

Updated March 1: An appellate judge issued a new temporary stay on Mount Sinai's plans to shut down Beth Israel. 
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Following a protracted legal tussle, the end is near now for Mount Sinai Beth Israel. 

After a state Supreme Court judge yesterday dismissed a lawsuit seeking to block the facility's closure, Mount Sinai Beth Israel leadership announced a March 26 closing date, according to published reports. (Politico's Maya Kaufman also shared the date in an X post last evening.)

As Gothamist and Crain's reported, Judge Jeffrey Pearlman tossed the lawsuit filed in August by a community coalition challenging the closing. 

As previously reported, Mount Sinai must operate a new 24/7 urgent care center near the hospital on First Avenue at 16th Street for at least three months and reach an agreement with New York City Health + Hospitals to invest in expanding Bellevue Hospital's emergency room and psychiatric emergency department. 

In an employee memo shared with Becker's"This date will allow us to ramp down the facility in a manner that is seamless and safe for patients and staff," said Elizabeth Sellman, president and COO of Mount Sinai Beth Israel.

Arthur Schwartz, the coalition's pro-bono lawyer, said he would appeal the decision and seek a new stay on the closure within 24 hours, per Gothamist. 

Reactions included... Mount Sinai officials have said Beth Israel lost $1 billion in the last decade, with dwindling cash reserves and reduced bed counts.

Beth Israel was founded 143 years ago on the Lower East Side and moved to its current location on 16th Street and First Avenue in 1929.