Monday, June 9, 2025

East Village tenants call for nonprofit ownership amid years of housing instability

East 5th Street, west of 2nd Avenue, where several buildings are in foreclosure

Tenants in several East Village buildings currently facing foreclosure are calling for action — and a meeting — as they advocate for their troubled properties to be sold to a nonprofit preservation group that can stabilize their homes.

The call to action follows years of alleged hazardous conditions, including illegal construction, lead dust exposure, and multiple foreclosures.  

The residents, part of the Tenants Taking Control Coalition (TTC) — a group that first formed as the Toledano Tenants' Coalition in 2015 when the buildings were purchased by the infamous landlord Raphael Toledano, then in his mid-20s — say they've had enough instability and want a long-term solution. 

Madison Realty Capital (MRC) initially financed Toledano's acquisition of the buildings through a securitized loan from Signature Bank. (At the time, experienced real estate professionals raised concerns about Toledano's heavy reliance on debt.)

Toledano's notorious tactics, which included widespread tenant harassment and construction abuse, led to a lifetime ban in January 2022 from the New York real estate industry. In its findings, the Attorney General also stated that Madison Realty Capital "aided and abetted tenant harassment" and "knew landlord Toledano was engaging in fraud and harassment." 

Eventually, the buildings entered foreclosure, and ownership passed to MRC — the same firm that had initially funded Toledano. 

As The Real Deal reported in March: 
Madison got pulled in by association. [NY AG Letitia] James sued the firm for lending Toledano $124 million on an East Village portfolio with the understanding the landlord would aggressively and illegally deregulate units. Madison eventually settled, admitting no wrongdoing. But in 2021, it ended up with that East Village collateral —15 buildings half-gutted by Toledano's half-baked deregulation plan. Madison paid $153 million for the deal in a credit bid after Toledano liquidated the assets. 
But for tenants, the change brought little relief. In 2021, they say, MRC initiated construction aimed at combining smaller, rent-stabilized units into large, high-rent "Frankenstein" apartments, some reportedly listed for $9,000 or more. The work was disruptive and often dangerous, they allege, contributing to deteriorating living conditions across the buildings. 

When Signature Bank failed in 2023, the federal government intervened to prevent widespread fallout, establishing a joint venture to oversee the affected loans. That venture, composed of four entities, is managed by Community Stabilization Partners, with the Community Preservation Corporation serving as the managing partner.

Earlier this year, after trying to bring the Signature loans back to good standing, Community Stabilization Partners took a subset of sponsors described as "unresponsive and uncooperative" to court, as The Real Deal reported on March 11, including Madison Square Realty. 

Now, TTC members are demanding two things: that the Community Preservation Corporation meet directly with tenants about ongoing problems in the buildings and that the properties be sold to a nonprofit preservation buyer committed to long-term housing stability.

Adding to the urgency, the New York Post recently reported that MRC has not made a mortgage payment since January 2024 — despite managing more than $23 billion in assets, including the new high rise on 14th Street and Avenue C.

For tenants, this raises concerns that MRC is angling for more favorable loan terms than those originally extended to Toledano, echoing the very cycle that led to years of instability in the first place. (The Post reports this is part of a broader trend of landlords stopping making mortgage payments and ultimately making rent-stabilized units even more scarce in NYC.)

For TTC members, the message is clear: after a decade of disinvestment and displacement, the time has come for meaningful, community-centered change. 

"For many tenants of the 15 East Village buildings, this has been home for decades," Kathy Berry, a long-time tenant of 325 E. 12th St. and member of the Tenants Taking Control Coalition, said in a release distributed by the Cooper Square Committee. "Over the years, we have dealt with slow response to do repairs, sloppy repairs, and harassment (no cooking gas for 14 months). Basically, we want safe and clean buildings. Tenants want a preservation buyer to purchase the buildings rather than another private equity firm." 

Jodie Leidecker, an organizer with Cooper Square Committee, said in a statement: "After everything Madison Realty Capital has put these tenants through, it's sad to think they could be rewarded with the terms they prefer on these buildings while CPC does nothing to help tenants. That would be like all Madison's wishes come true at the tenants' expense. The tenants, however, are rightly standing up and demanding a voice in the process. I wouldn't bet against these tenants."
The 15 former Toledano East Village buildings involved in foreclosure are: 

• 27 St Mark's Place  
• 66 E. Seventh St.
• 514 E. 12th St 
• 223 E. Fifth St.
• 229 E. Fifth St. 
• 231 E. Fifth St. 
• 233 E. Fifth St. 
• 235 E. Fifth St. 
• 228 E. Sixth St. 
• 253 E. 10th St. 
• 323-325 E. 12th St.
• 327 E. 12th St. 
• 329 E. 12th St. 
• 334 E. Ninth St.
• 510 E. 12th St. 

There is a single foreclosure action for all the former Toledano buildings: SIG RCRS D MF 2023 VENTURE LLC v. EVP 27 ST MARKS PL LLC et al.

Gerald Lebovits, a judge of the New York Supreme Court 1st Judicial District, is assigned to this case,

A belated farewell to a familiar fixture of St. Mark’s Place

For years, the southwest corner at Second Avenue and St. Mark's Place buzzed with several sidewalk vendors selling everything from cheap sunglasses and floppy hats to wigs, umbrellas, and novelty holiday fare — items that were more functional than fashionable but always there when you might need them. 

The vendors disappeared earlier this year. (Photo below by Steven from 2020.)
We haven't seen the vendors since late February or early March here in the spaces outside the current tenant, Poetica Coffee.
A reliable source informs us that the newish landlord plans to demolish the structure that housed these vendors. 

In a sale announced last July, Ryco Capital purchased the three buildings at 127-129 Second Ave. and 36 St. Mark's Place from Jonis Realty (which is run by Citi Urban Management, also owned by the Helegua family) for $29 million. 

For decades, until 2020, the corner housed Gem Spa, the candy shop-newsstand. The wall was lined with payphones in the 1970s and 1980s... (and well-known for New York Dolls photo shoots)...

 

We attempted to establish a more precise timeline of how the corner space evolved but only came up with fragments. 

Ray Patel bought Gem Spa in 1986, and he eventually removed a wall, replaced it with glass, and began selling goods such as T-shirts and hats outside. The adjacent kiosk was said to have arrived about the same time. (Photo below from 2019 by Stacie Joy.)
Buying something here was a bit of a rite of passage — mostly touristy, the kind of stop longtime residents might scoff at or avoid altogether. But in a sudden downpour or after a few drinks, it was often where you found yourself. And you knew that you could get the $20 asking price in half by starting to walk away. 

You can still find sidewalk hats and scarves from the kiosks that remain on the southeast corner of St. Mark's Place and Third Avenue (as well as outside Funky Town mid-block). 
Still, for those who remember the cluttered charm of that southwest corner, its absence leaves the block feeling just a little less alive — and familiar. 

New chapter in healing: Spear PT to open in former dispensary space on 14th Street

The next office for Spear, a physical therapy practice launched in 1999, is opening at 212 E. 14th St. between Second Avenue and Third Avenue. 

There are currently 60-plus locations of the business in the Tri-State area. 

This space was previously Columbia Care, Manhattan's first medicinal marijuana dispensary. (Who misses the Super Saving Store?)

Sunday, June 8, 2025

Sunday's parting shot

Photo by Jose Garcia

Dirt Cobain and Outersource refreshed their U Get Me So High mural on St. Mark's Place between First Avenue and Second Avenue today... the mural first arrived here in January 2018.

A free music showcase at Baker Falls on Monday night

On Monday (tomorrow) night, as part of WFUV's "Radio City" initiative during New York Music Month, you can take in a free showcase at Baker Falls. 

On the bill from 7-10 p.m.: local artists lovetempo, The Jack Moves and Rebounder. (Check out Rebounder's new video, filmed partly on Canal Street, here.) 

DJ Alisa Ali, who curates "NY Slice" weekdays at noon on 90.7 FM, is the host. 

The "NY Slice" showcase is free with an RSVP via Eventbrite

Aside from seeing some local acts, it's a chance to check out Baker Falls, the venue that relocated to 192 Allen St. between Stanton and Rivington and opened earlier this year.

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with a summer morning photo from St. Mark's Place)...

• City issues RFP for affordable housing development on 5th Street (Monday

• The hidden charms of a soon-to-sell loft building and the former home of Sixth Street Specials (Thursday

• Cleanup planned for E-bike hub on 11th Street following spike in complaints (Tuesday

• The Astor Place Greenmarket will not be returning (Wednesday

• EV Rite Aid remains open for now (Wednesday

• A band to know: Bec Lauder & the Noise (Friday

• Talking Heads celebrate 50 years with 'Killer' new video (Thursday

• The history of 2 East Village backhouses (Tuesday

• Off the wall: Longtime 'Alphabet City' mural erased (Wednesday)

• New broker for Avenue A storefront that has been vacant for nearly 11 years (Tuesday

• Signage alert: Eim Khao Mun Kai on 2nd Avenue (Monday

• Macy's Fireworks returning to the East Side, rightful home of all things spectacular (Thursday

• The hollyhocks on the former St Emeric's property (Wednesday

• Sweep the leg, Johnny! Take in a screening of 'The Karate Kid' at First Park (Sunday)

• 88 Coffee debuts at the Bowery Market (Monday

• Openings: Lil Sweet Treat on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday

• Openings and closing on these 2 blocks of 1st Avenue (Monday

And get the Week in Grieview emailed to you every Sunday by signing up (for free) here.

For some reason there is now a weekly EV Grieve newsletter

Over the years, a few EVG readers have inquired about the availability of a subscription or newsletter to receive our stories directly. 

Back during Substack's heyday in 2020, we actually created an account… but we didn't do much more than that. 

Anyway, you can now sign up for a free weekly EVG newsletter here. For now, it's just a rundown with all the links and headlines from the past week. (Basically, it's the same thing as the Week in Grieview feature, but emailed straight to you.) 

We may eventually add a few (free) extras, and there are plenty of bells and whistles we could explore once we gain a better understanding of the platform. 

On that note — yes, we know there were a few gaffes in the first edition. We're working on it. Speaking of gaffes, there are TWO EVG accounts. Use EV Grieve's Newsletter. (We will deactivate the other one after exporting the email subscriptions.)

Hopefully, it'll be a convenient way to keep up with EVG. Thanks, as always, for reading.

Today (Sunday!) in Tompkins Square Park: WastexFest 5

Here's the lineup for WastexFest 5 today (Sunday), scheduled between 2-6 in Tompkins Square Park: 

• Blackout Shoppers — 2-2:25 
• Complete Fucker — 2:35-3 
• Angry Corpses — 3:10-3:40
• YDI — 3:50-4:20 
• Urban Waste — 4:30-5:10
• Fang — 5:20-6

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

Today in Tompkins Square Park... during one of the 7-8 downpours today...

Join author Ada Calhoun for an East Village AMA this afternoon

East Village native (and current resident!) Ada Calhoun is taking part in an AMA on Reddit (r/eastvillage) this afternoon from 2-4. 

Perhaps you can ask her about one of her books, including "St. Marks Is Dead" or her recently released (from February) first novel, "Crush." 

Find the AMA link here.

Saturday's opening shot

A sunrise view from Astor Place looking across Stuyvesant Street, the only street in Manhattan that runs true west to east

As for the weather, overcast and muggy, with showers and scattered thunderstorms this morning into the afternoon. 

As for the Belmont Stakes (at Saratoga again this year), the track is expected to be wet, perhaps even sloppy. Kentucky Derby winner Sovereignty and Preakness Stakes victor Journalism meet again. Five weeks ago at Churchill Downs, Sovereignty edged out Journalism on a rain-soaked track in the Run for the Roses, as we cut-n-paste from elsewhere.

Friday, June 6, 2025

A band to know: Bec Lauder & the Noise

 

Last week, Bec Lauder & The Noise, a band said to be born in the East Village, released "Give It." The song — a rhythmic, retro-tinged pop track with a subtle funk groove — is the first single from their debut album, The Vessel, out Aug. 22.

As you'll see, the video was filmed on Astor Place, as well as along Third and Fourth avenues, and features dancers for the Brooklyn Nets. 

On May 11, during the first 2025 Show Brain show in Tompkins Square Park, we had a chance to see the band, featuring Bec Lauder (vocals/guitar/bass), Maggie Bishop (drums/vocals), and Soph Shreds (guitar/bass). 

Pics by Stacie Joy...
You can follow the band on Instragram for updates.

Tompkins Square Park hawklet watch continues

The Tompkins Square Park hawk chicks continue to GROOOW. 

Mark Hado shared these photos this week, with the top taken via an iPhone through 16 power binoculars. 

As hawk documentarian Goggla noted in her last post, the offspring "suddenly go from little fuzz balls to serious-looking raptors." 

See below! 
This is the first brood for Amelia, the resident female red-tailed hawk in Tomkins Square Park, and her new male companion, aka M2. (This marks Amelia's eighth season raising chicks in Tompkins. )

Meanwhile, the fledge watch continues. As always, check out Goggla's site for updates.

Friday's opening shot

From last evening on Avenue A near Seventh Street (thanks, Emily Quinn, for the photo!). 

We happened to walk by this morning and saw it ourselves... pretty damn green still — like, Jan. 2 green.
Just a little longer in the bag and it'll be fully toasted...

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Thursday's parting shot

Photo by Roger Bultot 

The damaged Mexican Navy ship Cuauhtémoc has been docked at Pier 36 since its fatal collision with the Brooklyn Bridge on May 17

Early tomorrow morning, the New York City Emergency Management Department will coordinate a multi-agency operation to tow the ship from Pier 36 to the Brooklyn Navy Yard for repairs. 

Per the media advisory: 
This will be a tightly coordinated marine movement involving the United States Coast Guard, NYPD Harbor, NYC Mayor's Office of International Affairs, NYC Economic Development Corporation, NYC Ferry, the Brooklyn Navy Yard, the Government of Mexico, and private ferry and salvage partners. 
The East River will be closed between the Williamsburg Bridge and Manhattan Bridge from 6:45-8 a.m. Ferry service will be disrupted during this time, officials said.

Two Mexican Navy cadets, América Sánchez, 20, and Adal Jair Maldonado Marcos, 23, died, and 19 others were injured when the Cuauhtémoc struck the Brooklyn Bridge; 277 people were aboard at the time. 

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

Talking Heads celebrate 50 years with 'Killer' new video

Half a century after their live debut, Talking Heads' "Psycho Killer" gets an official music video. 

Last night, the band provided fans with a sneak peek of the clip from 195 Chrystie St. on the Lower East Side, a loft building that David Byrne, Chris Frantz, Tina Weymouth, and Jerry Harrison lived in during the mid-1970s. 

The new video, directed by filmmaker (and Cooper Union grad) Mike Mills, stars Oscar-nominated actress Saoirse Ronan

Per Variety:
The video covers 13 days in the very repetitive life of a woman waking up and going to an unspecified job, where she experiences a range of emotions from indifference to sorrow to rage to, finally, a kind of peace — all of these moods going more or less unregistered by the other humans she interacts with.
   

On June 5, 1975, Talking Heads made their debut, opening for the Ramones at CBGB. We heard it was a pretty good show. 

"Psycho Killer" appeared on the band's first record, Talking Heads: 77.

Today in photos of the sky

As you may have noticed, the sky here today is a little milky/hazy/adjective of choice.

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation has issued an Air Quality Health Advisory until 11 tonight as ground-level ozone may approach or exceed unhealthy standards for a second straight day.
The haze is also attributed to smoke from the Canadian wildfires, according to published reports.

The hidden charms of a soon-to-sell loft building and the former home of Sixth Street Specials

Photos and reoorting by Stacie Joy
Top photo from March

Last week, Sixth Street Specials moved out of its home of 39 years at 703 E. Sixth St. 

The move to New Rochelle marks a new era for the business — as well as the four-story building between Avenue C and Avenue D. 

The building had been on the sales market, and as of May 14 (see below), it is now under contract with a yet-to-be-named buyer. The ask had been more than $4 million. 

Hugh Mackie, the owner of the motorcycle repair shop who also lived above with his family, decided to retire. He and his family relocated. (Mackie said previously that the current "landlord's been 100% cool with me.")

I was given access to the now-empty building — every floor except the third, where the door remained stubbornly locked despite my best efforts with the key. 

Each floor features a loft, and they are massive. What I saw was enough to stir both curiosity and a bit of envy.
According to Village Preservation, tax records show that a house was built at this location around 1855, replacing the shop and stables that had formerly occupied the lot. 

Here's more: 
The 1858 tax record describes the structure as four stories tall. The 1856 map labels this building as 'Piano Action Factory.' Although no permits were found prior to 1965, the current front facade likely dates to 1920-30s. In 1965 the building was altered by having its dumbwaiters, doors and bulkhead removed.
Vintage touches abound here. A double Fox Police Lock is still intact — a relic of security craftsmanship that's both rare and beautiful. Con Edison panels from another era line the wall alongside weathered AFA automatic fire alarms that haven't beeped in years.

We also spotted a lone piano in one of the spaces...   
At the top of the building, a half-door leads to the roof — watch your head! Even your intrepid, height-challenged reporter had to duck. 
But the climb (and duck) is worth it: a sprawling rooftop mural stretches across the surface, a splash of color crowning the building like a secret. (The KTM crew created the mural.)
You can't help but sigh at the potential. The place is under contract now, but for a few moments, it was ours to imagine.

Macy’s Fireworks returning to the East Side, home of all things spectacular

Image via Macy's 

ICYMI: After a year abroad, the Macy's July 4th fireworks are returning to the East River. 

According to a city press release, the 49th edition of the fireworks will launch from the Brooklyn Bridge and four surrounding barges in the East River at the South Street Seaport. 

And if you want to get close to the live-viewing action: 
Additional details on public viewing locations, live broadcast details, and a city-sponsored lottery for free public viewing tickets will be announced in the coming weeks. 
With the East 10th Street pedestrian bridge closed and Greenway access limited up to Stuyvesant Cove, we're curious how congested the remaining open sections of East River Park might get during the fireworks.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Off the wall: Longtime 'Alphabet City' mural erased

After nearly 11 years as a colorful fixture on the southwest corner of Sixth Street and Avenue C, the "Alphabet City" mural is gone. 

A reader reports that on Monday, an anti-graffiti crew power-washed the artwork from the one-story RCN Cable building — a windowless structure as mysterious as it is nondescript. 

The creative mural of the alphabet letters was created by Brooklyn-based artists The Yok and Sheryo, who were then working for the Jersey City-based arts group Green Villain. 

It arrived in late 2014 (and with some controversy). 

Someone tagged the mural in August 2022 (it took eight years)... and it got worse from then on. 

Here in better days, via Carpe City...
We'll be curious to see what, if anything, shows up next.