To the low lifewho took the plants[Karma] a bitchMay your life be [taken]in a bad way. We tryto make the block nice.
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Noted
Urban etiquette signage as seen in a tree well on Sixth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B:
Week in Grieview
Posts this past week included (with a photo on Ludlow Street)...
• "A reminder of the tragedy that left many physically and emotionally wounded..." (Wednesday) ... Wednesday's parting shots (Wednesday)
• RIP Janne Schaefers (Wednesday)
• Terra Thai reopens with new grab-and-go items (Tuesday)
• An impromptu goodbye party as Sabor A Mexico closes on 1st Avenue (Thursday)
• Williamsburg hit Titi's bringing the empanadas to 7th Street (Wednesday)
• A moment with East Village artist Scooter LaForge (Friday)
• A few more details on the condo conversion of a former tenement synagogue on 4th Street (Monday)
• Residential rendering reveal at the former 9th Street parking garage (Monday)
• At the annual fundraiser for the Sixth Street Community Center (Tuesday)
• Last days for Current Coffee and Sunday C&C Eatery at the Bowery Market (Wednesday)
• After December fire in building, Jane Cookshop will not be reopening on 9th Street (Monday)
• Urbanspace Union Square has shut down to make way for Time Out Market (Tuesday)
• A week left for 'Before the Clean-Up' at new East Village gallery Smilers (Saturday)
• 7 years vacant, the storefront on the NW corner of 3rd Avenue and 12th Street is now for rent (Monday)
• At the closing party for Lori McLean's jewelry shop (Saturday)
• Checking in on the bunny of 13th and B (Sunday)
• Bánh Anh Em looking closer to opening on 3rd Avenue (Tuesday)
• On St. Mark's Place, sidewalk emerges after lengthy construction stint (Thursday) ... Welcoming back another East Village sidewalk (Friday)
• Venerable Joe's Pizza becomes Jonas Pizza for a day to celebrate the Jonas Brothers (Sunday)
EVG Etc.: Explaining the new composting rules; crowdfunding for La Sirena
Photo by Stacie Joy
Wrapping up Women's History Month at the Tompkins Square Library branch
Local stories of interest from other sources this past week include...
• Compost avoiders will be fined starting on Tuesday (Gothamist) ... How the city will enforce mandatory composting (CBS 2) ... A guide to composting (The City)
• An explainer on applying for unemployment in NYC (The City)
• Postal workers at Cooper Station on Fourth Avenue indicted for kidnapping, attempted rape of co-worker (1010 WINS ... DA's release)
• How can NYC's next mayor bring down homelessness? (Gothamist)
• A feature on La Sirena Mexican Folk Art on Third Street (ABC 7... owner Dina Leor has a crowdfunding campaign here)
• Sauerkraut fish stars at this new Third Avenue restaurant (Grub Street... previously on EVG)
• Momofuku's Kabawa, serving Caribbean cuisine, debuts in Extra Place (The Times)
• The Post picked up our bunny-on-B story (The Post... previously on EVG)
• Now playing: "Julie Keeps Quiet" is "a drama of startling revelations" that made a splash at Cannes last year (Metrograph)
• Cult classic "Harold & Maude" gets a screening on April 14 (Village East by Angelika)
• Luna Park at Coney Island officially opened for the season yesterday (NY1)
Saturday, March 29, 2025
Saturday's parting shot
Photo by Stacie Joy
At East Village Tattoo, celebrating its first anniversary today at 207 E. Fourth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B...
At the closing party for Lori McLean's jewelry shop
Photos by Stacie Joy
Last Saturday, Lori McLean held a closing party at her eponymous jewelry shop at 207 Avenue A, between 12th Street and 13th Street.
As we reported, McLean decided to retire from running a storefront after two decades.
After a summer hiatus, she will continue doing custom work for clients. (Check her website for details.)
EVG's Stacie Joy stopped by for the shop's farewell...
McLean had two East Village storefronts, first on 11th Street then 207 Avenue A.
"My landlord is great and really saved us during the COVID shutdown," she said of No. 207, which will be available to rent in May.
A week left for 'Before the Clean-Up' at new East Village gallery Smilers
Flyer via @smilersnyc
You have a week left to catch the latest exhibit at Smilers, a small basement gallery that debuted in Janaury on Sixth Street.
"Before the Clean-Up" features photography by Nick Waplington and Lizzi Bougatsos as they documented the 1990s NYC underground club scene...
The show, which opened on March 6, runs through next Saturday. Hours: noon to 6 p.m., Thursday to Saturday.
The gallery, launched by Mark Beasley and Laura Tighe, is at 431 E. Sixth St. between Avenue A and First Avenue. (The address was also home to William Wegman's studio.)
Also: Our old EVG friend James Maher has launched a new video series about photography books and shows in conjunction with Miwa Susuda of Dashwood Books and Session Press. His first interview is with Nick Waplington. Watch that here.
Saturday's opening shot
Morning view from Ninth Street and Stuyvesant... High of 80 (!!) today with a mix of sun and clouds and the possibility of a passing shower, though likely not. There's also an 80% chance of being annoyed by large groups of people having brunch outdoors.
Friday, March 28, 2025
Tainted love
"Liquorice" is the latest single from Freak Slug... on the recently released deluxe LP I Blow Out Big Candles (But with a Cherry on Top).
You can catch Manchester's finest at the Bowery Ballroom this coming Wednesday. Find tickets here.
A moment with East Village artist Scooter LaForge
Photo by Stacie Joy
We caught up with East Village-based artist-designer Scooter LaForge yesterday.
He is enjoying a moment in "The White Lotus" season three spotlight.
Fans of the HBO series, which people enjoy discussing and dissecting far too much (all in on the monkey theory, btw!), likely spotted two of LaForge's T-shirt designs that Chelsea (Aimee Lou Wood) and Chloe (Charlotte Le Bon), who suspiciously became friends way too fast, wore as party dresses during the full moon party episode that aired March 16.
His upcycled design collection is available at Patricia Field's newish boutique on the LES or online.
LaForge talked about his art and designs with NBC 4's Ashley Bellman the other day. Watch that here.
Welcoming back another East Village sidewalk
Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy
The scaffolding/sidewalk bridge is coming down around PS 64/Earth School on Avenue B between Fourth Street and Sixth Street.
The construction crew says, "80% of the structure is coming down, and there is still work being done on a small part."
It will be nice to see the building again. It seems like that sidewalk bridge went up when Mayor LaGuardia was in office.
Thursday, March 27, 2025
Thursday's parting shots
An EVG reader shared these photos from today in Stuy Town... where the cherry blossoms are in FULL bloom...
March 27
Thanks to EVG reader Guillermo for a photo of this late-March discard on Seventh Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue...
On St. Mark's Place, sidewalk emerges after lengthy construction stint
Photo by Jacob Ford
On the NE corner of St. Mark's Place and Third Avenue, workers have pushed the barricades closer to the new 9-story building ... allowing use of the sidewalk again for the first time in five-plus years.
Pre-leasing is underway for the boutique office building, which includes 7,700 square feet of retail space.
The return of the sidewalk might mean the end of this from the sidewalk bridge and construction zone era.
An impromptu goodbye party as Sabor A Mexico closes on 1st Avenue
Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy
After 15 years at 160 First Ave., Sabor A Mexico has shut its doors.
The nook of a restaurant closed on Monday.
On Tuesday evening, I found (from left) owner Maria Escamilla, her brother, chef Enebidio Escamilla,
and staffer Antonia Escamilla inside the space...
They welcomed me in to take some photos, discuss the decision to close, and drink some strong house-special passion fruit margaritas.
Like other small business owners, Maria cited rising costs as the driving factor behind the closure.
"The economy, rent, supplies. I couldn't afford to pay my employees anymore, and I wanted to quit while I was ahead," Maria said. "The cost of ordering food was going up."
She does not owe back rent and decided to leave the storefront between Ninth Street and 10th Street before she dug herself into a deeper hole.
Maria will take a few weeks off to plan her next move, but she says her current focus is on shutting down the shop.
"Thank you to all the guests, our customers, and the support we received. The business was a way to give my kids an education," said Maria, who has two adult daughters, a son, and several grandchildren. "The restaurant also helped employ other people and provided for them. My friends, family, and clients, this means a lot."
Originally from Guerrero, in southern Mexico, Maria moved to the United States in 1988.
"This was my dream, my restaurant, my cuisine," she said. "I learned my style of cooking from my momma. This keeps the tradition going."
As I eyed my still-half-full margarita, people stopped by to thank the family.
Last days for Current Coffee and Sunday C&C Eatery at the Bowery Market
Tomorrow (Friday) is the last day for Current Coffee after two-plus years of operating from the front corner space at the Bowery Market.
They said they haven’t secured a new location yet.
Ownership will look for a new, larger space after its run here.
Here was the closing announcement on Instagram...
It was a lively spot with an upbeat vibe and a year-round summery feel — not bad for a corner of the Bowery and Great Jones.
Meanwhile, the plant-based Sunday C&C Eatery is ending its two-year stint at the Bowery Market on Sunday. Owner Christian Torres said he is seeking a full-size restaurant space for his Latin American cuisine. (The Instagram post announcing the closure is no longer online. Eater had an item about it here.)
We contacted the Bowery Market to see about new vendors in the works for the open-air space that debuted in 2016.
Updated:
Bowery Market founder Scott Marano told us that Ramen by Ra is also going to be moving on.
"They are all success stories. They have built up a strong customer base, and they are ready to fulfill their goal of opening larger brick-and-mortar spaces. I am happy about their success," he said.
As for new tenants, he said, "I am speaking with prospects at the moment. The most important part is putting the right combination of operators/concepts together to complement one another. We have not finalized that yet."
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
Wednesday's parting shots
Photos by Steven
Today, on the 10th anniversary of the deadly Second Avenue explosion, Nixon Figueroa visited the corner where his son Nicholas died on March 26, 2015.
Nicholas, who was 23, was having a late lunch with a friend at Sushi Park, 121 Second Ave., when an explosion rocked the building. The blast killed Nicholas and Sushi Park employee Moises Locón, 27, and injured more than 20 others.
On this 10th anniversary, Nixon was surprised that no one was there. He wondered if a ceremony had been planned and he simply hadn’t been informed. There wasn’t one.
'A reminder of the tragedy that left many physically and emotionally wounded...'
Today marks the 10th anniversary of the deadly Second Avenue gas explosion.
First, the victims. Nicholas Figueroa and Moises Locón died on March 26, 2015. Figueroa, 23, who had recently graduated from SUNY Buffalo State, was at Sushi Park, 121 Second Ave. between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place, and the site of the fatal blast, dining with a co-worker. Locón, 27, worked at Sushi Park.
However, Obus said he gave the defendants a break on their prison time because they were older and "did not intend to blow up the building."
"It's not enough. It’s a joke," Nixon Figueroa, father of Nicholas, told reporters afterward. "What kind of justice did you give us? You didn't give us no justice. It's a slap in my son’s face."
The explosion injured over 20 others and leveled three buildings — 19, 121 and 123 Second Ave. A condominium complex at 45 E. Seventh St. (above) sits on two of these three lots. A third lot remains vacant.
Here's some background about what has happened to date with those people who were convicted for their roles in the explosion.
In November 2019, a jury found landlord Maria Hrynenko, who took over ownership of the buildings after her husband, Michael, died in 2004, contractor Dilber Kukic, and unlicensed plumber Jerry Ioannidis guilty of manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, and related offenses for their role in the explosion.
Prosecutors said that Hrynenko, driven by greed, and her cohorts rigged an illegal system to funnel gas from 119 Second Ave. to 121 Second Ave. to save money.
In January 2020, they were each sentenced to four to 12 years in prison. Hrynenko remained out on bail for two more years as she waited for an appeal of the case.
During the sentencing, Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Michael Obus told the courtroom, "What the defendants did, in a matter of speaking, was roll the dice with the lives of many people. The results, as we know, are catastrophic."
However, Obus said he gave the defendants a break on their prison time because they were older and "did not intend to blow up the building."
"It's not enough. It’s a joke," Nixon Figueroa, father of Nicholas, told reporters afterward. "What kind of justice did you give us? You didn't give us no justice. It's a slap in my son’s face."
According to public records, Hrynenko, 65, was released from prison in October 2023 after serving 20 months. She was eligible for parole in November 2025. Her conditional release date was November 2029, and the maximum date is November 2033. It's not known at this moment why she was released early. Records show that she is under post-release supervision through April 2026.
Kukic, 49, served at the Wallkill Correctional Facility after sentencing in early 2020. He was released on parole last month. Ioannidis, 68, remains in custody at the Adirondack Correctional Facility in Essex County, N.Y. He is also eligible for parole in September.
Michael A. Hrynenko, Jr., Maria's son and a key figure in the gas explosion investigation, died on Aug. 25, 2017. He was 31, according to an obituary posted on the Pizzi Funeral Home website. The cause of death was never disclosed.
RIP Janne Schaefers
Information via the EVG inbox...
It is with profound sadness that the East Fifth Street Block Association announces the death of Janne Schaefers.
Janne was the central force of the East Fifth Street Block Association for many years. Her association with the BA began with the trees that now line East Fifth Street between First Avenue and The Bowery, for which she is solely responsible. She was also the driving force behind all substantive efforts by the block association.
She spent countless hours at Community Board State Liquor Authority Committee meetings advocating for residents on and around East Fifth Street. She organized community protests that resulted in major agreements with large businesses, garnering substantial commitments to the quality of life for East Fifth Streeters and the elderly residents of The Greene Residence. She was also involved in the protest and eventual closing of Sin Sin, an intensely disruptive rogue bar (and location of a murder) located on the southwest corner of Fifth Street and Second Avenue.
Janne was a fighter. She worked hard for our block, the trees, and the quality of life she expected for herself and her neighbors. If you knew her, we sure hope you were on her right side. If you weren't, well, you weren't the only one!
As Spring approaches and the budding canopy of trees blesses East Fifth Street for another year, take a moment to enjoy them and give thanks to the tough old gal who brought them to us.
Williamsburg hit Titi's bringing the empanadas to 7th Street
Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy
Titi's, a family-owned restaurant in Williamsburg specializing in empanadas, is opening an outpost at 130 E. Seventh St. just west of Avenue A this spring.
I talked with co-owners (from left) Nate Ramm and Jesus Villalobos inside the space the other day...
Villalobos, whose family also runs the Venezuelan restaurant Cachapas y Mas, which has locations in Ridgewood and Inwood, says they will serve empanadas, cachapas, Cuban sandwiches, and coffee. There will be 18 varieties of empanadas, largely Venezuelan, although some fusion offerings are in the works.
There will be two, maybe more, vegan options, plus vegetarian choices, and Villalobos tells me that about half the menu is gluten-free.
"I like the neighborhood — it's a good place for our demographic," Villalobos says. "There are people willing to try different ethnic foods and are adventurous."
He also pointed out his immediate neighbors. "There is a Latin/Caribbean corner here with Miss Lily's, Yuca Bar and 787 Coffee," he says. "It's a good fit for us."
Plans are for Titi's to be up and running the first week of May.
Titi's topped The Infatuation's recent "Best Empanadas in NYC" list. (This Eater feature has more on Villalobos and his family.)
While I was there, Villalobos was working on a donation to Trinity's Services and Food for the Homeless and EVLovesNYC.
"We embrace community and want to be a part of the community," Villalobos says.
This retail space was most recently the Instant Noodle Factory.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)